Results for ' totalitarian regimes'

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  1.  5
    Privacy in a Totalitarian Regime.Fatos Lubonja - 2001 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 68:237-254.
  2.  7
    Vasile Băncilă: an ethnic-spiritualist metaphysics banned by the totalitarian regime.Ion Dur - 2022 - Wilmington, Deleware: Vernon Press.
    This book is a rediscovery and examination of the thinking of Vasile Băncilă, a philosopher forbidden by the totalitarian regime of Nicolae Ceaușescu. The philosopher Lucian Blaga saw Băncilă as a threat to the spirit of the highest Romanian culture. It is estimated that Băncilă's work extends to 32 volumes, 17 of which have been published so far. With such a significant opus, Vasile Băncilă is, indisputably, a key figure in contemporary Romanian culture, particularly in the sphere of philosophy. (...)
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  3.  40
    Radical evil and banality of evil: Two faces of horror of totalitarian regimes from Hannah Arendt's perspective.Adolfo Jerónimo Botero & Yuliana Leal Granobles - 2013 - Universitas Philosophica 30 (60):99-126.
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  4.  21
    Apocalyptic elements and fear in totalitarian regimes.Ana Martinjak Ratej - 2011 - Disputatio Philosophica 13 (1):49-57.
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  5.  12
    Science and Education in a Totalitarian Regime: The Case of Slovakia.Juraj Sebesta & Rudolf Zajac - 1998 - Science & Education 7 (3):225-229.
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  6.  22
    The role of ideology for the self-preservation of a totalitarian regime.Richard Löwenthal - 1963 - Studies in East European Thought 3 (3):179-183.
  7. Science as a battlefield: Methodological and historical considerations on the misuse of science by totalitarian regimes of Central Europe.A. Hajduk - 1997 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 20 (2-3):216-221.
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  8.  18
    Just and Unjust Memory? The Moral Obligation to Remember All Victims of Wars and Totalitarian Regimes.Andrzej Kobyliński - 2020 - Journal of Military Ethics 19 (2):151-162.
    The main purpose of this article is to analyze the philosophical problem of just and unjust memory. There is a general consensus about commemorating fallen soldiers and killed civilians. But, unfor...
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  9.  9
    Ivan Foletti and Adrien Palladino, eds., Inventing Medieval Czechoslovakia 1918–1968: Between Slavs, Germans, and Totalitarian Regimes. (PARVA Convivia 3.) Rome: Viella, 2019. Paper. Pp. 197; black-and-white figures. €25. ISBN: 978-8-8331-3310-2. Table of contents available online at https://www.viella.it/libro/9788833133102. [REVIEW]Paul W. Knoll - 2022 - Speculum 97 (2):493-495.
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  10. What Is “Totalitarian” Today?Larry Alan Busk - 2023 - Philosophy Today 67 (1):35-49.
    This article reconsiders Hannah Arendt’s account of “totalitarianism” in light of the climate catastrophe and the apparent inability of our political-economic system to respond to it adequately. In the last two chapters of The Origins of Totalitarianism, Arendt focuses on the “ideology” of totalitarian regimes: a pathological denial of reality, a privileging of the ideological system over empirical evidence, and a simultaneous feeling of total impotence and total omnipotence—an analysis that maps remarkably well onto the climate zeitgeist. Thus, (...)
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  11.  13
    Totalitarian and Democratic Rhetoric as an Indicator of the Relations of Power in the Contemporary Information Society.Maryna Prepotenska, Inna Pronoza, Svitlana Naumkina, Tetiana Khlivniuk, Olha Marmilova & Oksana Patlaichuk - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (1 Sup1):350-376.
    The article is devoted to study of totalitarian and democratic types of rhetoric. The classical dichotomy of rhetorical influence has been discovered: monologic use of rhetoric as a verbal weapon through propaganda, demagoguery, populism, creation of the image of an enemy, division of society and dialogical use of rhetoric as consolidating communication, truth-seeking, social consent and understanding. It is shown that the trigger of democratic and totalitarian regimes is the existential of freedom. The active influence of the (...)
