Results for 'human history'

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  1.  13
    Politics and Modernity: History of the Human Sciences Special Issue.Irving History of the Human Sciences, Robin Velody & Williams - 1993 - SAGE Publications.
    Politics and Modernity provides a critical review of the key interface of contemporary political theory and social theory about the questions of modernity and postmodernity. Review essays offer a broad-ranging assessment of the issues at stake in current debates. Among the works reviewed are those of William Connolly, Anthony Giddens, J[um]urgen Habermas, Alasdair MacIntyre, Richard Rorty, Charles Taylor and Roy Bhaskar. As well as reviewing the contemporary literature, the contributors assess the historical roots of current problems in the works of (...)
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  2.  19
    Potential Novelty: Towards an Understanding of Novelty without an Event.Oliver Human - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (4):45-63.
    This paper explores the possibility for a means of bringing about novelty which does not rely on kairological philosophies based on an event. In contrast to both common sense and contemporary philosophical understandings of the term where for novelty to arise there must be some break in the repetition of the structure, this paper argues that it is possible for novelty to come about through small-scale experimentation. This is done by relying on the philosophical notion of ‘economy’ in order to (...)
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  3.  4
    Enkele tradisie-historiese perspektiewe op Psalm 83.D. J. Human - 1995 - HTS Theological Studies 51 (1):175-188.
    Some tradition historical perspectives on Psalm 83 Psalm 83 forms a poetical unit and is the well constructed poem of an artist. It could be divided into two stanzas which contains a cry for help (2), lament (3-9) and several petitions (10-19). This work reflects different tradition historical allusions. The use of prophetic language is immanent, while the faces of the prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel are elusively present. Two episodes from the history of the Judges (Judges 4-5; 7-8) (...)
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  4.  33
    Non-Evental Novelty: Towards Experimentation as Praxis.Oliver Human - 2013 - Cosmos and History 9 (2):68-85.
    In this article I explore the possibilities of experimentation as a non-foundational praxis for introducing novel ways of being into existence. Beginning with a discussion, following Bataille, of the excess of any thought, I argue that any action in the world is necessarily uncertain. Using the insights of Derridean deconstruction combined with Badiousian truth procedure I argue that experimentation offers a means for acting from this uncertain position. Experimentation takes advantage of the play and uncertainty of our understanding of the (...)
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  5. CHARLES David and William Child (eds): Wittgensteinian Themes: Essays.Cohen Ga, If You’re an Egalitarian, Crocker Robert, Reason Religion, Crockett Clayton, DUPRÉ John & Human Nature - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 10 (2):325-330.
     
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  6. Animals in History And Culture. Faculty of Humanities, Bath Spa University College. July 3-4, 2000 Representing Animals. Center for Twentieth Century Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. April 13-15, 2000 Thresholds of Identity in Human-Animal Relationships: An Interdisciplinary Colloquium. [REVIEW]Interdisciplinary Humanities Center & Santa Barbara March - 2001 - Society and Animals 9 (3).
     
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  7. Phi Cd Rom #5.3.John Milton & Packard Humanities Institute - 1991 - Packard Humanities Institute.
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  8. Philosophers' Ideas That Changed the World. Christ, Darwin, Marx, Freud.Charles Darwin, Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, Jesus Christ & Center for Humanities - 1990 - Center for Humanities.
     
