Results for 'Russon, John'

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  1.  20
    Selfhood, Conscience, and Dialectic in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit.John E. Russon - 1991 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 29 (4):533-550.
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  2.  28
    Russon, John. The Self and Its Body in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. [REVIEW]Christopher Field - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (1):169-171.
  3.  24
    Review of John Russon, Reading Hegel's Phenomenology[REVIEW]John McCumber - 2005 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2005 (6).
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  4.  10
    John Russon's Achievement: The Impossible Experience of Adulthood.Peter Gratton - 2023 - Symposium 27 (2):20-45.
    My hypothesis is that achieving adulthood has been Russon’s aim from the beginning—in life, yes, as perhaps with the rest of us—but also in and as his philosophical development. To set up this claim, I show how philosophy has traditionally conjoined its own development with narratives of adulthood. I turn to important moments in Plato, Descartes, and Kant to set out the outlines of a given structure of maturation as found in the Western tradition, all to bring home how Russon’s (...)
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  5.  10
    John Russon, The Self and Its Body in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit , pp. xiv + 199. ISBN 0-8020-0919-0.James Thomas - 1999 - Hegel Bulletin 20 (1-2):129-133.
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  6. John Russon and John Sallis, eds., Retracing the Platonic Text. [REVIEW]Kevin Corrigan - 2001 - Philosophy in Review 21:373-375.
     
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  7. Michael Bauer and John Russon, eds., Hegel and the Tradition: Essays in Honour of BS Harris Reviewed by.Mark T. Conard - 1999 - Philosophy in Review 19 (1):1-3.
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  8.  11
    Patricia Fagan and John Russon, eds. , Reexaming Socrates in the Apology . Reviewed by.Aaron James Landry - 2011 - Philosophy in Review 31 (1):33-35.
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  9.  11
    John Russon. Infinite Phenomenology: The Lessons of Hegel’s Science of Experience. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0-8101-3190-3 . Pp xxx+392. £39.95. [REVIEW]Filip Niklas - 2019 - Hegel Bulletin 40 (3):519-522.
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  10.  13
    Russon's Plato.Sean D. Kirkland - 2023 - Symposium 27 (2):97-107.
    This essay offers an assessment of some of the fundamental features and contributions of John Russon’s scholarship on the dialogues of Plato. It focusses on the interpretive method he refers to as “reading as agents of nemesis” and on Russon’s unique emphasis on experience as the ground of philosophical activity in the Platonic corpus. I close by raising two issues that I see as fundamental questions that Russon’s work on Plato leaves unanswered—the difference in ontology, and thus method, between (...)
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  11.  8
    Russon's Method of Authorless Description.Gregory Kirk - 2023 - Symposium 27 (2):108-133.
    In this article, I present John Russon’s phenomenological method of authorless description. I trace this method to Russon’s engagement with Aristotle, Hegel, and Heidegger. Speci????ically, I claim that he is informed by Aristotle’s practice of accounting for appearances, Hegel’s method of presuppositionless science, and Heidegger’s project of preparation to “let being be.” I apply this to Russon’s book, Sites of Exposure, and his account of both the human need to transcend the home towards an open-ended realm of indifference and (...)
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  12. Michael Baur & John Russon eds’s Hegel And The Tradition: Essays In Honour Of H S Harris. [REVIEW]Will Dudley - 2001 - Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 43:72-79.
     
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  13.  12
    Eros as Initiation: Russon on Desire, Culture, and Responsibility.Whitney Howell - 2023 - Symposium 27 (2):46-65.
    This article considers how John Russon’s original analyses of sexuality in Bearing Witness to Epiphany: Persons, Things, and the Nature of Erotic Life and in relevant articles address the relation between erotic desire and the familiar cultural narratives that describe and set the terms for engaging in erotic experience. I show how, according to Russon, erotic experience is an initiation into our responsibilities within and for an interpersonal reality that challenges speci????ic cultural narratives about sexuality and the pre-sumption that (...)
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  14. John Russon, Reading Hegel's Phenomenology. [REVIEW]Charles Rodger - 2005 - Philosophy in Review 25:340-343.