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  12.  20
    Several Considerations about the Totalitarian Personality Concept.Dan Ioan Dascalu - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 50:125-131.
    We consider that the research conducted on the totalitarian phenomenon has still remained a challenge for political philosophy and social sciences, even though most of the totalitarian regimes are now a matter of the past. However, its consequences and the threat of its reinvigoration have remained as well. Under the circumstances, the theoretical instruments that make possible an effective euristic approach of the phenomenon are particularly important. Among these instruments, the totalitarian personality concept occupies a foreground (...)
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  13.  61
    Totalitarian Language: Creating Symbols to Destroy Words.Juan Francisco Fuentes - 2013 - Contributions to the History of Concepts 8 (2):45-66.
    This article deals with totalitarianism and its language, conceived as both the denial and to some extent the reversal of liberalism and its conceptual framework. Overcoming liberal language meant not only setting up new political terminology, but also replacing words with symbols, ideas with sensations. This is why the standard political lexicon of totalitarianism became hardly more than a slang vocabulary for domestic consumption and, by contrast, under those regimes—mainly Italian fascism, Nazism, and Stalinism—a amboyant universe of images, sounds, (...)
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  14.  13
    Anti-totalitarian ambiguities: Jacob Talmon and Michael Oakeshott.Efraim Podoksik - 2008 - History of European Ideas 34 (2):206-219.
    Jacob Talmon and Michael Oakeshott represent two opposite tendencies in the anti-totalitarian world view. Both thinkers share many central features of this broad intellectual trend, such as the equation between the Soviet and Nazi regimes, Anglophilia and the rejection of the utopian quest. Yet this basic agreement should not distract us from significant differences in attitude and temperament. Talmon, like most other critics of totalitarianism, was strongly affected by the atmosphere of a profound intellectual and political crisis in (...)
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  15.  37
    Isaiah Berlin and the totalitarian mind.Cécile Hatier - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (6):767-782.
    One of the important—yet often underestimated—dimensions of the intellectual legacy of Isaiah Berlin is his contribution to the demystification of the totalitarian temptation in the twentieth century. This paper starts with an apparent paradox: Berlin is described as a major figure of the anti‐totalitarian camp, yet his writings nowhere touch explicitly on the totalitarian regimes of his time. Nonetheless, it is argued that Berlin's notion of “monism,” and his unique insight into the totalitarian mind, are (...)
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  16.  21
    The Totalitarian Horizon: Immanentism and our Tradition of Political Philosophy in Hannah Arendt.María Victoria Londoño B. - 2013 - Alpha (Osorno) 36:109-118.
    Este trabajo busca indagar sobre una posible interpretación del totalitarismo en el pensamiento de Hannah Arendt. Si bien es cierto que para Arendt el totalitarismo es un régimen político específico y delimitado en un contexto histórico particular, también es posible encontrar en su pensamiento una idea más amplia del totalitarismo en la estela de la crítica a la tradición de la filosofía política que la autora desarrolla. Según Arendt, esta tradición no habría hecho otra cosa que idear modos de gobierno (...)
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  17.  78
    Was the soviet union totalitarian? The view of soviet dissidents and the reformers of the gorbachev era.Jay Bergman - 1998 - Studies in East European Thought 50 (4):247-281.
    The article explains why Soviet dissidents and the reformers of the Gorbachev era chose to characterize the Soviet system as totalitarian. The dissidents and the reformers strongly disagreed among themselves about the origins of Soviet totalitarianism. But both groups stressed the effects of totalitarianism on the individual personality; in doing so, they revealed themselves to be the heirs of the tsarist intelligentsia. Although the concept of totalitarianism probably obscures more than it clarifies when it is applied to regimes (...)
