| Lee Braver - Philosophy - 2007 - 615 pages
Combining conceptual rigour and clarity of prose with historical erudition, this book shows how one of the standard issues of analytic philosophy, realism and anti-realism, has ... | |
| Michael A Peters - Education - 2013 - 230 pages
In the World Library of Educationalists series, international experts themselves compile career-long collections of what they judge to be their finest pieces - extracts from ... | |
| Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen - Science - 2008 - 348 pages
The volume advances research in the philosophy of technology by introducing contributors who have an acute sense of how to get beyond or reframe the epistemic, ontological and ... | |
| Iain Macdonald - Philosophy - 2008 - 250 pages
This collection of essays explores the conflictual history and future implications of two important traditions of twentieth-century European thought: the critical theory of ... | |
| Michael A. Peters - Education - 2002 - 276 pages
Martin Heidegger is, perhaps, the most controversial philosopher of the twentieth-century. Little has been written on him or about his work and its significance for educational ... | |
| Ladelle McWhorter, Gail Stenstad - Philosophy - 2009 - 289 pages
In this newly revised and greatly expanded edition of Heidegger and the Earth, the contributors approach contemporary ecological issues through the medium of Heidegger's thought. | |
| Jeff Malpas, Santiago Zabala - Literary Criticism - 2010 - 429 pages
Consequences of Hermeneutics celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of one of the most important philosophical works of the twentieth century with essay by most ... | |
| Michael Lewis - Philosophy - 2007 - 216 pages
A highly original reading of Heidegger in light of the deconstruction movement and the work of philosophers including Derrida, Marx, Lacan and Zizek. | |
| Peter Wilberg - Phenomenology - 2008 - 106 pages
"Being is no longer the essential matter to be thought." Martin Heidegger Western thought clings to the notion that consciousness is essentially both 'intentional' (awareness ... | |
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