Results for 'Martin Hägglund'

930 found
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  1.  71
    Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life.Martin Hägglund - 2008 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    _Radical Atheism_ presents a profound new reading of the influential French philosopher Jacques Derrida. Against the prevalent notion that there was an ethical or religious "turn" in Derrida's thinking, Hägglund argues that a radical atheism informs Derrida's work from beginning to end. Proceeding from Derrida's insight into the constitution of time, Hägglund demonstrates how Derrida rethinks the condition of identity, ethics, religion, and political emancipation in accordance with the logic of radical atheism. Hägglund challenges other major interpreters of Derrida's work (...)
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  2. The Necessity of Discrimination: Disjoining Derrida and Levinas.Martin Hagglund - 2004 - Diacritics 34 (1):40-71.
  3.  56
    Beyond the Performative and the Constative.Martin Hägglund - 2013 - Research in Phenomenology 43 (1):100-107.
  4.  47
    On Chronolibido: A Response to Rabaté and Johnston.Martin Hägglund - 2013 - Derrida Today 6 (2):182-196.
    This paper is a response to Jean-Michel Rabaté’s and Adrian Johnston's essays on my book Dying for Time. In responding, I further develop my notions of mortality and immortality, pleasure and pain, the flow of libido and the anticipation of loss. I also elaborate the stakes of my critique of Freud and Lacan, underlining why desire does not derive from a lack of timeless fullness. Rather, desire is both animated and agonized by temporal finitude.
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  5.  50
    Radical Atheism and “The Arche-Materiality of Time”.Martin Hägglund - 2011 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 6 (14):61-65.
  6.  64
    The Non-Ethical Opening of Ethics: A Response to Derek Attridge.Martin Hägglund - 2010 - Derrida Today 3 (2):295-305.
    This paper is a response to Derek Attridge's review of my book Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008. Attridge's review was published in Derrida Today Vol. 2, Issue 2 (2009), pp. 271–281, the arguments of which have also been incorporated in Attridge's recent book Reading and Responsibility, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010.
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  7.  58
    Time, Desire, Politics: A Reply to Ernesto Laclau.Martin Hägglund - 2008 - Diacritics 38 (1):190-199.
    The paper elucidates the author's conception of finitude and the logic of survival, which involves a deconstruction of the opposition between mortality and immortality. Returning to Laclau's deployment of a psychoanalytic conception of lack in his thinking of politics, the paper concludes with a discussion of democracy. Radical atheism does not seek to replace Laclau's approach to politics, as a struggle through articulation for a hegemonic position, but to demonstrate through immanent critique that it requires a different conception of desire.
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  8.  10
    Derrida's Radical Atheism.Martin Hägglund - 2014 - In Zeynep Direk & Leonard Lawlor (eds.), A Companion to Derrida. Chichester, West Sussex, United Kingdom: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 166–178.
    Radical atheism thus provides a new framework for understanding Derrida's engagement with religious concepts and challenges the numerous theological accounts of deconstruction. The proliferation in Derrida's late works of apparently religious terms, which will here examine through the triad of faith, the unconditional, and the messianic, has given rise to a widespread notion that there was a “religious turn” in his thinking. Deconstructing the religious conception of the good, Derrida develops a notion of “radical evil”. Derrida highlights the logic of (...)
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  9.  16
    Martin Luther über die Sprache.Bengt Hägglund - 1984 - Neue Zeitschrift für Systematicsche Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 26 (1):1-12.
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  10.  32
    Finitude, temporality and the criticism of religion in Martin Hägglund’s This Life: Why Mortality Makes Us Free (2019).David Biernot & Christoffel Lombaard - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (2):10.
    Based on two presentations during a February 2020 South African academic visit at the University of Pretoria and the University of Johannesburg, in this contribution, the authors of this article engage with one of the bestselling recent volumes in philosophy, Martin Hägglund’s This Life: Why Mortality Makes Us Free (here, the 2020 edition; initial publication date, 2019). In this book, Hägglund propagates ideas akin to those promoted within secular humanism. Whilst on the one hand this article elaborates the shortcomings (...)
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  11.  45
    Dying from Immortality: Notes for a Discussion with Martin Hägglund.Jean-Michel Rabaté - 2013 - Derrida Today 6 (2):169-181.
    This paper praises Martin Hägglund for his general take on Derrida, while objecting to a certain rigidity in the use of the concept of survival. This concept allowed Hägglund to reject the temptation of a ‘religious’ Derrida in Radical Atheism, but in Dying for Time, it leads to a hurried reading of psychoanalysis. My objections revolve around several forms: the role of gods for Plato and Greek thought; the reductive reading of Diotima's speech in the Sympoisum, and an all (...)
