- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
France is famous for philosophy: this Handbook explores the riches and interest of this great intellectual tradition since 1800. Specially written essays by leading experts illuminate key movements and positions, themes and thinkers in French philosophy,exploring the ideas in their historical context.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Oxford Handbook of Skepticism239,99 €
- Friedrich NietzscheOn the Genealogy of Morals12,99 €
- Friedrich SchillerOn the Aesthetic Education of Man13,99 €
- Mark SinclairFélix Ravaisson: French Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century114,99 €
- Ted Honderich (ed.)The Oxford Companion to Philosophy39,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Time63,99 €
- Brian LeiterThe Oxford Handbook of Continental Philosophy (Paperback)73,99 €
-
-
-
France is famous for philosophy: this Handbook explores the riches and interest of this great intellectual tradition since 1800. Specially written essays by leading experts illuminate key movements and positions, themes and thinkers in French philosophy,exploring the ideas in their historical context.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 768
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. September 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 173mm x 51mm
- Gewicht: 1474g
- ISBN-13: 9780198841869
- ISBN-10: 0198841868
- Artikelnr.: 69926951
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 768
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. September 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 173mm x 51mm
- Gewicht: 1474g
- ISBN-13: 9780198841869
- ISBN-10: 0198841868
- Artikelnr.: 69926951
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Mark Sinclair is Lecturer in Philosophy at Queen's University Belfast. He is the author of Being Inclined: Félix Ravaisson's Philosophy of Habit (Oxford University Press, 2019) and Bergson (2020), and is the editor of Félix Ravaisson, French Philosophy in the Nineteenth-Century (Oxford University Press, 2023). Daniel Whistler is Professor of Philosophy at Royal Holloway, University of London. He is the author of a series of works on French, German Dutch philosophies in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and is currently preparing a translation of Cousin's shorter publications for OUP.
* 1: Mark Sinclair and Daniel Whistler: Editors' Introduction
* Part I: Movements and Positions
* 2: Anne Dévarieux: Maine de Biran and the Legacy of Ideology
* 3: Delphine Antoine-Mahut: Eclecticism and its Discontents
* 4: Annie Petit: Positivisms and Spiritualisms: Quarrels and
Appropriations
* 5: Ayse Yuva: Vacherot and his Circle: Philosophy and Religion in the
Pantheism Controversy
* 6: Tullio Viola: Spiritualism as a Philosophy of Culture: Ravaisson
and Boutroux
* 7: Jeremy Dunham: Charles Renouvier on the Necessary Conditions of
the Scientific Mind: Passion, Habit, and Will
* 8: Mark Sinclair: Bergson after Boutroux on Freedom and Contingency
* 9: Keith Ansell-Pearson and Federico Testa: Jean-Marie Guyau on
Morality and Life
* 10: Pietro Terzi: Léon Brunschwicg and the Development of French
Neo-Kantianism
* 11: Philip Goodchild: Simone Weil's Practical Philosophy
* 12: Kate Kirkpatrick: Early Existentialisms
* 13: Cristina Chimisso: Historical Epistemology: A Broader and More
Complex View
* 14: Donald Landes: Merleau-Ponty: A Bergsonian in the Making
* 15: Lucie K. Mercier: Frantz Fanon, Philosophising (in) the Colonial
Situation
* 16: Michael L. Morgan: Emmanuel Levinas and Vladimir Jankélévitch:
Sociality and the Second-Person
* 17: Johanna Oksala: Foucault and the Task of Philosophy
* 18: Gaëlle Fiasse: Ethics and Ontology in French Hermeneutics: The
Case of Ricur
* 19: Frédéric Fruteau de Laclos: Deleuze or Lyotard?
