Cosmology and Politics in Plato's Later Works, written by Dominic J. O'Meara
In: Polis: the journal for ancient greek political thought, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 391-395
ISSN: 2051-2996
6 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Polis: the journal for ancient greek political thought, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 391-395
ISSN: 2051-2996
In: Polis: the journal for ancient greek political thought, Band 33, Heft 1, S. 196-200
ISSN: 2051-2996
In: Polis: the journal of ancient Greek political thought, Band 33, Heft 1, S. 196-200
ISSN: 0142-257X
In: Polis: the journal for ancient greek political thought, Band 30, Heft 1, S. 132-136
ISSN: 2051-2996
In: Topics in historical philosophy
On the purported Platonism of Heidegger's rectoral address / Theodore Kisiel -- Plato's legacy in Heidegger's two readings of Antigone / Jacques Taminiaux -- Imprint : Heidegger's interpretation of Platonic dialectic in the Sophist lectures (1924-25) / Catalin Partenie -- Truth and untruth in Plato and Heidegger / Michael Inwood -- Heidegger and the Platonic concept of truth / Enrico Berti -- Amicus Plato magis amica veritas : reading Heidegger in Plato's cave / María del Carmen Paredes -- Heidegger on truth and being / Joseph Margolis -- With Plato into the Kairos before the Kehre : on Heidegger's different interpretations of Plato / Johannes Fritsche -- Remarks on Heidegger's Plato / Stanley Rosen -- Heidegger's uses of Plato and the history of philosophy / Tom Rockmore.
In: Phaenomenologica 220
This book contains twelve engaging philosophical lectures given by Alexandru Dragomir, most of them given during Romania's Communist regime. The lectures deal with a diverse range of topics, such as the function of the question, self-deception, banalities with a metaphysical dimension, and how the world we live in has been shaped by the intellect. Among the thinkers discussed in these lectures are Anaxagoras, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, and Nietzsche. Alexandru Dragomir was a Romanian philosopher born in 1916. After studying law and philosophy at the University of Bucharest (1933-1939), he left Romania to study for a doctorate in philosophy in Freiburg, Germany, under Martin Heidegger. He stayed in Freiburg for two years (1941-1943), but before defending his dissertation he was called back to Romania for military service and sent to the front. After 1948, historical circumstances forced him to become a clandestine philosopher: he was known only within a very limited circle. He died in 2002 without ever publishing anything. It was only after his death that Dragomir's notebooks came to light. His work has been published posthumously in five volumes by Humanitas, Bucharest; the present volume is the first to appear in English translation. In 2009, the Alexandru Dragomir Institute for Philosophy was founded in Bucharest as an independent research institute under the auspices of the Romanian Society for Phenomenology