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In Prehistoric Seas (Paperback)
Carroll Lane 1900-1969 Fenton; Created by Mildred Adams 1899- Joint Au Fenton
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R512
Discovery Miles 5 120
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In Prehistoric Seas (Hardcover)
Carroll Lane 1900-1969 Fenton; Created by Mildred Adams 1899- Joint Au Fenton
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R830
Discovery Miles 8 300
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Ortega begins with a detailed definition of a principle and with an
examination of the specific principles formulated by Leibnitz. He
goes on to examine Leibnitz. He goes on to examine Leibnitz s
complex and mercurial attitudes towards principles and discusses
the effects of these attitudes on his philosophy and on
contributions to mathematics and logic."
The prospectus that announced the creation of The Institute of the
Humanities promised an inaugural course of twelve lectures, to be
given by its founder and entitled, "Concerning a New Interpretation
of International History. (Exposition and Examination of A. J.
Toynbee's work, A Study of History.)" But the course as given (in
1948-49) went much farther than that announcement, for the
"examination" consisted principally of a critique of Toynbee's work
from the point of view of Ortega's own doctrines, together with the
unfolding of his personal ideas about the science of history and
the progress of peoples-in particular the Romans-with frequent side
excursions, meant to be systematic, into the crisis of the present
time. The central theme of these pages becomes "the analysis of
life established in illegitimacy . . . of which the two gigantic
examples are the declining days of the Roman Empire and the period
in which we ourselves are living." To the modern crisis, Ortega
brings a basic analysis and a program of reform for intelligence by
which contemporary life might emerge from the confusion it now
suffers.
Ortega's entry into the writing world came by way of newspaper
essays that are still read by generations seeking revelations and
interpretations of the world. He wrote on varied subjects: love,
bullfighting, hunting, education, and Don Quixote. His incessant
search for knowledge led him into political theory and practice and
metaphysics as well. This present book represents Ortega's
incursions into a field of thought along which anyone curious
enough to travel will find leads him into a succession of ideas
that extend his vision and his understanding of himself. If
generations of men have puzzled over man's role in the universe and
have tried to put it into words, Ortega's phrase "I am myself and
my circumstances" is so simply and appealingly true that it may
come as a great surprise to find it hailed as an important
philosophic contribution. In this day of alienation, when the young
have difficulty finding out who they are, Ortega's venture into
metaphysics is a lit lamp in the first chapter, of the student's
role will shed light on the reason for present student disorders.
A brilliant examination of the twentieth century predicament in the light of the shift in Rome from pragmatism to Christianity and the transition from the static world of the Middle Ages to the Renaissance. "A worthy companion of the author's The Revolt of the Masses. Both books are marked by the brilliance, originality, and depth of the author's interpretation of the crisis of our age and of the the basic historical processes." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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