Results 141 to 150 of about 147,561 (281)
Philosophy of Word of Arseny Tarkovsky in Context of Russian Religious Philosophy of Language
The article focuses on the analysis of the poetic word of A. Tarkovsky. The coincidence of the poetic intuition of A. Tarkovsky and linguistically-philosophical framework of Russian philosophers is shown. The kinship of Russian metaphysical poetry and Russian philosophy based on the Christian ontology testifies to the common spiritual development of ...
openaire +1 more source
Civilizing the Nation: Travel, Civility and Bourgeois Nationalism in Israel
ABSTRACT This article reads The Lapid Guide to Europe, a bestselling Hebrew‐language travel guide published from the 1970s to the 1990s, as a form of bourgeois nationalism enacted through everyday practices of behaviour. Written by journalist and Holocaust survivor Tommy Lapid, the guide operated as civic pedagogy, instructing Israeli travellers in ...
Daniel Mahla
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Scholarship on nationalism and nation‐building in Kazakhstan has been dominated by a social constructivist approach that privileges the civic–ethnic dichotomy. Even when critiques of this binary have emerged, they have often substituted proxy categories that reproduce the same dualism.
Rico Isaacs
wiley +1 more source
Social and axiological guidelines of Russian religious philosophy
V Atayan, M Soghomonyan
openaire +1 more source
More Than Regulation: Challenging Habermas on the Future of the Public Sphere
Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
Bernardo Ferro
wiley +1 more source
Middlebrow Aesthetics: An Explanation and Defense
ABSTRACT We offer a philosophical account of the middlebrow as a theoretical category to do explanatory and critical work in aesthetics. On our account, the middlebrow ought to be understood as aspirational popular art. That is, it is art which aspires both to be popular (in a distinctive sense), and at the same time to be something more than popular ...
Aaron Meskin, Jonathan M. Weinberg
wiley +1 more source
How Can Law Be Robust in the Face of Heightened Societal Turbulence?
ABSTRACT Taking its cue from the growing frequency of disruptive crises, new research argues that crisis‐induced turbulence calls for robust governance based on adaptation and innovation. While law plays a key role in the effort of governments to govern robustly, the robustness of law has received scant regard.
Eva Sørensen +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Humanities in transition: Liberation of knowledge in Central Asia and the potential role of the European Union [PDF]
--
Jonboboev, Sunatullo
core
Russian religious philosophy in the optics of intellectual history
The article focuses on discussing a methodology for the study of Russian religious philosophy in the conditions of the linguistic and corporate divide between the history of Russian thought and contemporary philosophy. Describing this divide, V. Sidorin emphasizes that historians can distance themselves from their subjects without resorting to overly
openaire +1 more source
Intentionalism, anti‐Intentionalism and conversational interaction
Abstract Proponents as well as opponents of modeling aesthetic interpretation on conversation tend to assume that this implies that the author's intention constitutes the meaning of her work and that the aim of interpretation consists in recovering it.
Palle Leth
wiley +1 more source

