All Entries in the "Philosophy" Category
Foucault and Philosophy
Foucault and Philosophy
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell | ISBN: 1405189606 | 2010 | File type: PDF | 272 pages | 1.3 mb
Foucault and Philosophy presents a collection of essays from leading international philosophers and Foucault scholars that explore Foucault��s work as a philosopher in relation to philosophers who were important to him and in the context of important themes and problems in contemporary philosophy.
The Graph of Desire: Using the Work of Jacque Lacan By Alfredo Eidelzstein
The Graph of Desire: Using the Work of Jacque Lacan, by Alfredo Eidelzstein
KarnacBooks | 2009 | ISBN 1855756102 | 297 Pages | File type: PDF OCR | 8.2 mb Unzipped
This book gathers the lectures of the post-graduate course entitled quot;The Graph of Desire and the Psychoanalytic Clinicquot;, held in 1993 within the framework of the Updating Program on Lacanian Psychoanalysis (Post-Graduate Secretary, Faculty of Psychology, University of Buenos Aires).
Studies in the Philosophy of William of Auvergne Bishop of Paris 1228-1249 (Marquette Studies in Philosophy)
Roland J. Teske, “Studies in the Philosophy of William of Auvergne Bishop of Paris 1228-1249 (Marquette Studies in Philosophy)”
Publisher: Marquette University Press | ISBN 10: 0874626749 | 2006 | File type: PDF | 274 pages | 1.2 mb
Theophany: The Neoplatonic Philosophy of Dionysius the Areopagite (S U N Y Series in Ancient Greek Philosophy)
Eric David Perl, “Theophany: The Neoplatonic Philosophy of Dionysius the Areopagite (S U N Y Series in Ancient Greek Philosophy)”
Publisher: State University of New York Press | ISBN 10: 079147111X | 2007 | File type: PDF | 163 pages | 3.4 mb
Situates Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite as a Neoplatonic philosopher in the tradition of Plotinus and Proclus.
Heuretics: The Logic of Invention
Heuretics: The Logic of Invention By Gregory L. Ulmer
Publisher: The Joh.ns Hop.kins Univ.ers.ity Pre.ss 1994 | 267 Pages | ISBN: 0801847184 , 0801847176 | File type: PDF | 6 mb
In Heuretics a word defined as “the branch of logic that treats the art of discovery or invention” Gregory Ulmer sets forth new methods appropriate for conducting cultural studies research in an age of electronic hypermedia.

