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|a Wallraff, Charles F.,
|e author.
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|a Karl Jaspers :
|b an introduction to his philosophy /
|c Charles F. Wallraff.
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|a Princeton, New Jersey :
|b Princeton University Press,
|c 1970.
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|c ©1970
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|a 1 online resource (251 pages)
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|a text
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|a Princeton Legacy Library
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|a Includes bibliographical references and index.
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|a Print version record.
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|a The thought of the late Karl Jaspers, co-founder of the existentialist movement, has long exerted a powerful influence on world opinion. But, surprisingly, though translations of his writings have appeared in over 160 editions in 16 countries, his strictly philosophical work has hitherto been largely inaccessible to American audiences. Even where adequate English translations exist, the difficulties imposed by Jaspers' involved reasoning, intricate style, and ingenious neologisms are such that few unfamiliar with Continental philosophy can hope to acquire an understanding of his ideas on thei.
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|a PREFACE; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; CONTENTS; JASPERS' LIFE AND WRITINGS; CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION: DISPUTED TOPICS; Philosophy and Life; The Pre-eminence of the Contemporary; The Philosophical Unavailability of Clarity; The Role of Demonstration in Philosophy; Current Overemphasis on the Explicit, Sensible, and Tangible; Feelings as Cognitive; Scientific Knowledge and Philosophic Nonknowledge; The Elucidation of Existenz; CHAPTER II. SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY; What Philosophy Owes to Science; The Nature of Science; Scientific and Philosophical World-Orientation; The Relativity of the Coercive
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|a The Endless and the UnendingEvidences of Pluralism; Summary of Conclusions Concerning Science and Philosophy; CHAPTER III. INSTITUTIONS AND PROFESSIONS AS GUIDES THROUGH LIFE; The State and Its Laws as Guides; Social Planning and the Welfare State; Philosophy of Existenz and Christianity; The Church as a Guide; Psychiatry as a Guide; CHAPTER IV. EXISTENTIAL FREEDOM; The Kantian Background of Jaspers' Philosophy; The Kantian Soul as It Relates to Existenz; What Existenz Is Not; Existenz as Freedom: Inadequate Conceptions; The Approach to Freedom; Choice and Resolution; CHAPTER V. COMMUNICATION
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|a Anomalies of Scientific DiscourseThe Deceptions of Ordinary Speech; Speech as a Weapon: Political Discussion; Deception and Self-Deception; Communication among Academic Philosophers; A Second Possibility: Philosophizing as a Cooperative Struggle for Fulfilment ; Indirect Communication; CHAPTER VI. ULTIMATE SITUATIONS; The Ultimate Situation of Historical Determinacy; Specific Ultimate Situations: Conflict; Guilt as an Ultimate Situation; The Ultimate Situation of the Questionableness of all Existence; Reactions to Antinomies; CHAPTER VII. HOW OUGHT WE TO LIVE?
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|a The Insufficiencies of Teleological EthicsKant's Duty-Ethics; The Source; Existenz and Transcendence; Nonknowledge and Cipher-Reading; CHAPTER VIII. THE ENCOMPASSING; Fundamental Philosophic Knowledge; The Fundamental Operation and Its Results; The Modes of the Encompassing That We Are; The Basic Mode; Consciousness in General; The Realm of Spirit; Existenz and its Historicity; The Philosophy of Reason; BIBLIOGRAPHY; INDEX
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|a JSTOR
|b Books at JSTOR Demand Driven Acquisitions (DDA)
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|a Jaspers, Karl,
|d 1883-1969.
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|a Jaspers, Karl,
|d 1883-1969.
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|a Jaspers, Karl,
|d 1883-1969.
|2 fast
|0 (OCoLC)fst00029067
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|a PHILOSOPHY
|x General.
|2 bisacsh
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|a PHILOSOPHY
|x History & Surveys
|x Modern.
|2 bisacsh
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|i Print version:
|a Wallraff, Charles F.
|t Karl Jaspers : an introduction to his philosophy.
|d Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press, ©1970
|h xvii, 232 pages
|k Princeton legacy library.
|z 9780691621081
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|a Princeton legacy library.
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|u https://jstor.uam.elogim.com/stable/10.2307/j.ctt13x16m7
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