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  18.  27
    China the Anomaly Hannah Arendt, Totalitarianism, and the Maoist Regime.Peter Baehr - 2010 - European Journal of Political Theory 9 (3):267-286.
    During the autumn of 1949, Hannah Arendt completed the manuscript of The Origins of Totalitarianism. On 1 October of the same year, the People’s Republic of China was founded under the leadership of Mao Zedong. This article documents Arendt’s claim in 1949 that the prospects of totalitarianism in China were ‘frighteningly good’, and yet her ambivalent judgment, on the eve of the Cultural Revolution, about the totalitarian character of the Maoist regime. Despite being the premier theorist of totalitarian (...)
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  19.  13
    Towards a Regime of Post-political Biopower? Dispatches from Greece, 2010–2012.Alexandros Kioupkiolis - 2014 - Theory, Culture and Society 31 (1):143-158.
    This article makes the case that Greece has witnessed a transition from a ‘post-democratic’ condition in the ’90 s and the early 21st century to a regime of ‘post-political biopower’ in 2010–12 that can bid democracy farewell. To adequately theorize this modality of power in a way pertinent to contemporary Greece, the paper takes its bearings from Agamben’s take on biopower, the homo sacer and the endless state of exception. But the analysis fills in Agamben’s theoretical skeleton by drawing on (...)
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  20.  37
    The Marxist Conceptual Framework and the Origins of Totalitarian Socialism.Allen Buchanan - 1986 - Social Philosophy and Policy 3 (2):127.
    One of the few things modern liberals, classical liberals, and conservatives can agree on is the charge that some of the worst features oftotalitarian socialist regimes have their origins in the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Nevertheless, the nature of this claim, and therefore the reasons for accepting or rejecting it, are oftenleft obscure. If it is understood simply as a causal statement, then it must be confirmed or disconfirmed by empirical social science. The political philosopher can (...)
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  21.  9
    Language "Lockdown" as a Mean of Totalitarian Manipulations.Vadym Tytarenko - 2022 - Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv Philosophy 2 (7):52-55.
    This article explores the role of language and ideology in Soviet philosophy and education. The author argues that the Soviet regime deliberately used philosophy as a tool for manipulation, with the aim of creating a common understanding that Marxism and Leninism are the only true doctrines of philosophy. The course of philosophy was mandatory at all levels of education and was fully standardized, with a focus on scientific grounds that only Marxist philosophy was valid. The article also highlights the role (...)
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  22.  11
    Against dictatorship. The face of the german democratic republic regime in the work of Jürgen Fuchs.Ernest Kuczyński - 2023 - Alpha (Osorno) 57:212-249.
    Resumen Jürgen Fuchs (1950-99) fue uno de los escritores nacidos en la RDA, cuyas biografías no solo fueron moldeadas por el régimen del SED, sino también deformadas con eficacia. Asimismo, fue uno de los pocos que trató expresiva y abruptamente los tabúes y mecanismos de un Estado gobernado de manera totalitaria. La obra literaria de Fuchs es un testimonio de época, un desafío al régimen comunista y a su legado contenido en los archivos de la Stasi. Por un lado, su (...)
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  23.  4
    astronomer/astronomy 319, 391 atheist 53–55 Athena 17 f. augury 13 auxilia/auxiliary 209 f., 249, 313 f., 327.Ancien Régime & Aphrodite ĺ Venus - 2010 - In Marco Formisano & Hartmut Böhme (eds.), War in Words: Transformations of War From Antiquity to Clausewitz. De Gruyter. pp. 19--425.
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  24.  11
    Life Narratives of the Past: Herta Müller on Communist Romania.Simona Mitroiu - 2019 - The European Legacy 24 (2):202-219.
    Narratives of the past are created and, in some cases, recreated, through literary works by revealing fragments from past traumas, reinterpreting past events, or focusing on historical events held in the collective memory. In a text dedicated to excavation and memory, Walter Benjamin notes that when approaching one’s personal past, one must proceed like a person digging in the ground, and not be afraid of returning repeatedly to the same matter. This essay argues that Herta Müller uses this method to (...)
