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subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
Nozick develops new views on philosophy’s central topics and weaves them into a unified perspective.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
Questions the spectropoetics that Marx allowed to invade his discourse.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
Lives of the Eminent Philosophers of Diogenes Laertius is a crucial source for much of what we know about the origins of philosophy in ancient Greece.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
History Of Western Philosophy was published in 1946. A dazzlingly ambitious project, it remains unchallenged to this day as the ultimate introduction to Western philosophy.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
The collection is an indispensable resource for anyone interested in twentieth-century philosophy.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
A fresh translation of The New Science, with detailed footnotes that will help both the scholar and the new reader navigate Vico's masterpiece The New Science is the major work of Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
A book to raise the spirits and warm the heart. Includes the famous Kindergarten essay that was read on the floor of the U.S. Senate.From the Hardcover edition.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
This translation of The History of Madness in the Classical Age is the first English edition of the original, complete French text and includes important material that until now was unavailable.
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
With intellectual reference points that include Foucault and Freud, Wittig, Kristeva and Irigaray, this is one of the most talked-about scholarly works of the past fifty years and is perhaps the essential work of contemporary feminist ...
subject:"Philosophy General" from books.google.com
Above all, the reader will gain from this book a firm grasp of the structure of evolutionary theory, the evidence for it, and the scope of its explanatory significance.