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  12. Martin Hägglund, Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008), 255pp, hb $65.00 (USD), ISBN-10: 080470077X, ISBN-13: 978-0804700771; pb $24.95 (USD), ISBN-10: 0804700788, ISBN-13: 978-0804700788. [REVIEW]Derek Attridge - 2009 - Derrida Today 2 (2):271-281.
    Review of _Radical Atheism_, focusing on the question of hospitality.
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  13. Review of Martin Hagglund, Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life. [REVIEW]Derek Attridge - forthcoming - Derrida Today.
  14.  58
    The true Thing is the (w)hole: Freudian-Lacanian Psychoanalysis and Derridean Chronolibidinal Reading – Another Friendly Reply to Martin Hägglund.Adrian Johnston - 2013 - Derrida Today 6 (2):146-168.
    This article is an installment in an ongoing debate between me and Hägglund. Both here and throughout our exchanges, I argue on behalf of Freud and Lacan against Hägglund's Derrida-inspired critique of psychoanalysis. Prior to the appearance of Hägglund's 2012 book Dying for Time, the back-and-forth between us centered primarily around the issue of just how atheistic Freudian-Lacanian analysis really is in light of the Derridean-Hägglundian ‘radical atheism’ delineated by Hägglund's 2008 book of that title. In this piece, which focuses (...)
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  15. Review of Martin Hägglund, Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life: Stanford, Stanford University Press, 2008, ISBN: 9780804700788, pb, 255+xi pp. [REVIEW]William Robert - 2010 - Sophia 49 (1):173-175.
  16.  7
    Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life, by Martin Hägglund.Patrick O'Connor - 2010 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 41 (1):110-111.
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  17.  76
    The Promise of Other Voices: Response to Sarah Hammerschlag, Martin Hägglund, Penelope Deutscher, and Rodolphe Gasché.Michael Naas - 2013 - Research in Phenomenology 43 (1):118-137.
  18.  39
    The Lives of Marx: Hägglund and Marx’s Philosophy after Pippin and Postone.Michael Lazarus - 2021 - Historical Materialism 29 (4):229-262.
    To make ‘philosophy worldly’ often requires an act of translation. In This Life, Martin Hägglund argues for the relevance of Marx to our contemporary lives. By way of a lively and sophisticated dialogue between philosophical interlocutors – including Hegel and Marx – Hägglund offers a compelling account of the relation between time, value and freedom. This Life translates current issues in academic philosophy into a popular register that does not reduce the complexity of the issues but shows what is (...)
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  19.  19
    The True Infinity of the Living: The Hegelian Infrastructure of Hägglund's This Life.Gene Flenady - forthcoming - Hegel Bulletin:1-23.
    Although the concept of ‘true infinity’ is undoubtedly central to Hegel's philosophy, the Anglophone rehabilitation of Hegel as a post-Kantian critical philosopher has avoided any sustained interpretive confrontation with the concept. In this paper, I provide a revisionary reconstruction of Hegelian true infinity by engaging with Martin Hägglund's argument in This Life (2019) for the centrality of finitude to Hegel's philosophy. For Hägglund, Hegel's philosophy effects a ‘secular reconciliation’ with finitude by demonstrating that our mortality is not a negative (...)
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  20. Texts on Violence: Of the Impure (Contaminations, Equivocations, Trembling).Thomas Clément Mercier - 2020 - Oximora 17:1-25.
    This article interrogates a certain philosophical scene – one which constitutes itself through the position of what Jacques Derrida calls “the ethical instance of violence.” This scene supposes a certain “style” of writing or doing philosophy, and perhaps even a certain philosophical “genre” or “subgenre”: the philosophical discourse on violence. In the course of the essay, I analyze this quasi-juridical scene through readings of Aristotle, Walter Benjamin, Giorgio Agamben, Judith Butler, Slavoj Žižek, Werner Hamacher, Rodolphe Gasché, and Martin Hägglund (...)
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  21. Markus Gabriel Against the World.James Hill - 2017 - Sophia 56 (3):471-481.
    According to Markus Gabriel, the world does not exist. This view—baptised metametaphysical nihilism—is exposited at length in his recent book Fields of Sense, which updates his earlier project of transcendental ontology. In this paper, I question whether meta-metaphysical nihilism is internally coherent, specifically whether the proposition ‘the world does not exist’ is expressible without performative contradiction on that view. Call this the inexpressibility objection. This is not an original objection—indeed it is anticipated in Gabriel’s book. However, I believe that his (...)
