Results 161 to 170 of about 1,795 (212)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
From Solipsism to the Limits of Experience: A Reflection in the Light of Wittgenstein’s TLP
Journal of Indian Council of Philosophical Research, 2023Rajakishore Nath +2 more
exaly
2003
The term ‘solipsism’ derives from the Latin solus ipse , meaning oneself alone . Broadly speaking a method, or doctrine, or point of view is solipsistic to the extent that it assigns a fundamental, irreducible, and asymmetrical role to subjective phenomena of the kind that are normally indicated by use of the singular form of the first person pronoun.
openaire +1 more source
The term ‘solipsism’ derives from the Latin solus ipse , meaning oneself alone . Broadly speaking a method, or doctrine, or point of view is solipsistic to the extent that it assigns a fundamental, irreducible, and asymmetrical role to subjective phenomena of the kind that are normally indicated by use of the singular form of the first person pronoun.
openaire +1 more source
1968
In this chapter we will consider some principle avenues which one might take in order to flee from solipsism, provided that one comes to philosophy with the same sorts of methodological assumptions. In the next chapter we will discuss the attitudes towards solipsism of those philosophers who have quite different methodological outlooks.
openaire +1 more source
In this chapter we will consider some principle avenues which one might take in order to flee from solipsism, provided that one comes to philosophy with the same sorts of methodological assumptions. In the next chapter we will discuss the attitudes towards solipsism of those philosophers who have quite different methodological outlooks.
openaire +1 more source
2009
Abstract For Kant, moral reciprocity is intensely present in love and friendship, but he is gloomy about sexual love, which can make a person into ‘an object of appetite’. Two interpretations: sexual love can be reductive, regarding the other as a mere body, for physical gratification (Herman); it can be invasive, regarding the other ...
openaire +1 more source
Abstract For Kant, moral reciprocity is intensely present in love and friendship, but he is gloomy about sexual love, which can make a person into ‘an object of appetite’. Two interpretations: sexual love can be reductive, regarding the other as a mere body, for physical gratification (Herman); it can be invasive, regarding the other ...
openaire +1 more source
Spinoza and the Self-Overcoming of Solipsism
Comparative and Continental Philosophy, 2012Brook Ziporyn
exaly