* 20: Françoise Dastur: French Phenomenology after 1961
* 21: Rachel Jones: Irigaray and Feminism in French Philosophy after
Beauvoir
* 22: Leonard Lawlor: Deconstruction and Forgiveness: The Final Phase
of Derrida's Thought
* 23: Sean Bowden and Caitlyn Lesiuk: Badiou's Being and Event Trilogy
and the Pas de Deux with Deleuze
* 24: Rocco Gangle: The Non-Philosophy of François Laruelle
* Part II: Influences
* 25: Andrea Gadberry: Descartes in Modern French Philosophy
* 26: Knox Peden: Spinoza in Modern French Philosophy
* 27: Andrea Bellantone: Hegel in Modern French Philosophy
* 28: Frank Fischbach: Marx in Modern French Philosophy
* 29: François Raffoul: Heidegger in Modern French Philosophy
* 30: Barry Dainton: French Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition
* Part III: Themes
* 31: Carole Talon-Hugon: Aesthetics in Modern French Philosophy
* 32: Giuseppe Bianco: The Concrete and the Abstract in Modern French
Philosophy
* 33: Mark Sinclair: The Question of Habit in Modern French Philosophy
* 34: Marie Louise Krogh: Philosophical Historiography in Modern French
Philosophy
* 35: Pascal Engel: Reason and Analysis in Modern French Philosophy
* 36: Miguel de Beistegui: Desire in Modern French Philosophy
* 37: Giuseppe Bianco: Life: Modern French Philosophy and the Life
Sciences
* 38: Laurent Bove: Transcendence and Immanence in Modern French
Philosophy
* 39: Patrice Maniglier: Structure in Modern French Philosophy
* 40: Eleanor Kaufman: Literature and Modern French Philosophy
* 41: Martha Hanna: French Philosophy during the First World War
* Part I: Movements and Positions
* 2: Anne Dévarieux: Maine de Biran and the Legacy of Ideology
* 3: Delphine Antoine-Mahut: Eclecticism and its Discontents
* 4: Annie Petit: Positivisms and Spiritualisms: Quarrels and
Appropriations
* 5: Ayse Yuva: Vacherot and his Circle: Philosophy and Religion in the
Pantheism Controversy
* 6: Tullio Viola: Spiritualism as a Philosophy of Culture: Ravaisson
and Boutroux
* 7: Jeremy Dunham: Charles Renouvier on the Necessary Conditions of
the Scientific Mind: Passion, Habit, and Will
* 8: Mark Sinclair: Bergson after Boutroux on Freedom and Contingency
* 9: Keith Ansell-Pearson and Federico Testa: Jean-Marie Guyau on
Morality and Life
* 10: Pietro Terzi: Léon Brunschwicg and the Development of French
Neo-Kantianism
* 11: Philip Goodchild: Simone Weil's Practical Philosophy
* 12: Kate Kirkpatrick: Early Existentialisms
* 13: Cristina Chimisso: Historical Epistemology: A Broader and More
Complex View
* 14: Donald Landes: Merleau-Ponty: A Bergsonian in the Making
* 15: Lucie K. Mercier: Frantz Fanon, Philosophising (in) the Colonial
Situation
* 16: Michael L. Morgan: Emmanuel Levinas and Vladimir Jankélévitch:
Sociality and the Second-Person
* 17: Johanna Oksala: Foucault and the Task of Philosophy
* 18: Gaëlle Fiasse: Ethics and Ontology in French Hermeneutics: The
Case of Ricur
* 19: Frédéric Fruteau de Laclos: Deleuze or Lyotard?
