The Chief Works of Benedict de Spinoza, trans. Elwes, vol. 1 (1891)http://davidmhart.com/liberty/OtherLiberals/Spinoza/1891-ChiefWorks/ChiefWorks1.html
for all separated from Philosophy , p. 182 Chap. XV.— Theology is shown not to be subservient to Reason, nor Reason to Theology: a Definition of the reason which enables us
These pages contain the research and teaching materials of David Hart and have been put online to further the study of classical liberal and libertarian ideas.
The Manufactured Dialectichttps://scribe.rip/@JoinThePCPE/the-manufactured-dialectic-c6def227c0e2
involves. In classical philosophy, a dialectic represents the clash between opposing forces — thesis and antithesis — that generates new possibilities through their interaction. T
Gnosticism from a Non-Voegelinian Perspective, Part IV (Revisiting Voegelin) | The Brussels Journalhttps://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/4466
contribute to bringing philosophy closer to the form of science – the goal of being able to cast off the name of love of knowledge [ Liebe zum Wissen ] and become actual knowledge
A Guide to Isaac Asimov's Essayshttp://www.asimovonline.com/oldsite/essay_guide.html
changing natural philosophy to science don't try to limit the building of knowledge science polices itself and mostly avoids scandal the lunar landing provided the universal joy o
Equality Versus Liberty: The Eternal Conflicthttp://rcarterpittman.org/essays/misc/Equality_v_Liberty.html
or conceived in the philosophy that "all men are created equal." For a convenient text we quote from an article by Charles H. Davis, Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court, appeari
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Novum Organum, by Lord Baconhttps://www.gutenberg.org/files/45988/45988-h/45988-h.htm
the greatest injury on philosophy and learning. For they have tended to stifle and interrupt inquiry exactly in proportion as they have prevailed in bringing others to their opini
The Other Idol-Breaker: Owen Barfield and the Plenitude of the Word | The Brussels Journalhttps://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/4192
like systematic philosophy – he wrote as he thought, aphoristically and in paragraphs. One must take him unsystematically, too, or rather selectively – because, having atomized al
The Leopold Szondi Forumhttp://www.szondiforum.org/
aspects of Szondi’s philosophy. He made a new English translation of Szondi's "The Ego and the Dream" from Szondi’s book "Ego Analysis." In his "The Ego and the Dream" Szondi cont
International Psychiatric Information Site (Sweden)
History of Greece: The Golden Age of Greecehttps://www.ahistoryofgreece.com/goldenage.htm
great monuments, art, philosophy, architecture and literature which are the building blocks of our own civilization. The two most well known city-states during this period were th
The Classical period or Golden age of Greece, from around 500 to 300 BC, has given us the great monuments, art, philosophy, architecture and literature which are the building block
Late Breaking Website News!https://shroud.com/latebrak.htm
on the Religion and Philosophy page (alphabetically by title) and the Website Library page (alphabetically by author). Since there are far too many to include on t
The Ordo Templi Orientis Phenomenon — Peter-R. Koenighttps://www.parareligion.ch/
dimensions of esoteric philosophy are pushed to the margins, overshadowed by this peculiar obsession. Modern gestures toward historical nuance, shifting notions of gender, or symb
Peter-R. Koenig’s parareligion.ch homepage: a fieldwork-based, critical, image-rich archive on the O.T.O. phenomenon, its schisms, rituals, Gnostic churches, rival lineages, and
Some Metaphysics of Angular Momentum and Gravityhttps://friesian.com/angular.htm
to Popper's own philosophy of science. I have argued elsewhere at this site that this identity occurs because of the relative, accelerated motion of the body with weight against t
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