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  22.  34
    The Arguments of Radical Atheism – Some Critical Reflections.Guy Elgat - 2019 - Derrida Today 12 (2):130-151.
    The paper provides a critical review of Martin Hägglund's influential Radical Atheism. The paper focuses on what Hägglund calls ‘radical atheism’: the view that according to Derrida ‘the best is the worst’. First, the paper critically examines Hägglund's reconstruction of Derrida's argument for the structure of the trace or ‘the spacing of time’. This analysis clarifies one of the central premises in Hägglund's argument for radical atheism: the ‘contamination’ claim, according to which anything temporal is open as such to (...)
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  23.  7
    (1 other version)Spiritual Values for Those Without Eternal Life.Kevin Schilbrack - 2019 - Sophia 58 (4):753-759.
    Martin Hägglund’s This Life: Secular Faith and Spiritual Freedom offers a naturalistic, this-worldly theology with eloquence and heart. Nevertheless, from a religious studies perspective, there is a fair amount to criticize. This review essay identifies two shortcomings in this book and then develops a typology of religious teachings about eternal life in order to assess places where Hägglund’s critique succeeds.
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  24.  14
    Between faith and belief: toward a contemporary phenomenology of religious life.Joeri Schrijvers (ed.) - 2016 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    A contemporary philosophy of religion that offers a phenomenology of love. What is to be done at the end of metaphysics? Joeri Schrijvers’s contemporary philosophy of religion takes up this question, originally posed by Reiner Schürmann and central to continental philosophy. The book navigates the work of thinkers who have addressed such metaphysical concerns, including Martin Heidegger, Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-Luc Nancy, Jean-Luc Marion, Peter Sloterdijk, Ludwig Binswanger, Jacques Derrida, and more recently John D. Caputo, Mary-Jane Rubenstein, and Martin (...)
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  25.  68
    Is Radical Atheism a Good Name for Deconstruction?Ernesto Laclau - 2008 - Diacritics 38 (1):180-189.
    In Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life, Martin Hägglund fails to proceed deconstructively in his conception of radical atheism, opting instead for one term of an opposition, between the desire for immortality and an irreducible mortality that structures all human desire, rather than exploring the contamination of one term of an opposition by the other. The paper also responds to Hägglund's criticism of the author's account of articulation.
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  26.  19
    Adventures in Transcendental Materialism: Dialogues with Contemporary Thinkers.Adrian Johnston - 2014 - Edinburgh: Speculative Realism.
    Critically engaging with thinkers including Slavoj Zizek, Alain Badiou, Catherine Malabou, Jean-Claude Milner, Martin Hagglund, William Connolly and Jane Bennett, Johnston formulates a materialist and naturalist account of subjectivity that does full justice to human beings as irreducible to natural matter alone.
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  27.  11
    In the name of friendship: Deguy, Derrida and salut: including Of contemporaneity by Michel Deguy and How to name by Jacques Derrida.Christopher Elson & Garry Sherbert (eds.) - 2017 - Boston: Brill, Rodopi.
    In the Name of Friendship: Deguy, Derrida and "Salut"centres on the relationship between poet Michel Deguy and philosopher Jacques Derrida. Translations of two essays, "Of Contemporaneity" by Deguy and "How to Name" by Derrida, allow Christopher Elson and Garry Sherbert to develop the implications of this singular intellectual friendship. In these thinkers' efforts to reinvent secular forms of the sacred, such as the singularity of the name, and especially poetic naming, Deguy, by adopting a Derridean programme of the impossible, and (...)
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  28.  23
    Derrida’s Speculative Materialism/Marxism’s Promethean Scientism.David Maruzzella - 2023 - Symposium 27 (1):55-76.
    This paper examines the relationship between deconstruction and Marxism by turning to recent attempts to read Derrida as a materialist philosopher. Following Martin Hägglund, I propose that Derrida’s critique of logocentrism implies a commitment to certain seemingly materialistic philosophical positions, most importantly, the radical foreclosure of an entity exempt from a transcendental field of differences. However, Derrida’s materialism remains speculative to the extent that it results in a philosophy of infinite finitude itself premised upon a transcendental style of argumentation (...)
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  29.  35
    Tracing a Traumatic Temporality: Levinas and Derrida on Trauma and Responsibility.Cathrine Bjørnholt Michaelsen - 2016 - Levinas Studies 10 (1):43-77.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Tracing a Traumatic Temporality: Levinas and Derrida on Trauma and ResponsibilityCathrine Bjørnholt Michaelsen (bio)For more than three decades, Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas develop their conceptions of trauma and responsibility in close, critical, and engaged readings of each other’s works.1 In a text first published in 1973, Levinas explicitly considers different aspects and implications of Derrida’s “new style of thought,” as well as his own relation to Derrida, describing (...)
