Results for 'European consciousness'

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  1.  17
    On the purity of European consciousness in the existential anthropology of early M. Heidegger.V. B. Okorokov - 2022 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 21:137-150.
    _Purpose._ The purity of consciousness in European culture has practically been turned into an abstraction. Because of this, there are so many discrepancies in understanding its nature. For Heidegger, the question of the purity of human consciousness remains open. Our purpose is to study the purity of European consciousness in the work of M. Heidegger. _Theoretical basis._ We draw on the deep foundations of existential, phenomenological, hermeneutic, religious-philosophical and postmodern Western and Eastern thought. _Originality._ While (...)
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  2.  6
    The mutation of European consciousness and spirituality: from the mythical to the modern.Willy Obrist - 2014 - London: Karnac Books. Edited by Reinhard Buerger.
    What is new about the present study is that the author approaches the religious metamorphosis from the perspective of the evolution of consciousness itself. The result of his exploration made the author realize that the development of European consciousness was not just an accidental historical process.
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  3.  6
    The Cosmopolitan Evolution: Travel, Travel Narratives, and the Revolution of the Eighteenth Century European Consciousness.Matthew Binney - 2006 - Lanham, MD: Upa.
    Working from the concept of cosmopolitanism and incorporating textual evidence from philosophy, drama of the English Renaissance, seventeenth-century travel narratives, and eighteenth-century literature, The Cosmopolitan Evolution, explores the interactions between the European consciousness and the foreign. The book also chronicles the development of cosmopolitanism from a form of representative universalism, which seeks to enfold all humans under on ideal, towards complex universalism, which seeks to account for alternate and particular views.
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  4.  4
    The cosmopolitan evolution: travel, travel narratives, and the revolution of the eighteenth century European consciousness.Matthew Binney - 2006 - Lanham, MD: University Press of America.
    Working from the concept of cosmopolitanism and incorporating textual evidence from philosophy, drama of the English Renaissance, seventeenth-century travel narratives, and eighteenth-century literature, The Cosmopolitan Evolution, explores the interactions between the European consciousness and the foreign. The book also chronicles the development of cosmopolitanism from a form of representative universalism, which seeks to enfold all humans under on ideal, towards complex universalism, which seeks to account for alternate and particular views.
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  5.  5
    On the Purity of European Consciousness and the Limits of Being-Time in the Existential Anthropology of the Late M. Heidegger.Viktor Okorokov - 2022 - Philosophy and Cosmology 9 (29):88-115.
    The issue of the European thinkers’ purity of consciousness is studied from the standpoint of the later M. Heidegger (in polemic with F.J. Gonzales and T. Sheehan). The article shows that Heidegger, having embarked upon the searching for new thinking, chooses the European thinking origins and, starting from the “Contributions to Philosophy (of the Event)”, he already refuses to distinguish between being and time, that is, he is looking for a third principle (thinking) for their joint grip. (...)
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  6.  21
    Ruptures and traumas in central European consciousness: Czech history as a test case.Jaroslav Krejci - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):365-376.
  7.  10
    Margins of Disorder: New Liberalism and the Crisis of European Consciousness.Ben Jackson - 2006 - Contemporary Political Theory 5 (4):500-502.
  8.  17
    Margins of Disorder: New Liberalism and the Crisis of European Consciousness.Michael Lewis - 2006 - Contemporary Political Theory 5 (4):500-502.
  9.  15
    Consciousness and society: the reorientation of European social thought, 1890-1930.Henry Stuart Hughes - 1974 - New York: Octagon Books.
  10.  9
    American and European Guidelines on Disorders of Consciousness : Ethical Challenges of Implementation.Michele Farisco & Arleen Salles - forthcoming - Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation.
    The recently published Guidelines on Disorders of Consciousness by the European Academy of Neurology and by the American Academy of Neurology in collaboration with the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research stand as the most ambitious international attempts to provide clear and standardized recommendations to clinicians working with patients with DoCs. They offer an updated, timely, and wide-ranging list of recommendations for the diagnosis, prognosis, and clinical care of (...)
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  11. Consciousness and Society, The Reorientation of European Social Thought, 1890-1930.H. Stuart Hughes - 1973 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 163:65-67.
     
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  12. Schizophrenia, consciousness, and the self.Louis A. Sass & Josef Parnas - 2003 - Schizophrenia Bulletin 29 (3):427-444.