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  25.  4
    The Păltiniș diary: a paideic model in humanist culture.Gabriel Liiceanu - 2000 - New York: CEU Press.
    The intellectual resistance to totalitarian regimes can take many forms. This remarkable volume portrays one such story of resistance in Romania during the reign of Ceausescu: that of Constantin Noica, one of the country's foremost intellectuals. The Paltinis Diary is a wonderful homage to an intellectual master and to the power of intellect and freedom. The book will be of interest to philosophers, non-philosophers alike, and to anyone who seeks to grasp the true meaning of survival under (...) conditions. (shrink)
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  26. trans. David Ames Curtis.Cornelius Castoriadis, Democracy as Procedure & Democracy as Regime - 1997 - Constellations 4 (1):2-3.
    In the intellectual confusion prevailing since the demise of Marxism and “marxism”, the attempt is made to define democracy as a matter of pure procedure, explicitly avoiding and condemning any reference to substantive objectives. It can easily be shown, however, that the idea of a purely procedural “democracy” is incoherent and self-contradictory. No legal system whatsoever and no government can exist in the absence of substantive conditions which cannot be left to chance or to the workings of the “market” but (...)
     
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  27. Comprensión política y experiencia de los totalitarismos en el pensamiento político de Hannah Arendt.Jerónimo Botero & Yuliana Leal - 2013 - Logos: Revista de la Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades 23:53-67.
    El propósito de este artículo es analizar la perspectiva de Hannah Arendt sobre el problema de la originalidad e incomprensibilidad del horror de los regímenes totalitarios, utilizando los testimonios de Primo Levi en Si esto es un hombre y Los hundidos y los salvados. Arendt considera que los campos de concentración y exterminio son la institución central de los regímenes totalitarios, en los cuales se intenta destruir la humanidad de las víctimas a través de prácticas de terror que no solo (...)
     
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  28.  27
    The Open Society and its Enemies.Karl R. Popper - 1945 - Princeton: Routledge. Edited by Alan Ryan & E. H. Gombrich.
    ‘If in this book harsh words are spoken about some of the greatest among the intellectual leaders of mankind, my motive is not, I hope, to belittle them. It springs rather from my conviction that, if our civilization is to survive, we must break with the habit of deference to great men.’ - Karl Popper, from the Preface Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in two volumes in 1945, Karl Popper’s _The Open Society and (...)
  29.  15
    The Rebel.Albert Camus & Anthony Bower - 2000 - Penguin Modern Classics.
    Translated by Anthony Bower With an Introduction by Oliver Todd 'A conscience with style' V.S. Pritchett The Rebel (1951) is Camus's 'attempt to understand the time I live in' and a brilliant essay on the nature of human revolt. Here he makes a daring critique of communism - how it had gone wrong behind the Iron Curtain and the resulting totalitarian regimes. And he questions two events held sacred by the left wing - the French Revolution of 1789 (...)
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  30. The Open Society and Its Enemies.Karl Raimund Popper - 2013 - Princeton: Princeton University Press. Edited by Alan Ryan & E. H. Gombrich.
    Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in 1945, Karl Popper's The Open Society and Its Enemiesis one of the most influential books of the twentieth century. Hailed by Bertrand Russell as a 'vigorous and profound defence of democracy', its now legendary attack on the philosophies of Plato, Hegel and Marx exposed the dangers inherent in centrally planned political systems. Popper's highly accessible style, his erudite and lucid explanations of the thought of great philosophers and (...)
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  31.  20
    On history's witness stand: Rubashov, bukharin, and the logic of totalitarianism.Peter Skagestad - 1988 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 31 (1):3 – 24.