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  30.  8
    Desire in ashes: deconstruction, psychoanalysis, philosophy.Simon Wortham (ed.) - 2016 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing PIc.
    If critical momentum in European philosophy and theory has seemed to shift away from deconstruction over the past decade or so, nevertheless the indebtedness of contemporary key thinkers to Derrida's writing and the entire project of deconstruction is unquestionable, regardless of whether it is always fully acknowledged, and whether or not Derrida's influence manifests itself as a source of inspiration or the grounds of critical antagonism or opposition. Many of those who now reject deconstruction continue to write texts that engage (...)
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  31.  9
    In defence of the desire for everlasting life: why secular faith cannot ground human meaning and solidarity.Roman A. Montero - 2024 - Heythrop Journal 65 (6):662-680.
    In this article, I argue that human meaning and value are grounded in an infinite horizon as opposed to the finite horizon of the building of a life. This infinite grounding of human meaning and value makes sense of and justifies the desire for everlasting life. I also argue that this infinite horizon can motivate an ethic of social justice better than the necessity of building a life within a finite timeframe could. In this article I take Martin Hägglund's (...)
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  32.  51
    We are Building Gods: AI as the Anthropomorphised Authority of the Past.Carl Öhman - 2024 - Minds and Machines 34 (1):1-18.
    This article argues that large language models (LLMs) should be interpreted as a form of gods. In a theological sense, a god is an immortal being that exists beyond time and space. This is clearly nothing like LLMs. In an anthropological sense, however, a god is rather defined as the personified authority of a group through time—a conceptual tool that molds a collective of ancestors into a unified agent or voice. This is exactly what LLMs are. They are products of (...)
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  33.  10
    Metaphysical Desire.Eddo Evink & Kevin Kruiter - 2024 - Journal for Continental Philosophy of Religion:1-26.
    This article revisits the debate on the ‘religious and ethical readings’ of Derrida that was instigated by Martin Hägglund’s Radical Atheism. The impasse in this debate can be overcome in a new reading of Derrida’s work that combines the strong elements of the opposing interpretations. At the same time, this new and critical reading exposes an implicit metaphysical desire, a desire without desire, in Derrida’s work, the presuppositions and consequences of which are not well understood in all the other (...)
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  34.  27
    Derrida, Time, and Infinite Finitude.Ian Maclachlan - 2018 - Philosophy Today 62 (3):921-937.
    This article presents a critique of the influential reading of Derrida proposed by Martin Hägglund, focusing in particular on the latter’s account of time, différance, and finitude in Derrida’s work. It concludes that, at root, there is a persistent misapplication of a notion of the negative in Hägglund’s reading, and that this feature can most revealingly be linked to a misconception about Derrida’s conception of mortal limits.
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  35.  49
    Time and the Unity of Absolute Consciousness.Jakub Kowalewski - 2021 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 52 (3):223-235.
    The aim of this paper is to defend the thesis, found across the works of Edmund Husserl, that the most fundamental level of subjectivity – the so-called absolute consciousness – is given in time as an immediate unity. In order to do so, I first consider Martin Hägglund’s critique of the Husserlian absolute consciousness. My subsequent answer to Hägglund has two parts: firstly, I argue that Hägglund’s own account of subjectivity is contradictory; secondly, I offer a model of absolute (...)
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  36.  15
    “A Certain Way of Thinking”: Derrida, Weil and the Philippi Hymn.Stuart Jesson - 2021 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 5 (3):7-22.
    Toward the beginning of one of her notebooks, Simone Weil interrupts a dense series of reflections on war, force and prestige to write, in parentheses: “(To think on God, to love God, is nothing else than a certain way of thinking on the world.)” In some respects, this one sentence is a crystallization of everything Weil wrote about God. The thought of God is somehow inseparable from a new mode of attention to and valuation of things “here below”; that is, (...)
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  37. (1 other version)In search of the moral status of AI: why sentience is a strong argument.Martin Gibert & Dominic Martin - 2021 - AI and Society 1:1-12.
    Is it OK to lie to Siri? Is it bad to mistreat a robot for our own pleasure? Under what condition should we grant a moral status to an artificial intelligence system? This paper looks at different arguments for granting moral status to an AI system: the idea of indirect duties, the relational argument, the argument from intelligence, the arguments from life and information, and the argument from sentience. In each but the last case, we find unresolved issues with the (...)
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  38.  82
    Separably closed fields with Hasse derivations.Martin Ziegler - 2003 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 68 (1):311-318.
