Results 71 to 80 of about 3,115,089 (273)

Strategic materials and state capacity in Renaissance Italy. The economic policies of ‘Roman saltpetre’ procurement

open access: yesThe Economic History Review, EarlyView.
Abstract Demonstrating the existence of a soaring demand for strategic materials in fifteenth‐century Rome, the article pioneers research in the late medieval trade in saltpetre, the irreplaceable, rare component of gunpowder, indispensable for waging war following the diffusion of artillery technology.
Fabrizio Antonio Ansani
wiley   +1 more source

ALİ ŞİR NEVÂYÎ’NİN MAHBÛBU’L-KULÛB’UNUN ETKİSİNDE YAZILMIŞ BİR RİSALE

open access: yesUluslararası Uygur Araştırmaları Dergisi, 2018
Bu makalede öncelikle Özbekistan İlimler Akademisi El Biruni’deki kütüphanede 3402-II numarada kayıtlı yazmanın 1b - 10a/3 yapraklarında yer alan;  ilk 7 yaprağı Ali Şir Nevâyî’nin Mahbûbu’l-Kulûb adlı eserinin çeşitli bölümlerinden alınan, diğer 3 ...
Fatih BAKIRCI
doaj  

Whose Rebellion? Reformed Resistance Theory in America: Part I

open access: yes, 2017
Students of the American Founding routinely assert that America\u27s civic leaders were influenced by secular Lockean political ideas, especially on the question of resistance to tyrannical authority. Yet virtually every political idea usually attributed
Hall, Mark, Smith, Sarah Morgan
core  

Politics and collective action in Thomas Aquinas's On Kingship [PDF]

open access: yes, 2019
Collective action is a much-discussed topic today, but not in the historiography of philosophy. Therefore, I would like to contribute a little bit to our understanding of the history of this concept by exploring the political philosophy of Thomas Aquinas.
Spindler, Anselm
core   +2 more sources

On Schopenhauer's Debt to Spinoza1

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
Abstract Schopenhauer offers ‘nature is not divine but demonic’ as a direct rebuttal of Spinoza's pantheism, his identification of ‘nature’ with ‘God’. And so, one would think, he ought to have been immune to the ‘Spinozism’ that became, as Heine called it, ‘the unofficial religion’ of the age.
Julian Young
wiley   +1 more source

CRITICAL HISTORY, SUBVERSION AND SELF-SUBVERSION: THE CURIOUS CASES OF JEAN MABILLON AND RICHARD SIMON (I/II)

open access: yesStudia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai. Philosophia, 2020
This paper compares two programmes of historical criticism at the end of the 16th Century – Jean Mabillon’s diplomatics and Richard Simon’s biblical criticism.
Veronica LAZĂR
doaj   +1 more source

Spinoza and Judaism in the French Context: The Case of Milner's Le Sage Trompeur [PDF]

open access: yes, 2020
Jean-Claude Milner’s Le sage trompeur (2013), a controversial recent piece of French Spinoza literature, remains regrettably understudied in the English-speaking world.
Stetter, Jack
core  

“A minimum of domination”—the overt normative orientation of Foucault's work

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
Abstract Answering the charge of ‘crypto‐normativity’ that has long overshadowed Michel Foucault's work, I argue that this work is animated by an overt normative orientation to keep domination to a minimum. This orientation operates both at the level of content and form.
Fabian Freyenhagen
wiley   +1 more source

L’éthique de l’historien spinoziste. Histoire et raison chez Spinoza

open access: yesAstérion, 2012
The point of departure is the paradoxical finding that Spinoza is sometimes presented as the a-historical philosopher par excellence, while his Theological-Political Treatise is truly an historian’s work.
Thomas Hippler
doaj   +1 more source

Contextualism and the History of Philosophy [PDF]

open access: yes, 2019
In this paper, I seek to advance the thesis that if we are to come to a better appreciation of the historical rootedness of philosophical thinking, we must strive to encourage the contextualization of philosophical texts and support this goal by ...
Paterson, Craig
core  

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