- published: 17 May 2015
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Neo is a prefix from the ancient Greek word for young, neos (νέος).
Neo may refer to:
Michael Inwood gives a talk on Ernst Cassirer in connection with Immanuel Kant, G.W.F. Hegel, and Martin Heidegger. Ernst Cassirer was a German philosopher heavily influenced by the work of Kant. As a Neo-Kantian idealist, Cassirer took concepts and the mind to be fundamental and primary over material bodies, and understood truth in terms of internal coherence rather than as correspondence to an independent external reality. His focus was on epistemology and science, as well as culture. Cassirer is perhaps most famous for his philosophy of symbolic forms. This talk was given at a conference called "After Kant".
Neo-Kantianism Neo-Kantianism refers broadly to a revived type of philosophy along the lines of that laid down by Immanuel Kant in the 18th century, or more specifically by Schopenhauer's criticism of the Kantian philosophy in his work The World as Will and Representation (1818), as well as by other post-Kantian philosophers such as Jakob Friedrich Fries and Johann Friedrich Herbart.It has some more specific reference in later German philosophy. =======Image-Copyright-Info======= Image is in public domain Author-Info: Unknown Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Kant_foto.jpg =======Image-Copyright-Info======== -Video is targeted to blind users Attribution: Article text available under CC-BY-SA image source in video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2f2B0tAWiYw
A discussion about how the Marburg and the Heidelburg (South-West) schools of Neo-Kantianism reinterpreted Kantianism. The general upshot is that they referred to transcendental preconditions of validity of judgments instead of relying on preconditions of possible empirical experience. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/blairvlogproject/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/hotelsdown Instagram: https://instagram.com/hotelsdown/ Snapchat: buhlaiorr Email: buhlaiorr@gmail.com Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/102748052340037281381/posts
Thats what you get for being roommates with schelling
Symposium on Occasion of the Farewell of Paul Hoyningen-Huene from Hannover: Science - Big Questions Revisited. 18th July 2014
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It is well-known that in his 1929 book "Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics", Heidegger argues that the second edition of the "Critique of Pure Reason" is not the improvement over the first edition that it is generally assumed to be. Because timeless concepts of the understanding are made victorious over the temporal schematization of the imagination, Heidegger reads the second edition as a lapse into a shallow idealism on Kant's part. The second edition is seen as responsible for the heritage of German idealism and Marburg Neo-Kantianism that reduce Kant's theoretical philosophy to mere epistemology. It is Heidegger's aim to retrieve something more profound from his reading of the first edition, namely, an ontological access to the world that can ground our intellectual representations of...
Sources Original video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tla6mXNhBvA Carneades.org and Kant on the cosmological argument - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqrRl-1UT70 Lynch on Craig and neo-kantianism - Pages 24-25 - http://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1151&context;=masters Nowaki on Craig and neo-kantianism – Page 14 - http://imgur.com/a/jWVLC (includes page quoted and where it is from). Messianic Drew on Craig and Neo-kantianism in the context of a Kalam apologetic - http://messianicdrew.blogspot.ca/2013/10/an-empiricist-objection-to-kalam.html And video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YgzSOYu1Yw0&list;=UUUVKLrf2SmaNwAdFc02WqOA Craig in defence of Mike Lichona – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_R._Licona#Matthew_27_controversy Kant and the Kalam – h...
Based on a critical reading of Jürgen Habermas’s European writings, Volker Heins argues that Europe’s current crisis is also a crisis of its narratives. It is shown how Habermas has recently revised his political vision of a united Europe without giving up on his neo-Kantian ‘soft revolutionism’. The novelty is that the envisioned future EU is no longer seen only as an alternative to the allegedly defunct European nation state, but also as the antithesis to US-style federalism and Continental postdemocracy. Moreover, the German philospher no longer fully trusts the power of the better argument defended in his general social theory, but instead backs up his hope for normative progress towards a politically more integrated Europe with a belief in the force of the crisis that might push peopl...
