Papers On Philosophy
Page 62 of 90
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Karl Marx and Immanuel Kant
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This 5 page report discusses the
philosophers Karl Marx (1818-1883) and Immanuel Kant (1724-1804).
Simplistically reduced, Marx held to the pronouncement that all
events are determined by economic forces. Marx was always
well-aware that it was not the working class but the middle class
that drove history along its ever-progressing path. Immanuel
Kant believed individual thought to be the framework by which the
individual was able to determine the appropriate category into
which one thought process or pattern would fit over another.
Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: BWmxkant.wps
Karl Marx’s Contribution to Political Thought
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This 10 page
report discusses the fact that in any discussion or research on
the works of Karl Marx, that he had a singular premise, whether
it related to politics, economics, or sociology. Marx’s
declaration, simplistically reduced, was that all events are
determined by economic forces. In terms of his separate political
perspective, as much as it could ever be separated from his point
of view regarding economics, it was not as opposite to the
politics of many of the great politicians in the world’s modern
democracies. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: BWmarpol.wps
Kierkegaard / "Fear and Trembling"
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A 5 page analysis of Soren Kierkegaard's book Fear and Trembling, in which the nineteenth century Danish philosopher argues that there are three stages to human existence, the highest of which is religious. No additional sources cited.
Filename: 99fr&tr.wps
Kierkegaard: "Fear and Trembling"
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A 5 page paper which discusses Problemata I
within Kierkegaard's "Fear and Trembling" and illustrates Kierkegaard's solution to the
problem. The problem presented is that which is clearly evident in the philosophies of
Hegel which Kierkegaard heavily disagreed. The paper also addresses Kierkegaard's
notion of faith as it relates to this problem. Bibliography lists 1 additional source.
Filename: RAkierkegrd.wps
Kitaro Nishida's New World Order
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This 5 page paper explores the
concept of a new world order as it was articulated by Kitaro Nishida in
1943. In his essay, Nishida writes that each nation must transcend
itself in order to construct a single multi-world, or worlds of worlds
within the world. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: KTkitaro.wps
Knowledge of the Past, Knowledge of the Future:
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5 pages in length. "Without knowledge of the past, we would have no knowledge at all." With this statement in mind, the author examines many different ways in which the statement is proven to be true. Examples are given and an effective thesis is made. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: JGAknowl.wps
Learning to Die is Learning to Live: "Tuesdays with Morrie" and "Sacred Art of
Dying"
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A 5 page paper which discusses how the term "learning to live is learning to
die," as presented in Mitch Albom's book "Tuesdays with Morrie," is a theme also found
in Kenneth Kramer's "The Sacred Art of Dying." Bibliography lists 4 additional sources.
Filename: RAdielive.wps
Levoy's Callings
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This 5 page book review looks at Callings : Finding and Following an Authentic Life. by Gregg Michael Levoy. The concept of the calling and finding satisfaction in work is discussed. No additional sources cited.
Filename: SA101cal.wps
Limited Nuclear War
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A 6 page paper exploring three main points regarding a 'limited' nuclear war: the sociological history of war, the justification for nuclear arms, and the effects of a nuclear war on society and the environment. Concludes with an argument in favor of limited nuclear war. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: Limitwar.wps
Living Up to our Standards According to Different Sources
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5
pages. There are many terms that have been used to characterize
the notion that human beings fall short of what they are meant to
be. In order to fully research this topic, we will look at the
following terms and indicate which of them seems to most
accurately describe the human condition and why. The terms we
will look at are that of sin as written about in the New
Testament; Unrighteousness as discussed in the Old Testament;
Ignorance as considered by Plato and the Stoics, and Attachment
as we find in the Bhagavad Gita. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: JGAignrc.wps
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