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18th Century German Aesthetics

plato.stanford.edu·Guyer, Paul·25 days ago
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The philosophical discipline of aesthetics did not receive its name until 1735, when the twenty-one year old Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten introduced it in his Halle master’s thesis to mean epistêmê aisthetikê, or the science of what is sensed and…

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Normative Economics and Economic Justice
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Normative Economics and Economic Justice

plato.stanford.edu·Fleurbaey, Marc·25 days ago
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Distributive justice is often considered not to belong to the scope of economics, but there is actually an important literature in economics that addresses normative issues in social and economic justice.…

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Friedrich Albert Lange

plato.stanford.edu·Widmer, Elisabeth·29 days ago
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Lange was born on September 28, 1828 in Wald, near Solingen, Germany. He was the son of a protestant theologian, pastor and professor. Soon after Lange was born, the family moved to Langenberg near Elberfeld and then in 1832 to Duisburg.…

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Russell’s Moral Philosophy

plato.stanford.edu·Pigden, Charles·29 days ago
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Russell’s destiny as an ethical thinker was dominated by one book—G.E. Moore’s Principia Ethica (1903). Before 1903, Russell devoted some of the energy that he could spare from German Social Democracy, the foundations of mathematics and the philosophy of…

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Virtue Ethics

plato.stanford.edu·Pettigrove, Glen·29 days ago
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In the West, virtue ethics’ founding fathers are Plato and Aristotle, and in the East it can be traced back to Mencius and Confucius. It persisted as the dominant approach in Western moral philosophy until at least the Enlightenment, suffered a momentary…

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Loyalty

plato.stanford.edu·Kleinig, John·about 1 month ago
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Loyalty is usually seen as a virtue, albeit a problematic one. It is constituted centrally by perseverance in an association to which a person has become intrinsically committed as a matter of his or her identity.…

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Plato

plato.stanford.edu·Kraut, Richard·about 1 month ago
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Plato (429?–347 B.C.E.) is, by any reckoning, one of the most dazzling writers in the Western literary tradition and one of the most penetrating, wide-ranging, and influential authors in the history of philosophy.…

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Spinoza’s Epistemology and Philosophy of Mind

plato.stanford.edu·Hübner, Karolina·about 1 month ago
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Spinoza’s epistemology and philosophy of mind are governed by some rather unintuitive commitments: first, a commitment to universal intelligibility, often described as Spinoza’s version of what, with Leibniz, came to be known as the Principle of…

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Michel Foucault

plato.stanford.edu·Oksala, Johanna·about 1 month ago
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Michel Foucault (1926–1984) was a French historian and philosopher, associated with the structuralist and post-structuralist movements. He has had strong influence not only in philosophy but also in a wide range of humanistic and social scientific…

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Aristotle’s Biology

plato.stanford.edu·Leunissen, Mariska·about 1 month ago
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Aristotle was born in Stagira on the northern Aegean coast in 384 BCE. His father Nicomachus was physician to King Amyntas III of Macedon, and his mother Phaestis was of a wealthy family from the island of Euboea.…

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