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  9.  6
    Human history: a race between education and catastrophe.John J. Foley - 1963 - Pittsburgh,: Duquesne University press.
  10.  6
    The future of post-human history: a preface to a new theory of universality and relativity.Peter Baofu - 2012 - Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    Offers an understanding of the future of history, in the dialectic context of universality and relativity - while learning from different approaches in the literature but without favoring any one of them or integrating them, since they are not necessarily compatible with each other.
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  11. Human History in the Age of the Anthropocene: A Defence of the Nature/Culture Distinction.Giuseppina D'Oro - 2021 - Iai News.
    A legacy of Enlightenment thought was to see the human as separate from nature. Human history was neatly distinguished from natural history. The age of Anthropocene has now put all that into question. This human exceptionalism is seen by some as responsible for the devastating impact humans have had on the planet. But if we give up on the nature / culture distinction and see human activity as just another type of natural process, we (...)
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  12. Is Human History Predestined in Wang Fuzhi’s Cosmology?Jeeloo Liu - 2001 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 28 (3):321–338.
    In traditional Chinese cosmology, this pattern could be very well explained in terms of the fluctuation of yin and yang, or as the natural order of Heaven. This cosmological explanation fits natural history well. There are natural phenomena such as floods, draughts, hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes, etc., that are beyond human control. These events have their determining factors. Once those factors are present, a natural disaster, however unfavorably viewed by humans, is doomed to take place. The view that natural (...)
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  13. Human history and the word of God.James M. Connolly - 1965 - New York,: Macmillan.
  14.  28
    Human history and deep time in nineteenth-century British sciences: An introduction.Efram Sera-Shriar - 2015 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 51:19-22.
  15.  13
    Human history.E. N. Fallaize - 1930 - The Eugenics Review 22 (3):208.
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  16.  24
    Human history as natural history.Lee Cronk - 1988 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 2 (1):103-110.
  17.  14
    Human history and the kingdom of God: Past perspectives and those of J. L. segundo.Elizabeth Lord - 1989 - Heythrop Journal 30 (3):293–305.
  18. Is human history predestined.in Wang Fuzhi’S. Cosmology - 2001 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 28:321-337.
  19. Conjectural beginning of human history (1786).Immanuel Kant - 2007 - In Anthropology, History, and Education. Cambridge University Press.
  20. Human nature and human history.R. G. Collingwood - 1936 - London,: H. Milford.
    This paper presents evidence and arguments against an interpretation of david Hume's idea of history which insists that he held to a static conception of human nature. This interpretation presumes that hume lacks a genuine historical perspective, and that consequently his notion of historiography contains a fallacy (viz., Of the universal man). It is shown here that this interpretation overlooks an important distinction between methodological and substantive uniformity in hume's discussion of human nature and action. When this (...)
     
