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  1. The Main Trends in Philosophy Т. I. Oizerman, member of the USSR Academy of Sciences, is head of the sector of the history of philosophy of West European Countries and America of the Academy's Institute of Philosophy. He is well known throughout the world for his many fundamental works on the history of pre-Marxian, Marxian, and contemporary

  2. 1. Jan. 1979 · To assess the main trends of philosophy in the world today, the author avoids using a simple geographical framework and favours instead a schema that identifies philosophical fields or loci with questions being presently researched and discussed. The identification is made on the basis of the main conceptions that philosophers of various leanings have themselves formed of philosophy, its ...

    • Paul Ricoeur
  3. 18. Juli 2018 · As feminist philosophers carry out work in traditional philosophical fields, from ethics to epistemology, they have introduced new concepts and perspectives that have transformed philosophy itself ...

  4. 25. Juli 2021 · Firstly, philosophy of education can interrogate the professed aims of education, casting a critical. eye towards the way that these are conceptualized and articulated, to uncover possible ...

  5. Philosophy. The Philosophical Review. M ODERN empiricism has been conditioned in large part by two dogmas. One is a belief in some fundamental cleavage between truths which are analytic, or grounded in meanings independently of matters of fact, and truth which are synthetic, or grounded in fact. The other dogma is reductionism: the belief that ...

  6. E. A. Ruch and K. C. Anyanwu (eds.), African Philosophy: an introduction to the main philosophical trends in contemporary Africa, Rome: Catholic Book Agency, 1981, 412 pp. - Volume 52 Issue 4 Skip to main content Accessibility help

  7. Physics is the science of the motions and actions of physical bodies conceived in terms of cause and effect. Moral philosophy (or, more accurately, psychology) is the detailed study of “the passions and perturbations of the mind”—that is, how minds are “moved” by desire, aversion, appetite, fear, anger, and envy.