Integral Philosophy : the Common Logical Roots of Anthropology, Politics, Language, and Spirituality.
This cumulative course on Johannes Heinrichs's philosophical works presents the essence of his previous publications: a rich, consistent, and novel monolithic system defying temptations by the zeitgeist. Starting with an emphasis on reflection as the basis of epistemology, Heinrichs also covers...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
La Vergne :
Ibidem Press,
2018.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction to the English/Indian Edition; Chapter 1 Epistemological Entry; Philosophy as self- and sense-reflection; Consciousness of one's own activity as a basic sense experience; Dialectical unity of content and activity; The structured ensemble of sense-elements; The self-reflexive nature of the Ego: The knife that cuts itself; Necessary distinctions; It: The dialectic of subject and object; YOU: The I-You dialogic as the source of community; WE and the medium of sense; A summary of the structured ensemble of the senseelements.
- Chapter 2 Philosophical AnthropologyPerson as self-reference in external relation; The triad of body-soul-spirit; From Three to Seven: The anthropological three circle-model; Views of tasks; Chapter 3 Social Philosophy: Outlines of a Value Levels Democracy; From human actions to the social system; Interpersonal reflection as the principle of dynamic social systems; Self-organization of the social organism and system theory; The leap into the great organism: Differentiation of subsystems; Modern differentiation and social circuit capability; Four "heart chambers" of democracy.
- Practical conclusionsInstitutional approach or departure from the bottom?; Unlike Plato's Politeia; Unlike the Indian caste system; Chapter 4 Semiotic Theory of Action; Is there an order in the types of human action?; "Reconstruction" as a dialog between concept and experience (methodological remarks); The main subdivisions of the action genres; To the practiced conception of philosophy; Chapter 5 Semiotic Language Theory; Survey; Language and action; 1. Sigmatic or sign dimension; 2. Semantics or meaning dimension; 3. Pragmatics or the action dimension of language.
- 4. Syntax or connection dimensionChapter 6 Semiotic Theory of Arts; Linguistic stylistics as logical continuation of syntax; Transition from language to language art; From "fine art" to the art of expression; The action-logical division of arts; A theory of literal genera on the basis of language logic; Chapter 7 Religious Philosophy; Historical situation; The big semiotic levels: Action-Language-Art-Mystic; Correspondence to Sri Aurobindo's concept of the "Supramental"; The main divisions of mystic; The human sense of infinity; "Supermind" and "Self-consciousness of the universe."
- Belief and insightFinal remarks to a new spiritual pedagogy; Chapter 8 Ontology; Historical introduction; "Being" as the center in the structure of senseelements; Two different pairs of opposites; Reflection-theoretical sketch of regional ontologies; Sighting further ontological tasks in using the "wand of analogy"; Final comment on the question of immortality; Chapter 9 Meta-Ethics; The knowledge dependency of ethical reflection; What means moral goodness? Where does obligation come from?; Where does the diversity of moral and ethical positions come from?