    In [6] Messmer and Wood proved quantifier elimination for separably closed fields of finite Ershov invariant e equipped with a (certain) Hasse derivation. We propose a variant of their theory, using a sequence of e commuting Hasse derivations. In contrast to [6] our Hasse derivations are iterative.
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  39.  40
    The Phenomenology of Religious Life.Martin Heidegger - 2004 - Indiana University Press.
    Publisher's description: The Phenomenology of Religious Life presents the text of Heidegger's important 1920621 lectures on religion. First published in 1995 as volume 60 of the Gesamtausgabe, the work reveals a young Heidegger searching for the striking language that eventually formed the mature expression of his thought. The volume consists of the famous lecture course "Introduction to the Phenomenology of Religion," a course on "Augustine and Neoplatonism," and notes for a course on "The Philosophical Foundations of Medieval Mysticism" that was (...)
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  40.  17
    The Right to Higher Education: A Political Theory.Christopher Martin - 2021 - Oxford University Press.
    "Is higher education a right, or a privilege? This author argues that all citizens in a free and open society should have an unconditional right to higher education. Such an education should be costless for the individual and open to everyone regardless of talent. A readiness and willingness to learn should be the only qualification. It should offer opportunities that benefit citizens with different interests and goals in life. And it should aim, as its foundational moral purpose, to help citizens (...)
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  41. El "Teeteto". Acerca de la naturaleza del saber propio de la filosofía primera.Martín Zubiria - 1986-1987 - Philosophica 9:97.
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  42.  6
    Enseñar y aprender filosofia a partir del pensar logotectónico.Martín Zubiria - 2005 - Phainomenon 10 (1):137-152.
    The aim of this essay is to consider what it means to teach and learn philosophy in accordance with logotectonic thinking. The contemporary obsession with critical thinking, incessant questioning, and addressing “current problems” gains its genuine philosophical meaning only in the light of logotectonic building, which is able to differentiate philo-sophical thinking- as thanks-giving and learning·from the sofia and what has been thought – from the modern-”meditation” (Besinnung) and the submodern “anarchic” reflection.
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  43. H. Boeder. Topologie der Metaphysik.Martín Zubiría - 1984 - Philosophia (Misc.) 45:93.
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  44.  16
    La idea boederiana del saber civil y su relación con el idealismo alemán.Martín Zubiria - 2018 - Isegoría 59:651-661.
    Recognize the “philo- sophia ” as such, this side of Postmodernism, means, starting from the surprising studies of Heribert Boeder, see it as a thought epochally built on a Wisdom, that is, on a initial Knowledge about the Destiny of Man. For the philo-sophical thought of the so-called “German Idealism”, that Wisdom is neither that of the Muses, as in the First epoch, neither the “Christian sapientia”, as in the Middle epoch, but the “Civil Consciousness” about Duty and Freedom.
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  45. Scheier, A.: Kierkegaards Aergernis. Die Logik der Faktizitaet in den "Philosophischen Rissen".Martín Zubiría - 1988 - Philosophia:275.
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  46. Sobre el presente de la filosofía.Martín Pedro Zubiria - 2003 - Laguna 13:167-182.
    Tanto la explicación de sentido de la modernidad como el lenguaje de la posmodernidad han rechazado la noción de presente intemporal conocida otrora por la filosofía. Aquí se quiere mostrar en qué sentido y por qué razón el novísimo pensamiento logotectónico permite recuperar aquella noción merced a una nueva distinción del presente.
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  47. Thcmason, Burke C., Making Sense of Reification. Alfred Schutz and Constructionist Theory.Martín Zubiría - 1988 - Philosophia:281.
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  48.  18
    Sums of at most 8 ordinals.Martin M. Zuckerman - 1973 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 19 (26‐29):435-446.
  49.  10
    Being and Truth.Martin Heidegger - 2010 - Indiana University Press.
    "Fried and Polt's translation of Martin Heidegger's Being and Truth is a well-crafted and careful rendering of an important and demanding volume of the Complete Works."-Andrew Mitchell, Emory University In these lectures, delivered in 1933-1934 while he was Rector of the University of Freiburg and an active supporter of the National Socialist regime, Martin Heidegger addresses the history of metaphysics and the notion of truth from Heraclitus to Hegel. First published in German in 2001, these two lecture courses (...)
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  50.  13
    Basic Concepts.Martin Heidegger - 1993 - Indiana University Press.
    . This is thinking that is alive, always green.Ó ÑReview of Metaphysics ÒThis translation . . . enlarges our historical view of the probing advances in Heidegger's thought.Ó ÑInternational Studies in Philosophy This clear translation ...
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