Results 71 to 80 of about 4,087 (207)
Ideas as the ‘Divinity of Our Soul’: Kant's Theocentric and Platonic Model of Human Cognition
Abstract I pursue Kant's characterization of the ideas of reason as the ‘divinity of our soul’ with the aim of correcting a highly influential reading of his philosophy as rejecting the theocentric cognitive model, one measuring human cognition against the norm of the divine intuitive intellect.
Kimberly Brewer
wiley +1 more source
Provincializing Frankfurt: A Postcolonial Rereading of Habermasian Theory
Constellations, Volume 33, Issue 1, Page 14-24, March 2026.
Floris Biskamp
wiley +1 more source
Macdonald Before Quine on Truth by Convention
ABSTRACT I show that Margaret Macdonald anticipated Quine's well‐known criticisms of logical conventionalism in her unpublished 1934 PhD thesis, but that she later developed her criticisms in a direction distinct from that of Quine under the influence of Wittgenstein. Macdonald rejected as senseless the suggestion that statements of logical truth admit
Oliver Thomas Spinney
wiley +1 more source
This article will show how Natorp’s criticism of Husserlian phenomenology was one of the most important triggers of the hermeneutical transformation of Heideggerian phenomenology.
Stefano Cazzanelli
doaj +1 more source
Volume Introduction – Method, Science and Mathematics: Neo-Kantianism and Analytic Philosophy
Introduction to the Special Volume, “Method, Science and Mathematics: Neo-Kantianism and Analytic Philosophy,” edited by Scott Edgar and Lydia Patton. At its core, analytic philosophy concerns urgent questions about philosophy’s relation to the formal ...
Scott Edgar
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How to return to subjectivity? Natorp, Husserl, and Lacan on the limits of reflection [PDF]
This article discusses the recent call within contemporary phenomenology to return to subjectivity in response to certain limitations of naturalistic explanations of the mind.
Asemissen H. U. +32 more
core +1 more source
History of consumer demand theory 1871-1971: A Neo-Kantian rational reconstruction [PDF]
This paper examines the history of the neoclassical theory of consumer demand from 1871 to 1971 by bringing into play the knowledge theory of the Marburg School, a Neo-Kantian philosophical movement.
Ivan Moscati
core
The author exemplifies the congruency of essential foundations between the critical realism of the Berlin School of Gestalt Psychology (Gestalt theory) and Nicolai Hartmann’s Critical Ontology.
Walter Hans-Jürgen P.
doaj +1 more source

