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Latin American Philosophy I

Abstract Chapters 2 and 3 analyze the emergence in the 1970s of the “Latin American philosophy.” The former focuses, more specifically, on the historicist line of it, whose main representatives were Leopoldo Zea and Arturo Roig. This current intended to trace the genealogy of a distinct Latin American thought, its emergence and ...
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Work and Latin American Philosophy

Abstract This chapter canvases some notable historical accounts of the philosophical dimensions of work within the context of Latin American philosophy, including reflections by Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, José Vasconcelos, José Mariategui, and Rosario Castellanos. The chapter examines how labor was conceptualized prior to the European
Manuel Vargas
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Latin American Philosophy II

Abstract Chapter 3 analyzes the phenomenological current of “Latin American philosophy,” which spans from Rodolfo Kusch through Enrique Dussel. It recreates the intellectual operations and rhetorical devices put in each case at work for the construction of an image of that “being,” and how it became posited as standing in opposition to ...
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Rights and Identity in Latin American Philosophy

2017
Two issues of Latin American political philosophy have attracted considerable attention. The first is controversy about human rights, prompted by the European expansions that took place during the Iberian Conquest and colonial ruling that followed, and today, by the phenomenon of contemporary globalization.
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Latino and Latin American Philosophy

2015
María Cristina González, Nora Stigol
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Latin American Philosophy

2003
"The essays in this book make it elegantly clear that there is a vigorous and rigorous Latin American philosophy... and that others dismiss it at their peril." -Mario SáenzThe ten essays in this lively anthology move beyond a purely historical consideration of Latin American philosophy to cover recent developments in political and social philosophy as ...
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Latin American Philosophy as Metaphilosophy

CR: The New Centennial Review, 2007
THERE ARE INDEED MANY GOOD REASONS FOR NEEDING (WANTING) TO STUDY (consider?) Latin American philosophy. In my case, for existential and personal reasons, I want to study Latin American philosophy to ground a personal sense of cultural integrity and gravitas. There are also demographic reasons for needing to be concerned with Latin American philosophy.
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