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  21.  16
    The Virus and the Atmosphere: Reviewing the Trajectory of Human History.P. Wagner - 2023 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 20 (4):625-629.
    The article compares the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change in terms of natural characteristics of the crisis triggers as well as of socio-political responses.
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  22. Toward a Theory of Human History.Joseph Margolis - 2010 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 4 (3-4):245-273.
    I show the sense in which the concept of history as a human science affects our theory of the natural sciences and, therefore, our theory of the unity of the physical and human sciences. The argument proceeds by way of reviewing the effect of the Darwinian contribution regarding teleologism and of post-Darwinian paleonanthropology on the transformation of the primate members of Homo sapiens into societies of historied selves. The strategy provides a novel way of recovering the unity (...)
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  23.  11
    Self-Transcendence and Human History in Wolfhart Pannenberg.Godfrey Igwebuike Onah - 1999 - Upa.
    Self-Transcendence and Human History in Wolfhart Pannenberg examines Pannenberg's thoughts on self-transcendence and its relationship to human history. The author attempts to establish a better understanding of man as "creature" and as "creator" of history. Godfrey Igwebuike Onah begins by clarifying the definitions of self-transcendence, openness, and exocentricity. These terms involve man's natural tendency to constantly reach out beyond the present reality, which is based in his existence as a spiritual being open to God. Onah (...)
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  24.  6
    God: A Human History of Religion.Franz Magnis-Suseno - 2022 - Diskursus - Jurnal Filsafat dan Teologi STF Driyarkara 18 (2):276-277.
    This article reviews Reza Aslan's book God: a Human History of Religion, published in 2018 by Transworld Publ., Corgi Edition, London.
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  25. Review genes, memes and human history.Kim Sterelny - manuscript
    Archaeology, of all the human sciences, can dodge this problem the least, and the great virtue of Shennan’s Genes, Memes and Human History is that he confronts it directly. For though humans are now both cultural and ecological beings, it was not always so. Once our hominid ancestors had a social organisation and a material culture roughly equivalent to that of today’s chimpanzees. Chimps are not encultured in the sense that we are encultured: their social life and (...)
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  26.  24
    Sacred Relics of Human History and the Discovery of Cosmic Mind.Cox Hal - 2017 - Cosmos and History 13 (2):106-110.
    The human loss of the sense of sacred has been driven by a mechanization of the world that privileges the mundane and the material. Yet the earliest surviving history of the human mind reveals a widespread, embodied human faculty for perception of the cosmos and an intimate human relation to the cosmos. This history hints of an origin story that may be partly recovered by sacred relics of human prehistory.
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  27.  17
    On Sin as Human History Comprehended.Brayton Polka - 2015 - The European Legacy 20 (2):176-183.
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  28.  7
    Plough, sword, and book: the structure of human history.Ernest Gellner - 1988 - London: Paladin Grafton Books.
    "Philosophical anthropology on the grandest scale....Gellner has produced a sharp challenge to his colleagues and a thrilling book for the non-specialist. Deductive history on this scale cannot be proved right or wrong, but this is Gellner writing, incisive, iconoclastic, witty and expert. His scenario compels our attention."—Adam Kuper, _New Statesman_ "A thoughtful and lively meditation upon probably the greatest transformation in human history, upon the difficult problems it poses and the scant resources it has left us to (...)
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  29.  30
    Human History and the Word of God. [REVIEW]T. E. V. - 1967 - Review of Metaphysics 20 (4):717-717.
    A systematic, capable, Catholic theory of history, combining historical analysis with constructive argumentation. The author is particularly sensitive to divergent trends in current Catholic and Protestant interpretations, including those of Rahner and Tillich. Though its philosophical content is minimal, the book should be of interest to students seeking a religious perspective on history.—T. E. V.
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  30.  10
    Disorder: expressions of an amorphous phenomenon in human history: essays in honour of Gert Melville.Gert Melville, Jörg Sonntag & Mirko Breitenstein (eds.) - 2020 - Münster: Aschendorff Verlag.
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  31.  27
    Kant's cosmopolitanism and human history.Marianna Papastephanou - 2002 - History of the Human Sciences 15 (1):17-37.
    In this article I discuss Kant's idea of cosmopolitanism both in its prescriptive dimension (its normative content and regulative aspirations) and also its descriptive basis (its crucial philosophical-anthropological assumptions constituting its theoretical justification). My aim is to show that the prescriptive dimension cannot be treated separately from the descriptive one for some difficulties that the latter confronts pervade the former and misinform it. I then proceed to an examination of those difficulties which I locate mainly in Kant's onto-theological commitment to (...)
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  32. Why two epochs of human history? On the myth of the Statesman.Christoph Horn - 2012 - In Catherine Collobert, Pierre Destrée & Francisco J. Gonzalez (eds.), Plato and Myth: Studies on the Use and Status of Platonic Myths. Brill.
  33.  11
    Human History and the Word of God. [REVIEW]E. V. T. - 1967 - Review of Metaphysics 20 (4):717-717.
    A systematic, capable, Catholic theory of history, combining historical analysis with constructive argumentation. The author is particularly sensitive to divergent trends in current Catholic and Protestant interpretations, including those of Rahner and Tillich. Though its philosophical content is minimal, the book should be of interest to students seeking a religious perspective on history.—T. E. V.
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  34.  4
    How Biological is Human History?Liesbet Vanhaute - 2011 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 14 (1):155-169.
    Whereas in Idea for a Universal History Kant without much hesitation resorts to biological concepts to understand history, this fundamentally changes in Critique of the Power of Judgment. In this work, history and biology are separated; they are understood as two different forms of teleological judgments. The teleological concepts that make history intelligible are divorced from their biological origins and introduced in an explicitly non-biological way of thinking. I argue that because of this shift, after the (...)
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  35.  8
    How Biological is Human History?Liesbet Vanhaute - 2011 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 14 (1):155-169.
    Whereas in Idea for a Universal History Kant without much hesitation resorts to biological concepts to understand history, this fundamentally changes in Critique of the Power of Judgment. In this work, history and biology are separated; they are understood as two different forms of teleological judgments. The teleological concepts that make history intelligible are divorced from their biological origins and introduced in an explicitly non-biological way of thinking. I argue that because of this shift, after the (...)
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  36. The inner meaning of human history, the one increasing purpose that runs through the ages.Es Makarājan̲ - 1974 - Madurai: Madurai University.
     
