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Jakub Franěk
Charles University, Prague
  1. Philosophical parrhesia as aesthetics of existence.Jakub Franěk - 2006 - Continental Philosophy Review 39 (2):113-134.
    According to some interpreters, Foucault's encounter with the Greek and Roman ethics led him to reconsider his earlier work and to turn away from politics. Drawing mostly from Foucault's last and hitherto unpublished lecture course, this paper argues that Foucault's turn to ethics should not be interpreted as a turn away from his previous work, but rather as its logical continuation and an attempt to resolve some of the outstanding questions. I argue that the 1984 lectures on parrhesia should be (...)
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    Machiavelli and Contemporary Politics.Jan Bíba & Jakub Franěk - 2023 - Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 70 (174):1-7.
    Niccolò Machiavelli has acquired a prominent position in the history of political thought. Machiavelli is probably most notorious as a teacher of evil, a political realist advising tyrants and a proud proponent of Machiavellism, a devilish politics that astoundingly bears his name. This image, however, is far from being the only one. Sorting through the history of political thought, Machiavelli suddenly appears ubiquitous and dressed in various disguises. Historical interpretations of Machiavelli's writings range from a predecessor of totalitarianism to a (...)
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  3. Platón jako inspirátor současné politické filosofie?Jakub Franek - 2005 - Reflexe: Filosoficky Casopis 28:47-69.
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