     
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  15.  55
    Priming primates: Human and otherwise.Mark Chen, Tanya L. Chartrand, Annette Y. Lee-Chai & John A. Bargh - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (5):685-686.
    The radical nub of Byrne & Russon's argument is that passive priming effects can produce much of the evidence of higher-order cognition in nonhuman primates. In support of their position we review evidence of similar behavioral priming effects n humans. However, that evidence further suggests that even program-level imitative behavior can be produced through priming.
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  16.  25
    Review of Infinite Phenomenology: The Lessons of Hegel's Science of Experience by John Russon. [REVIEW]Michael Vater - unknown
    Russon suggests a pedagogy of cross-cultural awareness that can be derived from taking chapters of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit as a pattern for solving contemporary problems involving racial, ethnic, cultural and religious conflict.
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  17.  15
    Michael Baur and John Russon , Hegel and the Tradition: Essays in Honour of H.S. Harris , pp. xv + 349. ISBN 0-8020-0927-1. [REVIEW]Will Dudley - 2001 - Hegel Bulletin 22 (1-2):72-79.
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  18.  32
    Human experience: Philosophy, neurosis and the elements of everyday life. By John Russon.Glenn Morrison - 2008 - Heythrop Journal 49 (3):535–536.
  19.  68
    Reexamining Socrates in the Apology. Edited by Patricia Fagan and John Russon.Robin Waterfield - 2011 - Heythrop Journal 52 (1):115-116.
  20.  15
    The Self and Its Body in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. [REVIEW]Christopher Field - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (1):169-170.
    John Russon offers an engaging analysis of Hegel’s notion of embodiment, which, though not given priority in the Hegelian corpus, affords an enriching understanding of Hegel’s notion of sociality. Admittedly, Hegel does not offer those attempting to derive from his work a philosophy of embodiment a wealth of resources. Moreover, his few remarks on the body do not seem to fulfill his own philosophic criteria and aims, and so fail to offer an entirely self-developing position concerning human embodiment. However, (...)
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  21.  14
    A Phenomenological Account of the Conditions of Transnational Feminism.Shannon Hoff - 2023 - Symposium 27 (2):66-82.
    In Sites of Exposure, John Russon draws on the resources of phenomenology to describe how human life, while not having a “given” form specified in advance, nonetheless takes speci????ic shape through practices by which we become committed to certain ways of living. This means that our lives are simultaneously a matter of living with a speci????ic reality—what Russon calls “home”—and having to respond to an outside to which we are “exposed.” I argue here that Russon’s analysis is especially useful (...)
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  22.  59
    The Open Figure of Experience and Mind.David Morris - 2006 - Dialogue 45 (2):315-326.
    This review of John Russon's Human Experience: Philosophy, Neurosis, and the Elements of Everyday Life focuses on Russon's position that experience is open (having a developmental, situated and dynamic, rather than fixed, structure) and figured (having a structure inseparable from forms of bodily function), and that mind is something learned in the process of working out experience as figured and open. These themes are drawn together in relation to recent scientific discussions (e.g., of bodily dynamics, mirror neurons, robotic systems (...)
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  23.  83
    How to Study Animal Minds.Kristin Andrews - 2020 - Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press.
    The birth of a new science is long, drawn out, and often fairly messy. Comparative psychology has its roots in Darwin’s Descent of Man, was fertilized in academic psychology departments, and has branched across the universities into departments of biology, anthropology, primatology, zoology, and philosophy. Both the insights and the failings of comparative psychology are making their way into contemporary discussions of artificial intelligence and machine learning (Chollett 2019; Lapuschkin et al. 2019; Watson 2019). It is the right time to (...)
  24.  3
    The other in perception: a phenomenological account of our experience of other persons.Susan Bredlau - 2018 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Demonstrates the unique, pervasive, and overwhelmingly important role of other people within our lived experience. Drawing on the original phenomenological work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Edmund Husserl, Simone de Beauvoir, and John Russon, as well as recent research in child psychology, The Other in Perception argues for perception’s inherently existential significance: we always perceive a world and not just objective facts. The world is the rich domain of our personal and interpersonal lives, and central to this world is the role (...)