    In recent years, there has been much focus on the apparent heterogeneity of schizophrenic symptoms. By contrast, this article proposes a unifying account emphasizing basic abnormalities of consciousness that underlie and also antecede a disparate assortment of signs and symptoms. Schizophrenia, we argue, is fundamentally a self-disorder or ipseity disturbance that is characterized by complementary distortions of the act of awareness: hyperreflexivity and diminished self-affection. Hyperreflexivity refers to forms of exaggerated self-consciousness in which aspects of oneself are experienced (...)
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  13.  60
    The Discovery of the Mind: The Greek Origins of European Thought.Bruno Snell - 2013 - Harper & Row.
    European thought begins with the Greeks. Scientific and philosophic thinking--the pursuit of truth and the grasping of unchanging principles of life--is a historical development, an achievement; and, as Bruno Snell writes in The Discovery of the Mind, nothing less than a revolution. The Greeks did not take mental resources already at their disposal and merely map out new subjects for discussion and investigation. In poetry, drama, and philosophy they in fact discovered the human mind. The stages in man's gradual (...)
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  14.  28
    Randall Jarrell and the European refugee consciousness: Psychological breakdown and social insanity.Doris Z. Fleischer - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (4):1414-1420.
  15.  28
    Media events and European visions: Czech Republic in the 2007 Eurovision Song Contest.Václav Štětka - 2009 - Communications 34 (1):21-38.
    In this article, the author deals with the relationship between the supposed socio-integrative role of media events, as defined by Dayan and Katz, and the processes of European integration and identity building. He focuses specifically on the Eurovision Song Contest and the way it has been historically promoted as a tool for raising European consciousness, as well as on the difficulties with maintaining this role in the context of the growing number of participating countries. These issues are (...)
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  16.  23
    European Identity and National Characteristics in the Historia philosophica of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.Gregorio Piaia - 1996 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 34 (4):593-605.
    Notes and Discussions European Identity and National Characteristics in the Historia philosophica of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Philosophy proper commences in the West. It is in the West that this freedom of self- consciousness first comes forth; the natural consciousness, and likewise Mind disap- pear into themselves. In the brightness of the East the individual disappears; the fight first becomes in the West the flash of thought which strikes within itself, and from thence creates its world (...)
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  17.  62
    Leibniz on apperception, consciousness, and reflection.Mark Kulstad - 1991 - München: Philosophia.
    This work represents an investigation of the most important properties of the human mind consciousness, apperception and reflection - and of their significance for Leibnizian philosophy. The development of Leibniz's thinking in the course of his treatment of these themes receives especially detailed treatment, and is thoroughly documented on the basis of the original texts. The concepts of consciousness and reflection were the object of intensive discussion in the l7th century. Starting out from the problem of the distinction (...)
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  18. A Study on Ricoeur’s Reflection on European Historical Consciousness and Europe. 김정현 - 2020 - Journal of the New Korean Philosophical Association 101:17-41.
    이 글은 유럽 역사의식의 위기에 대한 리쾨르의 관점을 분석하고 그의 재구축 방향을 검토한다. 그는 유럽 역사의식의 성격을 분석함으로써 유럽의 특성을 언급하고 환기시키는데 우리는 이를 통해 유럽에 대한 그의 인식을 확인할 수 있다. 역사의식의 위기를 분석하고 극복의 방향을 제시할 때, 그가 주로 활용하는 것은 코젤렉의 개념들이다. 대표적으로 ‘경험 공간’과 ‘기대 지평’ 같은 개념들을 사용하여 유럽 역사의식의 상황을 분석한다.BR 유럽 역사의식의 위기는 기본적으로 유럽의 고유한 경험 공간을 구성하는 과거 유산들의 ‘복합성’과 관련된 취약성으로부터, 보다 정확하게는 이 취약성에 대한 왜곡된 대응으로부터 발생한다. 과거와 연관된 (...)
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  19. Brothers and Strangers. The East European Jew in German and German Jewish Consciousness, 1800-1923. By Steven Aschheim.D. Vietor-Englander - 2003 - The European Legacy 8 (2):262-262.
     
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  20.  19
    Understanding Consciousness Using Systems Approaches and Lexical Universals.Michael Winkelman - 2004 - Anthropology of Consciousness 15 (2):24-38.
