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In: Political studies, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 744
ISSN: 0032-3217
In: Cambridge Critical Guides
Nietzsche regarded Thus Spoke Zarathustra as his most important philosophical contribution. It is also the only place where he elaborates his concepts of the superhuman and the eternal recurrence of the same. In this Critical Guide, an international group of distinguished scholars analyze the philosophical ideas in this famous book.
In: History of continental philosophy Volume 3
1. Henri Bergson / John Mullarkey -- 2. Neo-Kantianism in Germany and France / Sebastian Luft and Fabien Capeilleres -- 3. The emergence of French sociology : Emile Durkheim and Marcel Mauss / Mike Gane -- 4. Analytic and continental traditions : Frege, Husserl, Carnap, and Heidegger / Michael Friedman and Thomas Ryckman -- 5. Edmund Husserl / Thomas Nenon -- 6. Max Scheler / Dan Zahavi -- 7. The early Heidegger / Miguel de Beistegui -- 8. Karl Jaspers / Leonard H. Ehrlich -- 9. Phenomenology at home and abroad / Diane Perpich -- 10. Early continental philosophy of science / Babette Babich -- 11. Ludwig Wittgenstein / John Fennell and Bob Plant -- 12. Freud and continental philosophy / Adrian Johnston -- 13. Responses to evolution : Spencer's evolutionism, Bergsonism, and contemporary biology / Keith Ansell-Pearson, Paul-Antoine Miquel, and Michael Vaughan.
In: Continuum reader's guides
In: Warwick Studies in European Philosophy
In: The complete works of Friedrich Nietzsche Vol. 5
In: Cambridge texts in the history of political thought
Friedrich Nietzsche is one of the most influential thinkers of the past 150 years and On the Genealogy of Morality (1887) is his most important work on ethics and politics. A polemical contribution to moral and political theory, it offers a critique of moral values and traces the historical evolution of concepts such as guilt, conscience, responsibility, law and justice. First published in 1994, and revised in 2006, the third edition of this best-selling, concise introduction and translation has been revised and updated throughout, to take account of recent scholarship. Featuring an expanded introduction, an updated bibliography and a guide to further reading, the third edition also includes timelines and biographical synopses. The Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought edition of Nietzsche's major work is an essential resource for both undergraduate and graduate courses on Nietzsche, the history of philosophy, continental philosophy, history of political thought and ethics.
In: Bloomsbury Revelations Ser
Cover -- HalfTitle -- Series -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- Chronology of Life and Works -- Introduction -- Duration and the two multiplicities -- Is time space? -- Bergson and Russell on continuity -- Towards an ontology of duration -- Life as a virtual multiplicity -- Bergson and relativity -- Intuition beyond Kant -- Morality and sociobiology -- Mélanges -- Time and Free Will -- The Idea of Duration -- Matter and Memory -- Introduction -- Images and Bodies -- The Persistence of the Past -- Planes of Consciousness -- Mind-Energy -- Memory of the Present and False Recognition -- Brain and Thought: A Philosophical Illusion -- Creative Evolution -- The Endurance of Life -- Mechanism and Finalism -- Life as Creative Change -- Duration and Simultaneity -- Concerning the Nature of Time -- The Creative Mind -- The Possible and the Real -- Philosophical Intuition -- The Perception of Change -- First lecture -- Second lecture -- On the Pragmatism of William James: Truth and Reality -- Introduction to Metaphysics -- Bergson and Kant -- Beyond the Noumenal -- The Two Sources of Morality and Religion -- Morality, Obligation and the Open Soul -- Frenzy, Mechanism, Mysticism -- Mélanges -- Good Sense and Classical Studies -- Letter to G. Lechalas -- End of 1897 -- Bergson–James Correspondence -- Villa Montmorency, 6th January 1903.13 -- Villa Montmorency, 25th March 1903.18 -- 15th February 1905.22 -- Villa Montmorency, 20th July 1905.26 -- Villa Montmorency, 27th June 1907.33 -- Villa Montmorency, 9th May 1908.37 -- Chalet Ferdinand de Reynier, Chaumont-Sur-Neuchatel (Switzerland), 23rd July 1908.39 -- Villa Montmorency, 21st January 1909.42 -- 9th April 1909.46 -- 30th April 1909.48 -- Villa Montmorency, 31st March 1910.51 -- Letter to Harald Höffding -- 15 March 1915 -- Letter to Floris Delattre -- 24th December 1935
In: Bouquins