Archive for the ‘Academic’ Category

The myth of reason

By Christopher Wink | Feb 27, 2007 | Existentialism In philosophical discourse, discussions of reason are not without precedence. It seems that all of the great thinkers of the 19th and 20th centuries had thoughts on rationality and its role in history, society and individual decision. German philosopher Karl Jaspers (1883-1969) is known for his [...]

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Durkeim’s suicide causes in final last words

By Christopher Wink | Mar 5, 2008 | Death and Dying We are so often caught up in final words. I suppose we write stories because we most enjoy understanding something’s beginning and its end. It follows then, if only in a casual way, that suicide, its finality, the control and closure it is said [...]

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Durkeim's suicide causes in final last words

By Christopher Wink | Mar 5, 2008 | Death and Dying We are so often caught up in final words. I suppose we write stories because we most enjoy understanding something’s beginning and its end. It follows then, if only in a casual way, that suicide, its finality, the control and closure it is said [...]

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Simone Weil and affliction

By Christopher Wink | Feb 9, 2007 | Existentialism The life of French philosophical writer and activist Simone Weil made a noticeable impact in many spheres of intellectual thought despite her politically-orientated, voluntary starvation little more than three decades after her birth. Despite her attachment to 20th century philosophy, perhaps her most powerful mark is [...]

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Reality’s absurdity to Existentialists

By Christopher Wink | Apr 15, 2007 | Existentialism There are likely few more important issues for philosophy than the question of existence, a subject that has been covered in innumerable ways by every successful intellectual. Perhaps one of the more popular means for understanding this world is to see it through the veil of [...]

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Reality's absurdity to Existentialists

By Christopher Wink | Apr 15, 2007 | Existentialism There are likely few more important issues for philosophy than the question of existence, a subject that has been covered in innumerable ways by every successful intellectual. Perhaps one of the more popular means for understanding this world is to see it through the veil of [...]

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Logical paradox in Kierkegaard

By Christopher Wink | Jan 30, 2007 | Existentialism I have never been confused for a great thinker. Philosophy is a world of thought, unprovoked and often aimless, an unlikely home for someone like me. I think I enjoy it anyway. I enjoy it because I have assignments that ask me to define an existential [...]

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Existential men of de Beauvoir

By Christopher Wink | Apr 17, 2007 | Existentialism In 1947 French author and philosopher Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986) published The Ethics of Ambiguity, arguably the most accessible explanation of a host of existential ideas and themes. A notable member of a notable age in French philosophy, Beauvoir had a close relationship with Jean-Paul Sartre [...]

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Absurdity in Camus

By Christopher Wink | Apr 17, 2007 | Existentialism Albert Camus is no small figure in twentieth century philosophy. Born in Algeria to a working-class family, to many, Camus is a central figure who, despite his disapproving, has become the face of existentialism. Because of his importance, his assertion that suicide is the ultimate philosophical [...]

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A review of Martin Heidegger on being

By Christopher Wink | Feb. 26, 2008 | 1,002 words Martin Heidegger was born poor and Catholic in a rural village of southern Germany. Believers in fate will know that he was destined to go to university, take academic ranks in Adolf Hitler’s National Socialist Party, fall out of favor, regain a position of scholarly [...]

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