Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
PHENOMENOLOGY 1073 analysis, can be approached from the gates of any of the positive sciences: and, being once reached, demands ...
1074 EDMUNDHUSSERL psychologically purified to the transcendental, that most general, subjectivity, which makes the world and it ...
PHENOMENOLOGY 1075 PHENOMENOLOGY, THEUNIVERSALSCIENCE Thus, as phenomenology is developed, the Leibnitzian foreshadowing of a un ...
1076 William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was born and raised in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. His mother, Mary Burghardt, was de ...
INTRODUCTION 1077 United States of America, 1638–1870(1896), was published as the first in the Harvard Historical Studies Series ...
Du Bois spent a busy “retirement” in political activism. For four years, he returned to the NAACP as director of the department ...
THESOULS OFBLACKFOLKS 1079 While using Hegelian notions, Du Bois noticed something unique about the self- consciousness of black ...
1080 W.E.B. DUBOIS W.E.B. Du Bois(on the left) and his high school graduating class, Great Barrington, Massachusetts, 1884. (W.E ...
THESOULS OFBLACKFOLKS 1081 I remember well when the shadow swept across me. I was a little thing, away up in the hills of New En ...
1082 W.E.B. DUBOIS black artisan—on the one hand to escape white contempt for a nation of mere hewers of wood and drawers of wat ...
THESOULS OFBLACKFOLKS 1083 him. The ballot, which before he had looked upon as a visible sign of freedom, he now regarded as the ...
1084 W.E.B. DUBOIS humiliation, the distortion of fact and wanton license of fancy, the cynical ignoring of the better and the b ...
1085 Bertrand Arthur William Russell was born into a prestigious family in Trelleck, Wales. His parents, Lord and Lady Amberley, ...
1086 BERTRANDRUSSELL continued fighting of World War I. He also spent six months in jail for alleging that U.S. troops were used ...
INTRODUCTION 1087 Although...comprehensive construction is part of the business of philosophy, I do not believe it is the most i ...
1088 BERTRANDRUSSELL The Analytic Heritage(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971) puts Russell’s thought in the context ...
THEPROBLEMS OFPHILOSOPHY 1089 the window buildings and clouds and the sun. I believe that the sun is about ninety-three million ...
1090 BERTRANDRUSSELL the naked eye, why should we trust what we see through a microscope? Thus, again, the confidence in our sen ...
THEPROBLEMS OFPHILOSOPHY 1091 no match for Philonous, who mercilessly drives him into contradictions and paradoxes, and makes hi ...
1092 BERTRANDRUSSELL our sense-data, and yet to be regarded as causing those sense-data whenever we are in a suitable relation t ...
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