    The replacement, under totalitarian regimes, of multiple sources of information with a single information monopoly confers an indeterminacy on the concepts of truth, fact, objectivity, and reality. From a pragmatist perspective, these words can then no longer mean exactly what they mean to speakers accustomed to freedom of discussion and inquiry. This corruption of discourse is detailed, e.g., in Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon, where criteria for belief?formation are ultimately completely divorced from the objects of belief. Like George (...)
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  32. The Open Society and its Enemies: The Spell of Plato.Karl Popper - 2002 - Routledge.
    ‘If in this book harsh words are spoken about some of the greatest among the intellectual leaders of mankind, my motive is not, I hope, to belittle them. It springs rather from my conviction that, if our civilization is to survive, we must break with the habit of deference to great men.’ - Karl Popper, from the Preface Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in two volumes in 1945, Karl Popper’s The Open Society and (...)
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  33.  2
    Exercises in the elements: essays, speeches, notes.Josef Pieper - 2016 - South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press. Edited by Daniel J. Farrelly.
    This title, which at first sight seems curious, shows Pieper's philosophical work as rooted in the basics. He takes his inspiration from Plato - and his Socrates - and Thomas Aquinas. With them, he is interested in philosophy as pure theory, the theoretical being precisely the non-practical. The philosophizer wants to know what all existence is fundamentally about, what "reality" "really" means. With Plato, Pieper eschews the use of language to convince an audience of anything which is not the truth. (...)
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  34.  6
    Memory and the integration. The European parliament’s 2019 resolution on European remembrance as a case study.Davide Barile - 2021 - Journal of European Integration 44.
    In September 2019, the European Parliament adopted a resolution that sparked controversy due to its equation of Nazism and Communism. The document made the USSR jointly responsible for the outbreak of the Second World War and accused the Russian government of whitewashing communist crimes and glorifying the Soviet totalitarian regime. This article presents the resolution as the latest expression of a broader discursive process that started with the accession process of the Central and Eastern European countries. To support this (...)
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  35.  23
    Language and Silence: Essays on Language, Literature, and the Inhuman.George Steiner - 1998 - Yale University Press.
    How do we evaluate the power and utility of language when it has been made to articulate falsehoods in certain totalitarian regimes or has been charged with vulgarity and imprecision in a mass-consumer democracy? How will language react to the increasingly urgent claims of more exact speech such as mathematics and symbolic notation? These are some of the questions Steiner addresses in this elegantly written book, first published in 1967 to international acclaim.
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  36.  17
    Deep Democracy: Community, Diversity, and Transformation.Judith M. Green - 1999 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Deeply understood, democracy is more than a "formal" institutional framework for which America provides the model, acting as a preferable alternative to the modern totalitarian regimes that have distorted social life around the world. At its core, as John Dewey understood, democracy is a realistic ideal, a desired and desirable future possibility that is yet-to-be. In this period of global crises in differing cultures, a shared environment, and an increasingly globalized political economy, this book provides a clear contemporary (...)
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  37.  10
    Medicine and State Violence.Esther Cuerda - 2019 - Conatus 4 (2):245.
    During the last decades, in different places and under different circumstances, some physicians and other health professionals have supported state violence. The Holocaust is a prime example for how doctors can cooperate with the state to plan, give ideological support to and implement violent policies. As a consequence of the Industrial Revolution, people gained access to health promotion and health protection, not as an achievement of the welfare state, but as a tool necessary to maintain healthy and more productive workers. (...)
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  38. The US foreign policy after 11 September 2001 – a kind of new pax americana?Cristian Alexandru - manuscript
    The 20th century was a bloody one, full of armed clashes which destroyed Europe, withered an entire generation’s hope of European-level peace. After the Versailles Treaty, the famous economist John Maynard Keynes uttered this prophecy: ”With such a peace treaty, you’ll be at war again within 20 years”. John Maxwell Coetzee, an important South-African novelist, called the 20th century “Satan’s century”. A tough statement yet extremely true unfortunately. Besides war, the past one hundred years also witnessed terrible totalitarian (...) occur, such as the Nazi and fascism. The hardness of those regimes at least equaled the suffering caused by the world wars. One wouldn’t be wrong to call such regimes state terrorism: a leader suppressing his own citizens just to satisfy his own fantasy. The hugeness of their deeds goes beyond human imagination according to the number of victims. A classical word of wisdom describes terrorism as follows: ”It kills a few, but terrifies more”. (shrink)
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  39.  15
    Molecular Revolution in Brazil.Karel Clapshow & Brian Holmes (eds.) - 2007 - Semiotext(E).