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  25. Utilitarianism, liberty, representative government.John Stuart Mill - 1972 - London,: Dent.
    John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) was a British philosopher, political economist, civil servant, and Member of Parliament.
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  26.  40
    Time, Memory, Institution: Merleau-Ponty's New Ontology of Self.David Morris & Kym Maclaren - 2015 - Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
    This collection is the first extended investigation of the relation between time and memory in Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s thought as a whole as well as the first to explore in depth the significance of his concept of institution. It brings the French phenomenologist’s views on the self and ontology into contemporary focus. Time, Memory, Institution argues that the self is not a self-contained or self-determining identity, as such, but is gathered out of a radical openness to what is not self, and (...)
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  27.  67
    Ethics.John Aristotle & Warrington - 1950 - New York,: Dutton. Edited by J. A. K. Thomson.
    We will next speak of Liberality. Now this is thought to be the mean state, having for its object-matter Wealth: I mean, the Liberal man is praised not in the circumstances of war, nor in those which constitute the character of perfected self-mastery, nor again in judicial decisions, but in respect of giving and receiving Wealth, chiefly the former. By the term Wealth I mean all those things whose worth is measured by money.
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  28.  35
    Hegel’s Critique of Representation.Joshua Rayman - 2005 - Idealistic Studies 35 (2-3):137-154.
    Recently, philosophy of language has swept through the community of Hegel scholarship. Since the early 1980s, Hegel scholars, such as John McCumber, Willem De Vries, Rodney Coltman, John Russon, Frank Schalow, Irene Harvey, and Henry Sussman, have imputed to Hegel the notion that the problems of philosophy are problems of language. What these readings ignore is that theessential systematic obstacle in Hegel is representation, not language as such. Hence, any Hegelian resolution of philosophical problems involves the speculative overcoming (...)
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  29. Loneliness in medicine and relational ethics: A phenomenology of the physician-patient relationship.John D. Han, Benjamin W. Frush & Jay R. Malone - 2024 - Clinical Ethics 19 (2):171-181.
    Loneliness in medicine is a serious problem not just for patients, for whom illness is intrinsically isolating, but also for physicians in the contemporary condition of medicine. We explore this problem by investigating the ideal physician-patient relationship, whose analogy with friendship has held enduring normative appeal. Drawing from Talbot Brewer and Nir Ben-Moshe, we argue that this appeal lies in a dynamic form of companionship incompatible with static models of friendship-like physician-patient relationships: a mutual refinement of embodied virtue that draws (...)
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  30.  75
    “Virtual Hegel”: International Association for Philosophy and Literature, Villanova University, May 11, 1995.Martin Donougho - 1995 - The Owl of Minerva 27 (1):122-122.
    As part of the 1995 IAPL meeting devoted to “Incorporations: Virtual Reality,” John Russon organized and chaired a session on the theme “Virtual Hegel.” Participants were asked to address the issue of Hegel and the postmodern, and to facilitate discussion their papers were circulated in advance.
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  31.  44
    Philosophy of religion.John Hick - 1973 - Englewood Cliffs, N.J.,: Prentice-Hall.
  32.  27
    Religion, Multiculturalism, and Phenomenology as a Critical Practice: Lessons from the Algerian War of Independence.Laura McMahon - 2020 - Puncta 3 (1):1-26.
    In the Algerian War of Independence, women famously used both traditional and modern clothing as part of their revolutionary efforts against French colonialism. This paper uncovers some of the principal lessons of this historical episode through a phenomenological exploration of agency, religion, and political transformation. Part I draws primarily on the philosophical insights of Martin Heidegger and Maurice Merleau-Ponty alongside the memoirs of Zohra Drif, a young woman member of the Algerian Front de Libération Nationale, in order to explore the (...)
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  33. The moral inefficacy of carbon offsetting.Tyler M. John, Amanda Askell & Hayden Wilkinson - forthcoming - Australasian Journal of Philosophy.
