DELEUZE CONNECTIONSDELEUZE CONNECTIONSSeries Editor: Ian BuchananEleven top Deleuze scholars reclaim Deleuzian phi. Home; Add Document. DOWNLOAD PDF. DELEUZE CONNECTIONS DELEUZE CONNECTIONS. 30 Deleuze and Ethics that he has much to say about ethics and affect in texts such as Spinoza: Practical Philosophy and about the production of. Among philosophers, Spinoza is best known for his Ethics, a monumental work that presents an ethical vision unfolding out of a. Rejection of Free-Will; The Conatus Principle; The Affects; Bondage. It is a central concern of Spinoza's ethical program to maximize this element. Edited and translated by Edwin Curley.
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Author by: Edward Regis Language: en Publisher by: University of Chicago Press Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 31 Total Download: 978 File Size: 46,7 Mb Description: Alan Gewirth's Reason and Morality directed philosophical attention to the possibility of presenting a rational and rigorous demonstration of fundamental moral principles. Now, these previously unpublished essays from some of the most distinguished philosophers of our generation subject Gewirth's program to thorough evaluation and assessment. In a tour de force of philosophical analysis, Professor Gewirth provides detailed replies to all of his critics-a major, genuinely clarifying essay of intrinsic philosophical interest.
Author by: Leo Strauss Language: en Publisher by: University of Chicago Press Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 77 Total Download: 241 File Size: 52,6 Mb Description: This concise and accessible introduction to Strauss's thought provides, for wider audience, a bridge to his more complex theoretical work. Editor Pangle has gathered five of Strauss's previously unpublished lectures and five hard-to-find published writings and has arranged them so as to demonstrate the systematic progression of the major themes that underlay Strauss's mature work. 'These essays display the incomparable insight and remarkable range of knowledge that set Strauss's works apart from any other twentieth-century philosopher's.' Kesler, National Review.
Author by: Rocco J. Gennaro Language: en Publisher by: Oxford University Press Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 65 Total Download: 784 File Size: 47,5 Mb Description: This collection presents some of the most vital and original recent writings on Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, the three greatest rationalists of the early modern period. Their work offered brilliant and distinct integrations of science, morals, metaphysics, and religion, which today remain at the center of philosophical discussion. The essays written especially for this volume explore how these three philosophical systems treated matter, substance, human freedom, natural necessity, knowledge, mind, and consciousness. The contributors include some of the most prominent writers in the field, including Jonathan Bennett, Michael Della Rocca, Jan A.
Cover, Catherine Wilson, Stephen Voss, Edwin Curley, Don Garrett, and Margaret D. Author by: Alan Musgrave Language: en Publisher by: Rodopi Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 38 Total Download: 368 File Size: 43,8 Mb Description: The book's essays represent an important contribution to the contemporary philosophical debate concerning Realism and Rationalism. The author defends in a clear and consistent fashion a fallibilist, realistic, and rationalist position in opposition to the idealistic and relativistic viewpoint characteristic of present postmodern philosophy. Author by: O.A. Johnson Language: en Publisher by: Springer Science & Business Media Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 96 Total Download: 401 File Size: 51,5 Mb Description: Finding descriptive titles for books devoted to central issues in philosophy can often become a problem; it is very difficult to be original.
Thus the title that I have given to this book is far from novel, having already been used several times by other authors. Nevertheless, I think that I can fairly claim to have employed it in a way that no one else has done before.
Concerning my subtitle, some comments are in order. I have added it to emphasize my views regarding the nature and scope of epistemology. In particular, I wish to draw attention to the fact that I conceive its subject matter quite broadly. Rather than equating it, as is often done, with 'theory of knowledge,' I believe that epistemology should concern itself with the philosophical investigation of human belief in general. The two categories of human belief of most importance to the epistemologist are knowledge and what I shall call in the book 'reasonable belief.
' In my opinion a complete epistemology must take account of both, attempting to resolve the problems that are peculiar to each. For reasons that I give in the book I believe that knowledge and its problems must be the first concern of the epistemologist.
Only after he has developed a satisfactory theory of knowledge can he tum, with any hope of success, to the formu lation of a theory of reasonable belief.