    Molecular Revolution in BrazilFélix Guattari and Suely Rolniktranslated by Karel Clapshow and Brian HolmesYes, I believe that there is a multiple people, a people of mutants, a people of potentialities that appears and disappears, that is embodied in social, literary, and musical events.... I think that we're in a period of productivity, proliferation, creation, utterly fabulous revolutions from the viewpoint of this emergence of a people. That's molecular revolution: it isn't a slogan or a program, it's something that I feel, (...)
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  40.  15
    Latin monastic orders and congregations in Ukraine: the realities and the project of a new stage of their relationship.Olena Danylyuk - 2013 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 66:347-354.
    Actuality of theme. At the end of the XX century, the religious life of Ukraine has undergone significant transformations. With the collapse of the totalitarian regime and the gaining of independence by Ukraine, religious communities were in a new socio-political and socio-cultural environment for themselves. There was a significant increase in the role of religious institutions in the development of civil society.
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  41.  13
    Behind the Limes: On the Quest for an Eastern Dimension of European Identity.Juraj Hocman - 2008 - Human Affairs 18 (1):107-114.
    Behind the Limes: On the Quest for an Eastern Dimension of European Identity Although the integration processes in Western Europe have been studied for decades, the idea of European identity as a specific area of scholarship is relatively new. This interest coincides with fundamental changes that have occurred in Europe since 1989 and that may impact the internal coherence of the enlarged European Union. Over the past decades, the East-West dichotomy has been magnified due to the impact of Communism in (...)
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  42. Problematising the problem of participation in art and politics.İbrahim Akkın - 2016 - In Mehmet Ali İçbay, Hasan Arslan & Francesco Sidoti (eds.), Research on Cultural Studies. Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften.
    After the collapse of the totalitarian regimes, participation into public matters has been an objective of democratic theory. Judging by a variety of instances from the sixties to today, it can be said that finding new means for encouraging audiences to participate in their works has become the major concern for contemporary art as well. Therefore, we can say that the problem of participation is the focal point of art and politics.
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  43.  18
    The Open Society and its Enemies: The Spell of Plato.Karl Raimund Popper - 2002 - Routledge.
    Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in 1945, Karl Popper's The Open Society and Its Enemies is one of the most influential books of the twentieth century. Hailed by Bertrand Russell as a 'vigorous and profound defence of democracy', its now legendary attack on the philosophies of Plato, Hegel and Marx exposed the dangers inherent in centrally planned political systems. Popper's highly accessible style, his erudite and lucid explanations of the thought of great philosophers (...)
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  44. Confucianism and Totalitarianism: An Arendtian Reconsideration of Mencius versus Xunzi.Lee Wilson - 2021 - Philosophy East and West 71 (4):981-1004.
    Totalitarianism is perhaps unanimously regarded as one of the greatest political evils of the last century and has been the grounds for much of Anglo-American political theory since. Confucianism, meanwhile, has been gaining credibility in the past decades among sympathizers of democratic theory in spite of criticisms of it being anti-democratic or authoritarian. I consider how certain key concepts in the classical Confucian texts of the Mencius and the Xunzi might or might not be appropriated for ‘legitimising’ totalitarian (...). Under an Arendtian approach to understanding totalitarianism, it is precisely an unproblematised relation to a normative History and Nature that underlies the potential compatibility or incompatibility. I argue against a longstanding prejudice that if any form of Confucianism would be totalitarian, it would have to be Xunzian. Against this, I hope to show that if any form of Confucianism would be totalitarian, it might well be a naturalistic Mencian Confucianism instead of a constructivist Xunzian one. (shrink)
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  45.  18
    What does «processing of the Рast» mean.Theodor Adorno & Vitaliy Mykolayovych Bryzhnik - 2018 - Філософія Освіти 22 (1):6-24.
