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Showing 1 - 13 of 13 matches in All Departments
Critiques modern liberal culture by means of a textual re-evaluation of Ralph Waldo Emerson, widely considered a prime formulator and archetype of liberal culture.
This is a new release of the original 1929 edition.
Contributing Authors Include John H. Muirhead, D. S. Mackay, W. R. Dennes, And Many Others. University Of California Publications In Philosophy, V10, October, 1928.
This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide.
Additional Editor Is Stephen C. Pepper. Lectures Delivered Before The Philosophical Union University Of California, 1924-1925.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
Text extracted from opening pages of book: About the Author Jacob Loewenberg, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cali fornia, Berkeley, began his teaching ca reer at Harvard as assistant to Josiah Royce, whose posthumous papers he edited. He taught for many decades at California, where his wit and wisdom have long been legendary. Of his last years of active teaching, three were spent at Columbia, where he taught his famous seminar on The Phenomenology of Hegel. It is this seminar ( and its predecessor at California) which forms the basis for the present definitive work on The Phenom enology for which the Hegel scholars of the world have long been waiting. In 1953, Loewenberg delivered the ninth series of Paul Carus Lectures later pub lished as his now classic Reason and the Nature of Things ( Open Court, 1959), in which he presents to the ordinary reader the effort of the Western Mind, sustained for centuries, to grapple with the major problems of human life and destiny/' The two interlocutors, Hardith and Meredy, whose sustained dialogue in the present work constitutes the eloquent vehicle for the presentation in dialectical fashion of Loewenberg's thought, were first introduced in an earlier work, Dia logues from Delphi, published in 1949 by the University of California Press. Hegel's Phenomenology: Dialogues on The Life of Mind J. LOEWENBERG Hegel's Phenomenology: Dialogues on The Life of Mind La Salle, Illinois 1965 The Open Court Publishing Co. Established 1887 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 65-15621 HEGEL'S PHENOMENOLOGY: DIALOGUES ON THE LIFE OF MIND 1965 by The Open Court Publishing Company Printed in the United States of America All rights in thisbook are reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in articles and reviews. For information address The Open Court Publishing Co., 1307 Seventh Street, LaSalle, Illinois. TO MY STUDENTS IN THE HEGEL SEMINAR AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, HARVARD, COLUMBIA, AND HAVERFORD. J. L. Preface Something needs to be said in justification of a new book on Hegel. Much has been written on his philosophy, and nothing fresh, it would seem, could now be added to the bulk of Hegelian scholarship. But the present volume, I hasten to state, is not designed to offer one more interpretation of Hegel's system. I propose neither to praise Hegel nor to bury him. My chief purpose is to afford a suitable approach to but one of Hegel's works which, as Windelband characterized it, is perhaps the most difficult treatise in the history of philosophy. The Phenomenology of Mind, published in 1807, was Hegel's first major work. Bewildering in matter and forbidding in manner, this early treatise has remained subject to conflicting valuations. To some it repre sents the very essence of Hegelianism, to others it exhibits a superseded position, the later writings alone constituting the true canon. The treatise has not been without panegyrists. William Wallace, for example, in a note introductory to his translation of Hegel's Logic, quotes with approval the dictum of David Strauss that the Phenomenol ogy is the Alpha and Omega of Hegel, and his later writings only extracts from it; and but here, as Wallace continues, the Pegasus of mind soars free through untrodden fields of air, and tastes the joys of firstlove and the pride of fresh discovery in the quest for truth. . . . The mood is Olympian, far above the turmoil and bitterness of lower earth. . . . But the Phenomenology is a key which needs consummate patience and skill to use with advantage. If it commands a larger view [ than the Encyclopaedia], it demands a stronger wing of him who would voyage through the atmosphere of thought up to its purest empyrean. Hyperbolic language, this. Yet, in spite of the extravagant figures of speech, the statement intimates a side of Hegel not unjustly deemed esoteric. In the Ph
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
Black Women in Nineteenth-Century American Life presents selections from the writings of two dozen representative black women leaders of the past century, with a general introduction relating them to their forebears in colonial times and to their descendants in the twentieth century. Each selection is introduced with a biographical headnote, and the book contains a bibliography of works by or about these women and other black women. The selections are grouped in four parts, emphasizing respectively family relationships, religious activities, political and reformist movements, and education. The women represented in this book comprise a cross section of historically significant black women in the nineteenth century. Ten were born free, eight were freed before the Civil War, and six were freed by the Emancipation Proclamation; eight were born in the North and sixteen in the South. Their names are Annie Louise Burton, Anna Julia Cooper, Fanny Jackson Coppin, Cornelia, Ellen Craft, Silvia Dubois, Elleanor Eldridge, Elizabeth, Charlotte Forten Grimke, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Elizabeth Keckley, Lucy Craft Laney, Jarena Lee, Louisa Picquet, Ann Plato, Nancy Prince, Sarah Parker Remond, Amanda Berry Smith, Maria Stewart, Susie King Taylor, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Ida Wells-Barnett, and Fannie Barrier Williams.
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