Marktplatzangebote
Ein Angebot für € 19,95 €
  • Gebundenes Buch

Through notes, reflections, and arguments on valuing and objective estimation, Carlos Ramos-Mattei examines the experience of valuing and intersubjectivity, based on a phenomenological analysis. In considering the feeling for a scale of values and a critical discernment of an ontology of values, Dr. Ramos-Mattei draws a parallel between ordinary reasoning and the deliberation of values. In the second section of the book he discusses the role of reason and valuing for a more democratic society. Topics on justice, law, natural law, the value of the human person, ethics, political activity, ecological responsibility, and religious experience are explored.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Through notes, reflections, and arguments on valuing and objective estimation, Carlos Ramos-Mattei examines the experience of valuing and intersubjectivity, based on a phenomenological analysis. In considering the feeling for a scale of values and a critical discernment of an ontology of values, Dr. Ramos-Mattei draws a parallel between ordinary reasoning and the deliberation of values. In the second section of the book he discusses the role of reason and valuing for a more democratic society. Topics on justice, law, natural law, the value of the human person, ethics, political activity, ecological responsibility, and religious experience are explored.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Carlos J. Ramos-Mattei is Professor of Humanities and Philosophy at the University of Puerto Rico, College of General Studies, in Río Piedras, Puerto Rico. He received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Louvain (KUL), Belgium. In addition to writing articles on topics in contemporary continental philosophy, he was the editor of Ceiba, the review of the faculty at the University of Puerto Rico in Ponce for ten years. He has published Ethical Self-Determination in Ortega y Gasset (Peter Lang, 1987) and Annotations on the Philosophy of Values (1997) in its original Spanish version. The present volume is his own translation.