    The numerous perspectives offered on consciousness reflect a multifaceted phenomenon that results from a system of relations. An etymological approach identifies linguistic roots of the meanings of consciousness and illustrates their concern with self-referenced informational relationships of an organism with its environment, a "knowing system" formed in the epistemological relations between knower and known. Common elements of contemporary models suggest that consciousness involves interacting components of a system, including: attention-awareness; phenomenal experiences; self reference; action-behavior, including representations and (...)
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  21.  17
    Explaining Human Behavior: Consciousness, Human Action and Social Structure.Paul F. Secord - 1982 - SAGE Publications.
    Eminent European and American contributors explore ways of synthesizing psychological, philosophical, and social scientific explanations of social behaviour. Innovative essays explain behaviour through analyses of the relationships between objective physical and social conditions; human consciousness and sensory perceptions; individual people's own understanding of themselves in society; and social contexts and structures of which they are not aware. `...a remarkable anthology containing a range of interdisciplinary discussions of issues in the explanation of human action' -- Ethics, July 1983.
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  22.  31
    European Network of Buddhist-Christian Studies.John D'Arcy May - 2004 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 24 (1):237-239.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:European Network of Buddhist-Christian StudiesJohn D'Arcy MayThe European Network of Buddhist-Christian Studies met at Samye Ling, Scotland, 16-19 May 2003. The theme of the meeting was "Buddhists, Christians, and the Doctrine of Creation."Samye Ling, founded in 1967 by Dr. Akong Tulku Rinpoche and now under the guidance of his brother, the Venerable Lama Yeshe Losal, is one of the oldest and largest Buddhist monasteries in Europe. Ven. (...)
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  23.  15
    European Network of Buddhist-Christian Studies: Salzburg, Austria, June 8–11, 2007.John D'Arcy May - 2008 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 28:149-152.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:European Network of Buddhist-Christian StudiesSalzburg, Austria, June 8–11, 2007John D’Arcy MayIs it a problem for Buddhists that what is generally regarded as religion can be profoundly different from tradition to tradition? Is it appropriate or even desirable to speak of a Buddhist “theology of religions”? Does Buddhism have its own ways, however subtle, of affirming its superiority over all else that claims the name “religion”?The European Network (...)
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  24.  21
    European Art: A Neuroarthistory.John Onians - 2016 - Yale University Press.
    _A bold revision of the history of European art, told through the lens of neuroscience_ Ambitious and much anticipated, this book celebrates the value of recent neuroscientific discoveries as tools for art-historical analysis. Case studies ranging across the whole history of European art demonstrate the relationships between forms of visual expression and the objects of visual attention, emotional connection, and intellectual interest in daily life, thus illuminating the previously hidden meanings of many artistic styles and conventions. Art historians (...)
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  25. Central-European Ethos: Freedom, Responsibility and Social Imaginaries.Piotr Machura - 2011 - In Jarmila Jurova, Milan Jozek, Andrzej Kiepas & Piotr Machura (eds.), Central-European Ethos or Local Traditions: Freedom, Responsibility. Boskovice: Albert. pp. 102-111.
    My aim in this paper is twofold. Firstly, I argue for the thesis of the necessity of involvement of a concept of social imaginary1 into the traditional dialectic of freedom and responsibility. Secondly, I trace those forms of social imaginary which are crucial for development of contemporary Central-European ethos, and particularly its Polish version. My general thesis is that to understand contemporary form of the ethos, we need to look for its roots in certain social and world views shared (...)
     
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  26.  19
    Imagined Europe: The Shaping of a European Cultural Identity Through EU Cultural Policy.Monica Sassatelli - 2002 - European Journal of Social Theory 5 (4):435-451.
    The EU has recently introduced a cultural policy. This includes symbolic initiatives, among which is the creation of the `European Cities of Culture' (ECC), that are a primary example of EU attempts at awakening European consciousness by promoting its symbols, while respecting the content of national cultures. This goes together with the realization that the idea of `Europe' as the foundation of an identity is key for the legitimization of the EU. This article addresses the question of (...)
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  27.  1
    Consciousness, smysl and untranslatability.Л. Т Рыскельдиева - 2023 - Philosophy Journal 16 (2):18-25.