Reaching back to pure experience, below the level of the fabrications, judgments, and conceptualizations of ordinary consciousness, was Nishida Kitaro’s expression of the heart of Zen practice. The main thrust of this philosophical expression was its ability to overturn the usual schemes of the theory of knowledge, thus going beyond the circle of Zen and questioning some of the dearest presuppositions of the Western science of nature. The most central presupposition of science, perhaps, is that objectivity is universal. This does not only create a blindspot in knowledge, but also forces one to ignore it. Several strategies were accordingly adopted in the West to overcome this ignorance. One of them is Phenomenology, with its project of stripping the layers of interpretation by way of a com...
Martin Heidegger is widely acknowledged to be one of the most original and important philosophers of the 20th century, while remaining one of the most controversial. His thinking has contributed to such diverse fields as phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty), existentialism (Sartre, Ortega y Gasset), hermeneutics (Gadamer, Ricoeur), political theory (Arendt, Marcuse, Habermas), psychology (Boss, Binswanger, Rollo May), and theology (Bultmann, Rahner, Tillich). His critique of traditional metaphysics and his opposition to positivism and technological world domination have been embraced by leading theorists of postmodernity (Derrida, Foucault, and Lyotard). On the other hand, his involvement in the Nazi movement has invoked a stormy debate. Although he never claimed that his philosophy was concern...
Martin Heidegger is widely acknowledged to be one of the most original and important philosophers of the 20th century, while remaining one of the most controversial. His thinking has contributed to such diverse fields as phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty), existentialism (Sartre, Ortega y Gasset), hermeneutics (Gadamer, Ricoeur), political theory (Arendt, Marcuse, Habermas), psychology (Boss, Binswanger, Rollo May), and theology (Bultmann, Rahner, Tillich). His critique of traditional metaphysics and his opposition to positivism and technological world domination have been embraced by leading theorists of postmodernity (Derrida, Foucault, and Lyotard). On the other hand, his involvement in the Nazi movement has invoked a stormy debate. Although he never claimed that his philosophy was concern...
Martin Heidegger is widely acknowledged to be one of the most original and important philosophers of the 20th century, while remaining one of the most controversial. His thinking has contributed to such diverse fields as phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty), existentialism (Sartre, Ortega y Gasset), hermeneutics (Gadamer, Ricoeur), political theory (Arendt, Marcuse, Habermas), psychology (Boss, Binswanger, Rollo May), and theology (Bultmann, Rahner, Tillich). His critique of traditional metaphysics and his opposition to positivism and technological world domination have been embraced by leading theorists of postmodernity (Derrida, Foucault, and Lyotard). On the other hand, his involvement in the Nazi movement has invoked a stormy debate. Although he never claimed that his philosophy was concern...
Martin Heidegger is widely acknowledged to be one of the most original and important philosophers of the 20th century, while remaining one of the most controversial. His thinking has contributed to such diverse fields as phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty), existentialism (Sartre, Ortega y Gasset), hermeneutics (Gadamer, Ricoeur), political theory (Arendt, Marcuse, Habermas), psychology (Boss, Binswanger, Rollo May), and theology (Bultmann, Rahner, Tillich). His critique of traditional metaphysics and his opposition to positivism and technological world domination have been embraced by leading theorists of postmodernity (Derrida, Foucault, and Lyotard). On the other hand, his involvement in the Nazi movement has invoked a stormy debate. Although he never claimed that his philosophy was concern...
In her third lecture of the Aberdeen Gifford Lecture Series 2012, Professor Sarah Coakley tackles more explicitly the problem of how to build an ethical system in conversation with the deliverances of evolutionary biology on "cooperation" and (human) "altruism". The failure of much evolutionary theory to take account of the difference between pre-human and human forms has resulted in some spectacular philosophical mistakes: choices have to be made between different meta-ethical theories to account for these phenomena, and a narrow utilitarian calculus is by no means obviously the most successful meta-ethic in taking account of the evidences. Coakley returns then to the neo-Aristotelian and Kantian options, but pointedly enquires in closing whether either of them can do full justice to th...