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ÆÃÄêʬÌî¤ËÆÃ°Û¤ÊºÍǽ¤Î¤¢¤ë»ùƸÀ¸Å̤ËÂФ¹¤ë³Ø¹»¤Ë¤ª¤±¤ë»ØÆ³¡¦»Ù±ç¤Îºß¤êÊýÅù¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ëÍ­¼±¼Ô²ñµÄ¡ÊÂè3²ó¡  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2021-11-10 14:39) 

¥æ¥Í¥¹¥³¡ÖÀ¤³¦¤Îµ­²±¡×»ö¶È¤Ë¤ª¤±¤ë¹ñºÝÅÐÏ¿¡Ê2022¡Ý2023ÅÐÏ¿¥µ¥¤¥¯¥ë¡Ë¤Ø¤ÎÅÐÏ¿¿½ÀÁ°Æ·ï¤Î·èÄê¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2021-11-10 14:00) 

¥æ¥Í¥¹¥³ÁϤÅԻԥͥåȥ¥¯¡ÊUNESCO Creative Cities Network¡Ë¤Ø¤Î²æ¤¬¹ñ¤ÎÅԻԤβÃÌÁǧÄê¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2021-11-10 14:00) 

Ãæ±û¶µ°é¿³µÄ²ñ¡ÖÎáÏÂ¤ÎÆüËÜ·¿³Ø¹»¶µ°é¡×¤òô¤¦¶µ»Õ¤Îºß¤êÊýÆÃÊÌÉô²ñ¡ÊÂè5²ó¡Ë¡¦½éÅùÃæÅù¶µ°éʬ²Ê²ñ¶µ°÷ÍÜÀ  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2021-11-10 14:00) 

Naturalism in Classical Indian Philosophy  from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy  (2021-11-10 13:00) 
[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....
Âç³ØÊ¬²Ê²ñ¡ÊÂè163²ó¡Ë¡¡µÄ»öÏ¿  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2021-11-10 13:00) 

Cusanus, Nicolaus [Nicolas of Cusa]  from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy  (2021-11-10 12:59) 
[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...
³Ø¹»Ë¡¿Í¥¬¥Ð¥Ê¥ó¥¹²þ³×²ñµÄ¡ÊÂè9²ó¡Ë¤Î³«ºÅ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2021-11-10 12:00) 

Self-Knowledge  from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy  (2021-11-10 11:58) 
[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,...
ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¸¦µæ¿¶¶½¶ÉÈó¾ï¶Ð¿¦°÷¡Ê´ü´Ö¶È̳¿¦°÷¡ËºÎÍѤΤªÃΤ餻  from ʸÉô²Ê³Ø¾Ê¡¡¿·Ãå¾ðÊó  (2021-11-10 10:26) 




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