    An unbiased metaphysics of consciousness allows us to put forward a thesis that con­sciousness is not an object, but a fundamental problem of modern philosophy and differ­ent solutions of this problem define the history of European philosophy. For Descartes, consciousness is Cogito, the personalization of substance by the mind acting in a variety of cogital, conscious acts. Kant, for whom substance is a mode of thinking the unity of experience, Cogito is not a thing (Res), but a (...)
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  28.  17
    On the differences between Heidegger’s and Fink’s interpretations of Hegel’s concept of experience of consciousness.Illia Davidenko - 2022 - Filosofska Dumka (Philosophical Thought) 2:157-169.
    The subject of this article are Martin Heidegger’s and Eugen Fink’s interpretations of Hegel’s concept of experience of consciousness examined in the light of the history of the development of German Hegelian studies. Article aims at revisiting and comparison of those original interpre- tations formulated by the prominent followers of phenomenological philosophy. Furthermore, in the course of the article those interpretations also get compared to the general approach of con- temporary Hegelian studies to interpreting the concept of experience of (...)
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  29.  13
    Mystical Consciousness: Western Perspectives and Dialogue with Japanese Thinkers.Louis Roy - 2003 - SUNY Press.
    Provides a philosophical account of everyday consciousness as a way of understanding mystical consciousness, drawing on the work of many Western and some Japanese thinkers.
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  30.  53
    Animals and Cartesian Consciousness: Pardies vs. the Cartesians.Evan Thomas - 2020 - Journal of Modern Philosophy 2 (1):11.
    The Cartesian view that animals are automata sparked a major controversy in early modern European philosophy. This paper studies an early contribution to this controversy. I provide an interpretation of an influential objection to Cartesian animal automatism raised by Ignace-Gaston Pardies (1636–1673). Pardies objects that the Cartesian arguments show only that animals lack ‘intellectual perception’ but do not show that animals lack ‘sensible perception.’ According to Pardies, the difference between these two types of perception is that the former is (...)
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  31. The Dialectic of Consciousness and Unconsciousness in Spontaneity of Genius: A Comparison between Classical Chinese Aesthetics and Kantian Ideas.Xiaoyan Hu - 2017 - Proceedings of the European Society for Aesthetics 9:246–274.
    This paper explores the elusive dialectic between concentration and forgetfulness, consciousness and unconsciousness in spontaneous artistic creation favoured by artists and advocated by critics in Chinese art history, by examining texts on painting and tracing back to ancient Daoist philosophical ideas, in a comparison with Kantian and post-Kantian aesthetics. Although artistic spontaneity in classical Chinese aesthetics seems to share similarities with Kant’s account of spontaneity in the art of genius, the emphasis on unconsciousness is valued by classical Chinese artists (...)
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  32. Ethics and Aesthetics in European Modernist Literature: From the Sublime to the Uncanny.David Ellison - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    David Ellison's book is an investigation into the historical origins and textual practice of European literary Modernism. Ellison's study traces the origins of Modernism to the emergence of early German Romanticism from the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, and emphasizes how the passage from Romanticism to Modernism can be followed in the gradual transition from the sublime to the uncanny. Arguing that what we call High Modernism cannot be reduced to a religion of beauty, an experimentation with narrative form, or (...)
     
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  33.  11
    A New European Constitutional Patriotism for Habermas.Melis Menent - 2016 - Philosophy Study 6 (8).
    Habermas’s interventions in German political affairs gave rise to the concept of constitutional Patriotism. His earlier theoretical work did not revisit the idea in any distinct manner. Moral Consciousness, I argue, has traces of a legal identity and universal morality. While interpreting Kohlberg’s work, Habermas did not seek to tie the concept of citizenship or political identity into his account of Moral Consciousness. The concepts of political identity and a legal orientation come up, more recently and in a (...)
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  34.  43
    Consciousness and Conscience: Mamardašvili on the Common Point of Departure for Epistemological and Moral Reflection.Daniel Regnier - 2006 - Studies in East European Thought 58 (3):141-160.
    Mamardašvili did not develop a systematic philosophy that treats separately the various traditional disciplines of philosophy such as epistemology, logic, ethics, aesthetics etc. On the contrary, isolated from the direct influences of other currents of thought that might otherwise have given his own a different direction, Mamardašvili concentrated his attention on the very act of thought, the vitality of which had been undermined in philosophical understandings, including both Hegelian-Marxist attempts to situate the subject in history and re-appropriations of the Cartesian (...)
