Showing 1 - 5 results of 5 for search '"German philosophy"', query time: 0.03s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Second Nature: Adorno and Contemporary Education by Edvardas Šumila

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This is done by exploring the notion of ‘second nature’, the significance of which is underlined by its rootedness in the dialectical tradition of German philosophy and Adorno’s emphasis on the nonidentical as an essential condition for critique and a link between subjectivity and what is understood as nature and history. …”
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  2. 2

    Spinozism, Kabbalism, and Idealism from Johann Georg Wachter to Moses Mendelssohn by Mogens Laerke

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…I am principally interested in the importance that Wachter’s book may have had for German philosophy in the second half of the eighteenth century. …”
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  3. 3

    The issue of Rejection of Positivist and Materialist Reflections in Turkish Thought by Aba Müslim Akdemir

    Published 2016-07-01
    “…In this process, French scientific and philosophical circleshad a central influence on our culture through copyrighted and translatedworks. In addition, German philosophy was introduced through whatthe Ottoman intelligentsia read in French. …”
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  4. 4

    Philosophies of Qualitative Research / by Brinkmann, Svend

    Published 2018
    Table of Contents: “…Preface -- Introduction: philosophy and qualitative research -- The historical background : philosophy from the Greeks to the 20th century -- British philosophies of qualitative research : positivism and realism -- German philosophies of qualitative research : phenomenology and hermeneutics -- American philosophies of qualitative research : the pragmatisms -- French philosophies of qualitative research : structuralism and poststructuralism -- Global influences on qualitative research : new philosophies -- Discussion -- References.…”
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  5. 5

    POSITIVISM AND ITS ADVERSARIES: BRADLEY, COLLINGWOOD, NIETZSCHE AND HEIDEGGER by Evaldas Nekrašas

    Published 1998-01-01
    “…They belong to two main groups: members of the first group continue the philosophical tradition (mainly that of classical German philosophy) while representatives of the second group oppose the tradition but do so resting upon principles incompatible with those of positivists. …”
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