* 20: Françoise Dastur: French Phenomenology after 1961
* 21: Rachel Jones: Irigaray and Feminism in French Philosophy after
Beauvoir
* 22: Leonard Lawlor: Deconstruction and Forgiveness: The Final Phase
of Derrida's Thought
* 23: Sean Bowden and Caitlyn Lesiuk: Badiou's Being and Event Trilogy
and the Pas de Deux with Deleuze
* 24: Rocco Gangle: The Non-Philosophy of François Laruelle
* Part II: Influences
* 25: Andrea Gadberry: Descartes in Modern French Philosophy
* 26: Knox Peden: Spinoza in Modern French Philosophy
* 27: Andrea Bellantone: Hegel in Modern French Philosophy
* 28: Frank Fischbach: Marx in Modern French Philosophy
* 29: François Raffoul: Heidegger in Modern French Philosophy
* 30: Barry Dainton: French Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition
* Part III: Themes
* 31: Carole Talon-Hugon: Aesthetics in Modern French Philosophy
* 32: Giuseppe Bianco: The Concrete and the Abstract in Modern French
Philosophy
* 33: Mark Sinclair: The Question of Habit in Modern French Philosophy
* 34: Marie Louise Krogh: Philosophical Historiography in Modern French
Philosophy
* 35: Pascal Engel: Reason and Analysis in Modern French Philosophy
* 36: Miguel de Beistegui: Desire in Modern French Philosophy
* 37: Giuseppe Bianco: Life: Modern French Philosophy and the Life
Sciences
* 38: Laurent Bove: Transcendence and Immanence in Modern French
Philosophy
* 39: Patrice Maniglier: Structure in Modern French Philosophy
* 40: Eleanor Kaufman: Literature and Modern French Philosophy
* 41: Martha Hanna: French Philosophy during the First World War
* 1: Mark Sinclair and Daniel Whistler: Editors' Introduction
* Part I: Movements and Positions
* 2: Anne Dévarieux: Maine de Biran and the Legacy of Ideology
* 3: Delphine Antoine-Mahut: Eclecticism and its Discontents
* 4: Annie Petit: Positivisms and Spiritualisms: Quarrels and
Appropriations
* 5: Ayse Yuva: Vacherot and his Circle: Philosophy and Religion in the
Pantheism Controversy
* 6: Tullio Viola: Spiritualism as a Philosophy of Culture: Ravaisson
and Boutroux
* 7: Jeremy Dunham: Charles Renouvier on the Necessary Conditions of
the Scientific Mind: Passion, Habit, and Will
* 8: Mark Sinclair: Bergson after Boutroux on Freedom and Contingency
* 9: Keith Ansell-Pearson and Federico Testa: Jean-Marie Guyau on
Morality and Life
* 10: Pietro Terzi: Léon Brunschwicg and the Development of French
Neo-Kantianism
* 11: Philip Goodchild: Simone Weil's Practical Philosophy
* 12: Kate Kirkpatrick: Early Existentialisms
* 13: Cristina Chimisso: Historical Epistemology: A Broader and More
Complex View
* 14: Donald Landes: Merleau-Ponty: A Bergsonian in the Making
* 15: Lucie K. Mercier: Frantz Fanon, Philosophising (in) the Colonial
Situation
* 16: Michael L. Morgan: Emmanuel Levinas and Vladimir Jankélévitch:
Sociality and the Second-Person
* 17: Johanna Oksala: Foucault and the Task of Philosophy
* 18: Gaëlle Fiasse: Ethics and Ontology in French Hermeneutics: The
Case of Ricur
* 19: Frédéric Fruteau de Laclos: Deleuze or Lyotard?
* 20: Françoise Dastur: French Phenomenology after 1961
* 21: Rachel Jones: Irigaray and Feminism in French Philosophy after
Beauvoir
* 22: Leonard Lawlor: Deconstruction and Forgiveness: The Final Phase
of Derrida's Thought
* 23: Sean Bowden and Caitlyn Lesiuk: Badiou's Being and Event Trilogy
and the Pas de Deux with Deleuze
* 24: Rocco Gangle: The Non-Philosophy of François Laruelle
* Part II: Influences
* 25: Andrea Gadberry: Descartes in Modern French Philosophy
* 26: Knox Peden: Spinoza in Modern French Philosophy
* 27: Andrea Bellantone: Hegel in Modern French Philosophy
* 28: Frank Fischbach: Marx in Modern French Philosophy
* 29: François Raffoul: Heidegger in Modern French Philosophy
* 30: Barry Dainton: French Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition
* Part III: Themes
* 31: Carole Talon-Hugon: Aesthetics in Modern French Philosophy
* 32: Giuseppe Bianco: The Concrete and the Abstract in Modern French
Philosophy
* 33: Mark Sinclair: The Question of Habit in Modern French Philosophy
* 34: Marie Louise Krogh: Philosophical Historiography in Modern French
Philosophy
* 35: Pascal Engel: Reason and Analysis in Modern French Philosophy
* 36: Miguel de Beistegui: Desire in Modern French Philosophy
* 37: Giuseppe Bianco: Life: Modern French Philosophy and the Life
Sciences
* 38: Laurent Bove: Transcendence and Immanence in Modern French
Philosophy
* 39: Patrice Maniglier: Structure in Modern French Philosophy
* 40: Eleanor Kaufman: Literature and Modern French Philosophy
* 41: Martha Hanna: French Philosophy during the First World War
* Part I: Movements and Positions
* 2: Anne Dévarieux: Maine de Biran and the Legacy of Ideology
* 3: Delphine Antoine-Mahut: Eclecticism and its Discontents
* 4: Annie Petit: Positivisms and Spiritualisms: Quarrels and
Appropriations
* 5: Ayse Yuva: Vacherot and his Circle: Philosophy and Religion in the
Pantheism Controversy
* 6: Tullio Viola: Spiritualism as a Philosophy of Culture: Ravaisson
and Boutroux
* 7: Jeremy Dunham: Charles Renouvier on the Necessary Conditions of
the Scientific Mind: Passion, Habit, and Will
* 8: Mark Sinclair: Bergson after Boutroux on Freedom and Contingency
* 9: Keith Ansell-Pearson and Federico Testa: Jean-Marie Guyau on
Morality and Life
* 10: Pietro Terzi: Léon Brunschwicg and the Development of French
Neo-Kantianism
* 11: Philip Goodchild: Simone Weil's Practical Philosophy
* 12: Kate Kirkpatrick: Early Existentialisms
* 13: Cristina Chimisso: Historical Epistemology: A Broader and More
Complex View
* 14: Donald Landes: Merleau-Ponty: A Bergsonian in the Making
* 15: Lucie K. Mercier: Frantz Fanon, Philosophising (in) the Colonial
Situation
* 16: Michael L. Morgan: Emmanuel Levinas and Vladimir Jankélévitch:
Sociality and the Second-Person
* 17: Johanna Oksala: Foucault and the Task of Philosophy
* 18: Gaëlle Fiasse: Ethics and Ontology in French Hermeneutics: The
Case of Ricur
* 19: Frédéric Fruteau de Laclos: Deleuze or Lyotard?
* 20: Françoise Dastur: French Phenomenology after 1961
* 21: Rachel Jones: Irigaray and Feminism in French Philosophy after
Beauvoir
* 22: Leonard Lawlor: Deconstruction and Forgiveness: The Final Phase
of Derrida's Thought
* 23: Sean Bowden and Caitlyn Lesiuk: Badiou's Being and Event Trilogy
and the Pas de Deux with Deleuze
* 24: Rocco Gangle: The Non-Philosophy of François Laruelle
* Part II: Influences
* 25: Andrea Gadberry: Descartes in Modern French Philosophy
* 26: Knox Peden: Spinoza in Modern French Philosophy
* 27: Andrea Bellantone: Hegel in Modern French Philosophy
* 28: Frank Fischbach: Marx in Modern French Philosophy
* 29: François Raffoul: Heidegger in Modern French Philosophy
* 30: Barry Dainton: French Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition
* Part III: Themes
* 31: Carole Talon-Hugon: Aesthetics in Modern French Philosophy
* 32: Giuseppe Bianco: The Concrete and the Abstract in Modern French
Philosophy
* 33: Mark Sinclair: The Question of Habit in Modern French Philosophy
* 34: Marie Louise Krogh: Philosophical Historiography in Modern French
Philosophy
* 35: Pascal Engel: Reason and Analysis in Modern French Philosophy
* 36: Miguel de Beistegui: Desire in Modern French Philosophy
* 37: Giuseppe Bianco: Life: Modern French Philosophy and the Life
Sciences
* 38: Laurent Bove: Transcendence and Immanence in Modern French
Philosophy
* 39: Patrice Maniglier: Structure in Modern French Philosophy
* 40: Eleanor Kaufman: Literature and Modern French Philosophy
* 41: Martha Hanna: French Philosophy during the First World War