Results 191 to 200 of about 39,094 (278)
ABSTRACT G.W.F. Hegel is usually held to be anti‐utopian in his political philosophy. I aim to challenge that standard reading, outlining and defending a more positive account of his relation to utopianism. The rational state described in Hegel's Grundlinien der Philosophie des Rechts (1820) is shown to fit an uncontroversial account of utopia without ...
David Leopold
wiley +1 more source
Alzheimer's Disease: The Current and Emerging Treatment Approaches. [PDF]
Pang R +9 more
europepmc +1 more source
Intertextual Reception: Re-thinking the Concept of Revelation in Light of Divine Immanence and the Dignity of the Person and the Cosmos [PDF]
Hughson, Thomas
core +1 more source
PREAMBULAR HISTORY: THE VIEW OF THE PAST IN KEY HUMAN RIGHTS INSTRUMENTS
ABSTRACT This article claims that the preambles of foundational human rights instruments, taken together, articulate a consistent view of the past. This view is firmly rooted in historical processes, embedded in metaphysical truths, and enacted in service of the future. Part 1 assesses the strengths and weaknesses of the “preambular approach to history”
Antoon De Baets
wiley +1 more source
On the Immanence and Transcendence of Kant’s Realm of Ends and Ethical Commonwealth: The Unsolved Dilemma of Human Autonomy and Divine Grace [PDF]
Van Impe, Stijn
core +1 more source
Practice Theory, Leadership‐as‐Practice, and Social Action
ABSTRACT Although practice theory has significantly contributed to our understanding of the mechanisms underlying social change, it does not take a position or advocate for particular meso‐macro changes, such as responsible management, because it is a theory wedded to ontological understanding.
Joseph A. Raelin
wiley +1 more source
Plays and practices as micropolitics in State social institutions. [PDF]
Spinelli H.
europepmc +1 more source
Multisituationality and Social Sensibility. Insights From Neophenomenological Sociology
ABSTRACT Sometimes, we do not act in accordance with what we know. For example, we may purchase products that we know are the result of production chains with questionable ethics. This contribution investigates the paradox between social action and rational knowledge, starting from the ambivalence between emotion and reason.
Michele Granzotto
wiley +1 more source

