Naturalism in Classical Indian Philosophy
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2021-11-10 13:00)
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[Revised entry by Amita Chatterjee on November 9, 2021.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
As a philosophical theory, naturalism aligns philosophy with science and the natural world - rejecting the supernatural. There are a variety of naturalisms, including: ontological naturalism, which holds that reality contains no supernatural entities; methodological naturalism, which holds that philosophical inquiry should be consistent with scientific method; and moral naturalism, which typically holds that there are moral facts and that such facts are part of the natural world....
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大学分科会(第163回) 議事録
from 文部科学省 新着情報
(2021-11-10 13:00)
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Cusanus, Nicolaus [Nicolas of Cusa]
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2021-11-10 12:59)
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[Revised entry by Clyde Lee Miller on November 9, 2021.
Changes to: Bibliography]
Arguably the most important German thinker of fifteenth century, Nicholas of Cusa (1401 - 1464) was also an ecclesiastical reformer, administrator and cardinal. His life-long effort was to reform and unite the universal and Roman Church, whether as canon law expert at the Council of Basel and after, as legate to Constantinople and later to German dioceses and houses of religion, as bishop in his own diocese of Brixen, and as advisor in the papal curia. His active life as a Church administrator and bishop found written expression in...
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学校法人ガバナンス改革会議(第9回)の開催について
from 文部科学省 新着情報
(2021-11-10 12:00)
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Self-Knowledge
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2021-11-10 11:58)
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[Revised entry by Brie Gertler on November 9, 2021.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography, notes.html]
In philosophy, "self-knowledge" standardly refers to knowledge of one's own mental states - that is, of what one is feeling or thinking, or what one believes or desires. At least since Descartes, most philosophers have believed that self-knowledge differs markedly from our knowledge of the external world (where this includes our knowledge of others' mental states). But there is little agreement about what precisely distinguishes self-knowledge from knowledge in other realms. Partly because of this disagreement,...
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Suicide
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2021-11-10 10:39)
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[Revised entry by Michael Cholbi on November 9, 2021.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
Throughout history, suicide has evoked an astonishingly wide range of reactions - bafflement, dismissal, heroic glorification, sympathy, anger, moral or religious condemnation - but it is never uncontroversial. For example, suicide has long been a central concern within many academic disciplines, including sociology, anthropology, psychology, and psychiatry. These disciplines converge in the multidisciplinary field of suicidology. But there remain many controversies within suicidology, including which methodologies are...
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文部科学省研究振興局非常勤職員(期間業務職員)採用のお知らせ
from 文部科学省 新着情報
(2021-11-10 10:26)
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幼児教育と小学校教育の架け橋特別委員会(第4回)議事録
from 文部科学省 新着情報
(2021-11-9 18:00)
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Inflation und Geldpolitik: Das sind jetzt die größten Sorgen der Märkte
from DER SPIEGEL - Schlagzeilen
(2021-11-9 17:04)
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Corona brachte die Finanzmärkte zum Einsturz. Doch nun lösen Inflation und eine straffere Geldpolitik die Pandemie als größte Sorge der Anleger ab. Die Risikobereitschaft bleibt aber so hoch wie seit 2001 nicht mehr.
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NFL: Schiedsrichter rempelt Gegenspieler und gibt ihm spielentscheidende Strafe
from DER SPIEGEL - Schlagzeilen
(2021-11-9 16:50)
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Große Aufregung in der NFL: In der Partie der Chicago Bears gegen die Steelers spielte der Unparteiische die Hauptrolle: Er verhängte eine umstrittene Strafe und griff auch noch körperlich in die Partie ein.
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