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  37.  18
    The meaning of human history.Morris Raphael Cohen - 1947 - LaSalle, Ill.,: Open Court.
  38. How both human history and the history of ethics may just be beginning.D. Parfit - 1994 - In Peter Singer (ed.), Ethics. Oxford University Press. pp. 391--393.
     
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  39. E. Hausen, Human History at the Crossroads Reviewed by.Kelly Joseph Salsbery - 1997 - Philosophy in Review 17 (5):331-332.
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  40.  13
    How biological is human history? Kant's use of biological concepts and its implications for history as moral anthropology.Liesbet Vanhaute - 2011 - Hegel Bulletin 32 (1-2):252-268.
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  41.  8
    Vaughn Scribner, Merpeople: A Human History London: Reaktion Books, 2020. Pp. 320. ISBN: 978-1-7891-4314-0. £20.00.Stephanie Eichberg - 2021 - British Journal for the History of Science 54 (1):122-124.
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  42. The Meaning of Human History.Morris R. Cohen - 1963 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 18 (2):213-214.
     
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  43. Human Nature and Human History. Vol. XXII.R. G. Collingwood - 1937 - Philosophy 12 (46):233-236.
     
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  44.  7
    Progress Unchained: Ideas of Evolution, Human History and the Future.Peter J. Bowler - 2021 - Cambridge University Press.
    Progress Unchained reinterprets the history of the idea of progress using parallels between evolutionary biology and changing views of human history. Early concepts of progress in both areas saw it as the ascent of a linear scale of development toward a final goal. The 'chain of being' defined a hierarchy of living things with humans at the head, while social thinkers interpreted history as a development toward a final paradise or utopia. Darwinism reconfigured biological progress as (...)
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  45. Genes, Genesis, and God: Values and Their Origins in Natural and Human History.Holmes Rolston - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Holmes Rolston challenges the sociobiological orthodoxy that would naturalize science, ethics, and religion. The book argues that genetic processes are not blind, selfish, and contingent, and that nature is therefore not value-free. The author examines the emergence of complex biodiversity through evolutionary history. Especially remarkable in this narrative is the genesis of human beings with their capacities for science, ethics, and religion. A major conceptual task of the book is to relate cultural genesis to natural genesis. There is (...)
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  46.  23
    The Meaning of Human History[REVIEW]Maurice Mandelbaum - 1948 - Review of Metaphysics 2 (5):107-115.
    The aspect of The Meaning of Human History which is likely to be of greatest interest to readers of this journal is also that in which Cohen went farthest beyond his previous analyses. Running through the present work, expressing itself in variant forms in varied contexts, is Cohen's insistence that in the historical process discreteness and continuity are equally real and equally significant. This thesis is not, of course, new; nor does it come as a surprise to anyone (...)
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  47. A Crusade for Humanity: History of Organized Positivism in England. By Frances E. Gillespie. [REVIEW]John Edwin Mcgee - 1931 - International Journal of Ethics 42:380.
     
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  48.  6
    History and human flourishing.Darrin M. McMahon (ed.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    What is the value of history for life? And how, if at all, might historians and their work contribute to human flourishing and well-being? Those are the straightforward, if capacious, questions that the distinguished contributors to this volume were asked to consider. The essays gathered here represent their responses. Each essay considers the value of history for life and its connections to human flourishing from a different standpoint and perspective. The answers are often deeply personal, but (...)
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  49.  33
    History in the humanities and social sciences.Richard Bourke & Quentin Skinner (eds.) - 2023 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book is an inter-disciplinary volume based on collaborative research in the humanities and social sciences that explores the benefits of historical understanding in leading disciplines, including History, Politics, Literature, Economics, Anthropology, Law, Sociology, and Philosophy.
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  50.  23
    Genes, genesis, and God: values and their origins in natural and human history.Holmes Rolston, Iii - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Holmes Rolston challenges the sociobiological orthodoxy that would naturalize science, ethics, and religion. The book argues that genetic processes are not blind, selfish, and contingent, and that nature is therefore not value-free. The author examines the emergence of complex biodiversity through evolutionary history. Especially remarkable in this narrative is the genesis of human beings with their capacities for science, ethics, and religion. A major conceptual task of the book is to relate cultural genesis to natural genesis. There is (...)
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