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  35. The early modern subject: self-consciousness and personal identity from Descartes to Hume.Udo Thiel - 2011 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Explores the understanding of self-consciousness and personal identity - two fundamendtal features of human subjectivity - as it developed in early modern philosophy. Udo Thiel presents a critical evaluation of these features as they were conceived in the sevententh and eighteenth centuries. He explains the arguments of thinkers such as Descartes, Locke, Leibniz, Wolff, and Hume, as well as their early critics, followers, and other philosophical contemporaries, and situates them within their historical contexts. Interest in the issues of self- (...) and personal identity is in many ways characteristic [of] and even central to early modern thought, but Thiel argues here that this is also an interest that continues to this day, in a form still strongly influenced by the conceptual frameworks of early modern thought. In this book he attempts to broaden the scope of the treatment of these issues considerably, covering more than a hundred years of philosophical debate in France, Britain, and Germany while remaining attentive to the details of the arguments under scrutiny and discussing alternative interpretations in many cases"--Publisher's description, p. [4] of dust jacket. (shrink)
  36.  77
    Dancing on the Tightrope of Existence: Deconstructing Black Consciousness.Bryan Mukandi - 2017 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
    For Steve Biko, ‘Black Consciousness’ has to do with remedying the ‘lack’ and ‘failure’ which emanate from the colonial encounter. It describes the existential and ontological shift whereby the black moves towards the assumption of her humanity. Beginning on the margins of Continental European philosophy with Jacques Derrida and Frantz Fanon, I examine the pathogenesis of the situation of the black, and point to a road to recovery. In the process, I centre the lived experience of black folk: (...)
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  37.  22
    European plastic art in anthropological dimension: From the classics to the postmodernism.R. M. Rusin & I. V. Liashenko - 2018 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 14:20-29.
    Purpose. The article is devoted to the analysis of corporality as an attribute of plastic art in the Ancient art, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the modernism and the postmodernism. Theoretical basis. The authors consider historical development of the art as a change of paradigms. Within each paradigm a special understanding of art is created, which is characterized both by the act of creativity itself and by the evaluation of its results. Particularly urgent is the task to identify the origins (...)
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  38. Natural theories of consciousness.Peter Carruthers - 1998 - European Journal of Philosophy 6 (2):203-22.
    Many people have thought that consciousness.
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  39.  7
    Firm's emission reduction effectiveness and the influence of the five institutional dimensions of the quintuple helix model: European evidence.Carmelo Reverte, Jennifer Martínez-Ferrero & Emma García-Meca - forthcoming - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility.
    Based upon the quintuple helix model (QHM), this study explores whether the differences in firms' emission reduction effectiveness can be attributed to the five institutional helices related to educational system, economic development, political–legal system, cultural orientation, and the natural capital. Using a set of listed European firms for the 2015–2020 period, we show that firms with better emission reduction effectiveness operate in nations with more public educational expenditure and scientific production, more extensive economic development, and better institutional and governance (...)
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  40.  53
    Consciousness and Hegel's Solution to the Problem of the Criterion.Peter Yong - 2018 - European Journal of Philosophy 26 (1):283-307.
    Traditional epistemological interpretations have portrayed Hegel as offering a coherentist solution to the problem of the criterion in the introduction to The Phenomenology of Spirit. In this paper, I criticize the coherentist interpretation and present an alternative reading that emphasizes the central role of conscious experience in Hegel's argument. In the first part of the paper, I show how the passages commonly used to support the coherentist interpretation ultimately fail to do so and argue that coherence by itself cannot be (...)
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  41.  80
    Intentionality, Consciousness, and the Ego: The Influence of Husserl’s Logical Investigations on Sartre’s Early Work.Lior Levy - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (5-6):511-524.
    Jean-Paul Sartre’s early phenomenological texts reveal the complexity of his relationship to Edmund Husserl. Deeply indebted to phenomenology’s method as well as its substance, Sartre nonetheless confronted Husserl’s transcendental turn from Ideas onward. Although numerous studies have focused on Sartre’s points of contention with Husserl, drawing attention to his departure from Husserlian phenomenology, scholars have rarely examined the way in which Sartre engaged and responded to the early Husserl, particularly to his discussions of intentionality, consciousness, and self in Logical (...)