    Adorno's work “What does‘processing of the Рast’ mean” for the first time was presented as a report on November 6, 1959 before the Coordination Council on Christian-Jewish Cooperation. In this work Adorno considered the essence of social ideology prevailing in postwar Germany, which predetermined the strategies of social reconciliation with the political crimes of the former national-socialist power. According to the philosopher the social ideology of the consumer society uses a large number of appropriate means to stabilize its dominant position (...)
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  46. The Open Society and its Enemies: The Spell of Plato.Karl Popper - 2002 - Routledge.
    Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in 1945, Karl Popper's _The Open Society and Its Enemies_ is one of the most influential books of the twentieth century. Hailed by Bertrand Russell as a 'vigorous and profound defence of democracy', its now legendary attack on the philosophies of Plato, Hegel and Marx exposed the dangers inherent in centrally planned political systems. Popper's highly accessible style, his erudite and lucid explanations of the thought of great philosophers (...)
     
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  47.  40
    In the Crosshairs of the Fourfold: Critical Thoughts on Aleksandr Dugin’s Heidegger.Matthew Sharpe - 2020 - Critical Horizons 21 (2):167-187.
    In Part 1, we situate Dugin’s interpretation of Heidegger in relation to the better known, broadly left-liberal approaches to interpreting Heidegger’s thought, stressing Dugin’s unusual focus on the German thinker’s “middle” or Nazi-era texts, and showing how this periodizing optic affects Dugin’s culminating reading of Sein und Zeit and its key axiological notion of authenticity (Part 1). Part 2 examines Dugin’s appropriation of Heidegger’s radically pessimistic, trans-epochal critique of Western thought, centring around his striking reading of the esoteric notion of (...)
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  48.  4
    Eugenics and the New Genetics in Britain: Examining Contemporary Professionals' Accounts.Amanda Amos, Sarah Cunningham-Burley & Anne Kerr - 1998 - Science, Technology and Human Values 23 (2):175-198.
    This article explores the accounts of eugenics made by a small but important group of British scientists and clinicians working on the new genetics as applied to human health. These scientists and clinicians used special rhetorical strategies for distancing the new genetics from eugenics and to sustain their professional autonomy. They drew a number of boundaries or distinctions between eugenics and their own field, describing eugenics as politically distorted "bad science, " as being technically unfeasible, a feature of totalitarian (...)
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  49.  11
    Sacrifice Imagined: Violence, Atonement, and the Sacred.Douglas Hedley - 2011 - Continuum International Publishing Group.
    ’Sacrifice Imagined’ is an original exploration of the idea of sacrifice by one of the world’s pre-eminent philosophers of religion. Despisers of religion have poured scorn upon the idea of sacrifice as an index of the irrational and wicked in religious practice. Nor does its secularised form seem much more appealing. One need only think of the appalling cult of sacrifice in numerous totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century. Yet, sacrifice remains a part of our cultural and intellectual (...)
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  50. Bertrand Russell: the colours of pacifism.Claudio Giulio Anta - 2023 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Bertrand Russell: The Colours of Pacifism analyzes the tenacious commitment of one of the twentieth century's most extraordinary intellectuals to the cause of civilization, progress, and human rights. Through his active and pragmatic pacifism, Russell sought to confront the problems stemming from the unstable and dramatic political conditions of his age: the beginning of the Great War, the establishment of the League of Nations, the rise of totalitarian regimes, the outbreak of the Second World War, the dawn of (...)
     
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