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Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Accepting The Romantics As Philosophers, Michael Fischer
Accepting The Romantics As Philosophers, Michael Fischer
English Faculty Research
The Romantics are not widely regarded as philosophers, at least not in philosophy departments, where they are seldom taught. Some of the reasons behind this exclusion of the Romantics involve a general disdain for literature; other reasons suggest a more specific uneasiness with Romanticism itself—with its apparent interest in animism, its self-indulgence, its coolness toward reason, and, perhaps above all, its refusal to abide by Kant's containment of skepticism. These complaints are not the invention of paranoid or obtuse academic philosophers (as some literary critics might like to think). In fact, some of these objections have dogged the Romantics from …
Husserl's Position Between Dilthey And The Windelband-Rickert School Of Neo-Kantianism, John E. Jalbert
Husserl's Position Between Dilthey And The Windelband-Rickert School Of Neo-Kantianism, John E. Jalbert
Philosophy, Theology and Religious Studies Faculty Publications
The controversy and debate over the character of the relationship between the natural and human sciences (Natur- und Geisteswissenschaflen) became a central theme for philosophical reflection largely through the efforts of theorists such as Wilhelm Dilthey and the two principal representatives of the Baden School of Neo-Kantians, Wilhelm Windelband and Heinrich Rickert. These turn of the century theorists are major figures in this philosophical arena, but they are by no means the only participants in the effort to grapple with this issue.
Look Before You Leap: Some Cautionary Notes On Civic Republicanism, Michael A. Fitts
Look Before You Leap: Some Cautionary Notes On Civic Republicanism, Michael A. Fitts
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Logos-Sophia, Pittsburg State University Philosophical Society
Logos-Sophia, Pittsburg State University Philosophical Society
LOGOS-SOPHIA: The Journal of the PSU Philosophical Society
Logos-Sophia, Volume 1, Fall 1988. The Journal of the Pittsburg State University Philosophical Society has largely been a student publication with occasional faculty contributions.
Unger's Philosophy: A Critical Legal Study, William Ewald
Unger's Philosophy: A Critical Legal Study, William Ewald
All Faculty Scholarship
Of all the scholars associated with the Critical Legal Studies movement, none has garnered greater attention or higher praise than Roberto Unger of Harvard Law School. In this Article, William Ewald argues that Professor Unger's reputation as a brilliant philosopher of law is undeserved. Despite the seeming erudition of his books, Professor Unger's work displays little familiarity with the basic philosophical literature, and the philosophical, legal, and political analysis in those works-in particular, the celebrated critique of liberalism in Knowledge and Politics-is so riddled with logical and historical errors as to be unworthy of serious scholarly attention.
Reply To Cornel West, William Ewald
Philosophy And Feminist Thinking, Jean Grimshaw, Samantha Brennan
Philosophy And Feminist Thinking, Jean Grimshaw, Samantha Brennan
Samantha Brennan
No abstract provided.
Plato And The Computer, Philip Novak
Plato And The Computer, Philip Novak
Philip Novak