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  42.  51
    Husserl, History, and Consciousness.Eva-Maria Engelen - 2009 - In David Hyder (ed.), Science and the Life-World: Essays on Husserl's Crisis of European Sciences. Stanford University Press.
    The “Crisis” itself is an attempt of enlightenment by examining origins. Husserl knows three philosophical origins of evidence and justification: (1) consciousness; (2) the life-world; (3) european philosophy and the history of the sciences. There is a tension of historicity and ahistoricity in all of these origins. I will show in how far all three origins are under this tension. Because even concerning the notion of absolute consciousness one can show, that it is linked to historicity. The (...)
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  43.  41
    Framing Consciousness in Art: Transcultural Perspectives. By Gregory Minissale.William M. Hawley - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (4):545 - 546.
    The European Legacy, Volume 17, Issue 4, Page 545-546, July 2012.
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  44. Personhood and Disorders of Consciousness: Finding Room in Person-Centered Healthcare.Marco Antonio Azevedo - 2020 - European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare 8 (3):391-405.
    Advocates of the Person-Centered Healthcare (PCH) approach say that PCH is a response to a failure of caring for patients as persons. Nevertheless, there are many human subjects falling to fulfill the requirements of a traditional philosophical definition of personhood. Hence, if we take, PCH seriously, a greater clarification of the key terminology of PCH is urgently needed. It seems necessary, for instance, that the concept of the person should be extended in order to include those individuals with insipient or (...)
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  45.  17
    Memory and "Consciousness" in an Evolving Brazilian Possession Religion.Daniel Halperin - 1995 - Anthropology of Consciousness 6 (4):1-17.
    Participants in Northern Brazilian Tambor de Mina dance and spirit possession rituals demonstrate three principal discourses concerning memory and states of consciousness during possession. Most dancers claim, as "unconscious" mediums, to remember essentially nothing of their trance experiences. Many, however, speak of "faked" or incomplete forms of possession. In fact, my research eventually revealed that some experienced mediums and religious leaders regard, if secretly, "conscious" possession to be a more—not less—advanced form of mediumship. I consider some potential implications of (...)
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  46. Consciousness and Revolution in Soviet Philosophy: From the Bolsheviks to Evald Ilyenkov.David Bakhurst - 1995 - Studies in East European Thought 47 (1):144-148.
     
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  47. Steven E. Aschheim. Brothers and Strangers: The East European Jew in German and German Jewish Consciousness, 1800–1923 (Madison, WI: University of). [REVIEW]Pierre Carlier Homere - 2000 - The European Legacy 5 (6):875-877.
     
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  48.  12
    Industrial citizenship, cosmopolitanism and European integration.Nathan Lillie & Chenchen Zhang - 2015 - European Journal of Social Theory 18 (1):93-111.
    There has been an explosion of interest in the idea of European Union citizenship in recent years, as a defining example of postnational cosmopolitan citizenship potentially replacing or layered on top of national citizenship. We argue this form of EU citizenship undermines industrial citizenship, which is a crucial support for social solidarity on which other types of citizenship are based. Because industrial citizenship arises from collectivities based on class identities and national institutions, it depends on the national territorial order (...)
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  49.  30
    The Future of a Discipline: Considering the Ontological/Methodological Future of the Anthropology of Consciousness, Part III.Rafael G. Locke - 2011 - Anthropology of Consciousness 22 (2):106-135.
    The anthropology of consciousness is a field of enormous and demanding scope. In this article, there is no attempt to address all of the current trends in thinking and research; rather, the aim was to draw a line through the field that extends from the 19th century and European philosophies to some contemporary expressions of those philosophies in social science research. In particular, taking the original project of Edmund Husserl, an approach to the phenomenological investigation of the nature (...)
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  50.  23
    Can philosophy contribute to a change of ethos? (The road from the law of the ethos toward European law.Jovan Arandjelovic - 2003 - Filozofija I Društvo 2003 (21):117-135.
    The author examines the character of the changes taking place in contemporary Serbian society. He emphasizes at the same time that contemporary Serbian philosophy is facing these crucial questions as well, which without it cannot be even addressed, let alone solved. The key difference between modern West European and contemporary Serbian societies, seen from the perspective of philosophy, is demonstrated most clearly in the manner of constituting institutions and transforming the modern Serbian society. In the process of building modern (...)
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