| |
|
|
| Issn:15665399 |
|
| Keywords: |
| Volume: 7 |
| Pages: |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:15665399 |
|
| Keywords: |
| Volume: 7 |
| Pages: |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:07184727 |
En este trabajo se revisan algunas ideas generales compartidas por la antropología y la filosofía acerca de la actitud básica de curiosidad frente al mundo, y al modo en que se descubren los múltiples modos de ser y estar en él a través de la experiencia intercultural. Se toma como caso el del grupo indígena qom o toba del Chaco argentino, indagando, en un diálogo con la fenomenología y el existencialismo occidentales, en el modo en que los primeros construyen su noción de mundo, conocimiento, pensamiento, y persona. Esta posibilidad de conversación intercultural está mediada por la llamada crítica postcolonial, corriente contemporánea de pensamiento crítico que intenta descentrar la hegemonía del discurso filosófico eurocéntrico en beneficio de un diálogo epistemológico y político horizontal entre universos dispares de saberes. Aquí se propone un ejemplo de tal ejercicio, identificando los aportes que el pensamiento qom podría realizar a una filosofía intercultural articulada desde la exploración etnográfica. |
| Keywords: Antropología ; crítica postcolonial ; filosofía ; Tobas ; Chaco argentino ; Anthropology ; Postcolonial critique ; Philosophy ; Toba ; Argentine Chaco |
| Volume: 1 |
| Pages: 1-10 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:19087330 |
In the study of the Filipino thoughts on religion, there are two important features of religion to consider in order to formulate a method that is suitable for the study of Filipino philosophy of religion. First, man experiences an encounter with the sacred, and this is called a religious experience. And this causes him to believe or to assent, and specifically, this is called faith. And second, symbols are used in expressing religious experience. |
| Keywords: Paul Ricoeur ; Filipino philosophy of religion ; hermeneutics |
| Volume: 1 |
| Pages: 122-131 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:19087330 |
|
| Keywords: |
| Volume: 1 |
| Pages: i-iii |
|
|
|
|
The Changing Image of God in Process Philosophy |
| Journal: Kritike : An Online Journal of Philosophy |
|
Journal Details |
|
Issn: 19087330 |
|
Country: Philippines |
| Keywords: continental philosophy, analytic philosophy, East-West comparative philosophy |
| Language: English |
| Publisher: kritike.org |
| Link: http://www.kritike.org/journal/issue_1/barcelona_june2007.pdf |
|
| Author: Salavador P. Barcelona |
| Year: 2007 Issue: 1 Views: 13 |
| Seeing is a matter of perspective. A perspective is the vantage point by which we view the reality |
| More Abstract.. |
|
| Issn:19087330 |
Seeing is a matter of perspective. A perspective is the vantage point by which we view the reality or the world around us. That is why it is called a worldview or paradigm. In other words, what we see is a by product of how we look at the reality around us based on our idea and image of ourselves. Thus, a philosopher once said that if a bird is given the necessary intelligence and the faculty to express its idea of God it will speak of a God that majestically sings and flies with His mighty wings. |
| Keywords: Charles Hartshorne ; process philosophy ; perspectivism |
| Volume: 1 |
| Pages: 96-113 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:19087330 |
|
| Keywords: |
| Volume: 1 |
| Pages: i-iii |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:18329101 |
A brief review of the 2002-4 ldquo;Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Hegel and the Phenomenology of Spiritrdquo;, by Robert Stern, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Sheffield. Focusing in particular on Stern#39;s attempt to negotiate some of the difficulties inherent in the procedure of #39;dialectical#39; thinking, in a form suitable to those reading Hegel for the first time. br /nbsp; |
| Keywords: Hegel ; Dialectic ; Phenomenology ; Introduction ; Robert Stern |
| Volume: 3 |
| Pages: 400-404 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:18329101 |
Book review of: Elliot L. Jurist, Beyond Hegel and Nietzsche: Philosophy, Culture, and Agency, Cambridge, The MIT Press, 2000, ISBN: 0262100878.br / |
| Keywords: Hegel ; Jurist ; Hegel ; Nietzsche ; Philosophy ; Culture ; Agency |
| Volume: 3 |
| Pages: 389-395 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Issn:18329101 |
This paper suggests that it is not enough to simply account for the lsquo;beginningrsquo; in Hegelrsquo;s philosophy. To capture the speculative depth of Hegelrsquo;s thinking one must also account for the beginning of philosophy as such. That is, how or why the philosopher begins or lsquo;the beginning before the beginningrsquo;. The question of the activation of the philosophical project itself is explored through Hegelrsquo;s notion of the lsquo;need of philosophyrsquo; and the fundamental relation between the historical event of the French Revolution and philosophical thinking. This question is explored through a critical discussion of those thinkers who are also concerned with the philosophy/revolution relation but are critical of Hegelrsquo;s approach. It is suggested that these critical readings employ a thematic approach to both Hegel and philosophy more generally. This approach renders them unable to appreciate Hegelrsquo;s philosophy speculatively and as a consequence the relation between philosophy and freedom, via the revolution, is misconstrued. In contradistinction to these readings the question of how one encounters Hegelrsquo;s thought non-thematically is explored through an analysis of the willingness of the would-be philosopher to activate themselves into the philosophical project and dwell with Hegel in the lsquo;wersquo;. Rather than providing answers to the questions raised, this paper seeks to act as a provocation for a renewed encounter with Hegelrsquo;s philosophy. br / |
| Keywords: Hegel ; Beginning ; Revolution ; Freedom ; Modernity ; Dwelling ; We ; Thought |
| Volume: 3 |
| Pages: 328-356 |
|
|
|
|