    Many real-world agents recognise that they impose harms by choosing to emit carbon, e.g., by flying. Yet many do so anyway, and then attempt to make things right by offsetting those harms. Such offsetters typically believe that, by offsetting, they change the deontic status of their behaviour, making an otherwise impermissible action permissible. Do they succeed in practice? Some philosophers have argued that they do, since their offsets appear to reverse the adverse effects of their emissions. But we show that (...)
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  34.  27
    Virtue, Ethics, and Neurosis.Paul Gyllenhammer - 2011 - Schutzian Research 3:153-163.
    Aristotle’s account of virtue is criticized through John Russon’s existential phenomenology of the human being. For Russon, neurosis is a characteristic of human being, whereas Aristotle would say that neurotic tensions do not arise in genuinely good people. The essay argues that an Aristotelian attitude engenders a particularly destructive form of neurosis by not recognizing the inherently dynamic nature of human identity. The essay seeks to build a theory of virtue that resists the idea of human fulfillment as ending (...)
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  35.  59
    One principle and three fallacies of disability studies.John Harris - 2001 - Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (6):383-387.
    My critics in this symposium illustrate one principle and three fallacies of disability studies. The principle, which we all share, is that all persons are equal and none are less equal than others. No disability, however slight, nor however severe, implies lesser moral, political or ethical status, worth or value. This is a version of the principle of equality. The three fallacies exhibited by some or all of my critics are the following: Choosing to repair damage or dysfunction or to (...)
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  36.  55
    Consent and end of life decisions.John Harris - 2003 - Journal of Medical Ethics 29 (1):10-15.
    This paper discusses the role of consent in decision making generally and its role in end of life decisions in particular. It outlines a conception of autonomy which explains and justifies the role of consent in decision making and criticises some misapplications of the idea of consent, particular the role of fictitious or “proxy” consents.Where the inevitable outcome of a decision must be that a human individual will die and where that individual is a person who can consent, then that (...)
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  37. Existentialism.John Macquarrie - 1972 - Philadelphia,: Westminster.
    There are already many excellent books on existentialism. Some of them deal with particular problem or particular existentialist writers. Most of those that deal with existentialism as a whole divide their subject-matter according to authors, presenting chapters on Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Sartre, and the rest. Thus I think that there is room for the present book, which attempts a comprehensive examination and evaluation of existentialism, but does so by thematic treatment. That is to say, each chapter deals with a major theme (...)
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  38. Organ procurement: dead interests, living needs.John Harris - 2003 - Journal of Medical Ethics 29 (3):130-134.
    Cadaver organs should be automatically availableThe shortage of donor organs and tissue for transplantation constitutes an acute emergency which demands radical rethinking of our policies and radical measures. While estimates vary and are difficult to arrive at there is no doubt that the donor organ shortage costs literally hundreds of thousands of lives every year. “In the world as a whole there are an estimated 700 000 patients on dialysis . . .. In India alone 100 000 new patients present (...)
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  39.  18
    Emergence and How One Might Live.Anthony Machum - 2012 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 1:1-2012.
    This thesis uses Manuel DeLanda's realist emergentist ontology to indicate a foundation for an ethics of open possibility and experimentation. DeLanda's emergentist ontology will be used as a bridge that links nature as a creative system to human life as self-consciously creative. As an emergent goal of human life as such, personal experimentation has an irreducibly ethical dimension. I will argue that John Russon's concept of mutual equal recognition or universality-as-sharedness best explicates the ethical implications implied by but not (...)
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  40.  44
    The Self and Its Body in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit (review).Robert Berman - 1998 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 36 (4):636-637.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Self and Its Body in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit by John RussonRobert BermanJohn Russon. The Self and Its Body in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1997. Pp. xv + 199. Cloth, $60.00To intoduce his account of the human body, Russon places two epigraphs at the front of his book, one from Diogenes Laertius, the other from Artaud. The first tells of Zeno, (...)
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  41.  26
    Multimodal film analysis: how films mean.John A. Bateman - 2012 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Karl-Heinrich Schmidt.
    Analysing film. Distinguishing the filmic contribution to meaning -- Examples of filmic "textual organisation" -- Redrawing boundaries -- Organisation of the book -- Semiotics and documents. Semiotics and its relations to film -- The nature of discourse semantics -- The film as cinematographic document -- A combined view: filmic documents for filmic discourse -- Constructing the semiotic mode of film. Semiotic multimodality -- The internal organisation of semiotic strata -- Composing and combining semiotic modes -- Materiality and "epistemological commitment" -- (...)
