Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Divine Complex and Free Thinking [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 256 pages, weight: 333 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Oct-2012
  • Leidėjas: Hampton Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1612891020
  • ISBN-13: 9781612891026
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 256 pages, weight: 333 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Oct-2012
  • Leidėjas: Hampton Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1612891020
  • ISBN-13: 9781612891026
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The text presents arguments, demonstrating what domain belongs to philosophy and what areas are ""unphilosophical"" and at time ""antiphilosophical."" The ""unphilosophical"" systems are claims are based on the notion--even if not explicit--of ""man as the measure of things,"" while the unphilosophical"" trend consists of pronouncements whose veracity is not to be questioned. Since philosophy, in principle, is a quest for rational justification of any claim, then its questioning of those pronouncements leads to the denouncement and, in principle, forbidding, destruction of philosophical writings and philosophers. The argument is extended to disclose that both mentioned trends end up in ""metaphysics of the will"" wherein the human self-understanding as not only the measure, but also the ""creator"" of all things through the scientific-technical, is hence isometric with the antiphilosophical trends and its pronouncements of the supremacy of the will of the creator. At this level, modern ""philosophical"" trends become identical with the metaphysics of the will--divine complex.

Counter to this trend is the philosophical classical tradition whose first principle is ""fallible reason"" and resultantly a demand and a duty to contest every claim, to find arguments for and against any position and its claim to the ""only truth."" Philosophy demands not only arguments, but a direct evidence in unhindered and uninterpreted phenomena--leading to the denial that ""man is the measure of all things."" The text purports to explicate--at the end--an ontological position that is also epistemological in order to encompass the classical notion of the primacy of the perceivable things of the world, but also of the principles of their space-time unfolding. At this level, there is a critique of the principles of ""first philosophies,"" both in their ontological and metaphysical forms
Introduction 1(4)
1 The Magic of Power
5(16)
Introduction
5(10)
Benevolence and Tyranny
15(6)
2 Metaphysics of Will and Supreme Authority
21(17)
Transcendence
35(3)
3 Modern Western Modes of Thought
38(67)
Modern West and Technology
55(1)
Introduction
55(7)
Method and Reality
62(4)
Interpreting Basic Reality---the Given
66(3)
Formal Systems
69(4)
All Facts are Contingent
73(3)
Modern Western Conception of Power
76(5)
The Modern Western Concept of Progress
81(15)
All Are Being Watched
96(9)
4 Anarchistic Knowledge-Action
105(36)
Introduction
105(3)
Variations of Anarchistic Conception
108(2)
Anarchy and Terror
110(2)
Pure Anarchy
112(10)
Social Variants of Anarchy
122(6)
The Bases of Modern Western Anarchy
128(7)
Modern Western Subject as a Global Standard for Individualism
135(6)
5 Self-Inclusion
141(30)
Criticism and New Dogmas
154(17)
6 The Birth of Political State from Tragic Myths
171(12)
Introduction
171(9)
Promethean Myth
180(3)
7 Birth of Philosophy
183(40)
The Way of Philosophy
184(20)
The Dissolution of Political Ethos and Philosophy
204(6)
War between Athens and Sparta
210(2)
Juridical State and Freedom
212(11)
8 Speculative Philosophies
223
Introduction
223(2)
First Philosophies
225(11)
Conjunction
236