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  42. Dissertations and discussions.John Stuart Mill - 1859 - New York,: Haskell House Publishers.
  43.  29
    Sharing Vocabularies: Towards Horizontal Alignment of Values-Driven Business Functions.Mollie Painter, Sareh Pouryousefi, Sally Hibbert & Jo-Anna Russon - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 155 (4):965-979.
    This paper highlights the emergence of different ‘vocabularies’ that describe various values-driven business functions within large organizations and argues for improved horizontal alignment between them. We investigate two established functions that have long-standing organizational histories: Ethics and Compliance and Corporate Social Responsibility. By drawing upon research on organizational alignment, we explain both the need for and the potential benefit of greater alignment between these values-driven functions. We then examine the structural and socio-cultural dimensions of organizational systems through which E&C and (...)
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  44.  45
    I—John Dupré: Living Causes.John Dupré - 2013 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 87 (1):19-37.
    This paper considers the applicability of standard accounts of causation to living systems. In particular it examines critically the increasing tendency to equate causal explanation with the identification of a mechanism. A range of differences between living systems and paradigm mechanisms are identified and discussed. While in principle it might be possible to accommodate an account of mechanism to these features, the attempt to do so risks reducing the idea of a mechanism to vacuity. It is proposed that the solution (...)
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  45.  51
    I—John Dupré: Living Causes.John Dupré - 2013 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 87 (1):19-37.
    This paper considers the applicability of standard accounts of causation to living systems. In particular it examines critically the increasing tendency to equate causal explanation with the identification of a mechanism. A range of differences between living systems and paradigm mechanisms are identified and discussed. While in principle it might be possible to accommodate an account of mechanism to these features, the attempt to do so risks reducing the idea of a mechanism to vacuity. It is proposed that the solution (...)
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  46.  6
    Time and myth.John S. Dunne - 1973 - Notre Dame [Ind.]: University of Notre Dame Press.
    The reviews of this book which greeted its appearance in America, where it won a Catholic Press Association Religious Book Award, speak for themselves. 'The real core of the book is the question that is raised - the demanding bone-crushing question we all face - alone - at one time - the question of death/life and immortality. In these few pages we set out on a journey - one that winds its way among ancient stories and myths ... one's constant (...)
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  47.  80
    Alcinous: The Handbook of Platonism.John Dillon (ed.) - 1993 - New York: Clarendon Press.
    John Dillon presents an English translation of Alcinous' Handbook of Platonism, accompanied by an introduction and a philosophical commentary which explain the ideas in the work and show their intellectual and historical context. The Handbook purports to be an introduction to the doctrines of Plato, but in fact gives us an excellent survey of Platonist thought in the second century AD.
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  48.  17
    One principle and a fourth fallacy of disability studies.John Harris - 2002 - Journal of Medical Ethics 28 (3):204-204.
    This brief paper shows that the idea of benefits to the subject compensating for the harms of disability is at best self defeating and at worst sinister. Equally benefits to third parties while real are dubious as compensating factors. This shows that disabilities are just that, a net loss and not a net gain.
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  49. Ethical relativism.John Ladd - 1973 - Belmont, Calif.,: Wadsworth Pub. Co..
    Herodotus. Custom is king.--Engels, F. Ethics and law: eternal truths.--Sumner, W. G. Folkways.--Ross, W. D. The meaning of right.--Duncker, K. Ethical relativity?--Herskovits, M. J. Cultural relativism and cultural values.--Kluckhohn, C. Ethical relativity: sic et non.--Taylor, P. W. Social science and ethical relativism.--Ladd, J. The issue of relativism.--Redfield, R. The universally human and the culturally variable.--Bibliography (p. 145-146).
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  50.  80
    Max Horkheimer and the foundations of the Frankfurt School.John Abromeit - 2011 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book provides an intellectual biography of Max Horkheimer during the early and middle phases of his life and analyzes his model of early Critical Theory.
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