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  1. Anschauung and the Archetype.Malte C. Ebach - 2005 - Janus Head 8 (1):254-270.
    Comparative biology is afield that deals with morphology. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe recognised comparative biology, not as a passive science obsessed with counting similarities as it is today, but as an active field wherein he sought to perceive the inter-relationships of individual organisms to the organic whole, which he termed the archetype. I submit that Goethe's archetype and his application of a technique termed the Anschauung are rigorous and significant ways to conduct delicate empiricism in comparative biology. The future of (...)
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  • Novalis's philosophical fictions: Love, reason, and the given from the Fichte‐Studies to the Hymns to the Night.James D. Reid - 2020 - European Journal of Philosophy 28 (3):703-722.
    European Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
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  • Burckhardt and the ideology of the past.Michael Ann Holly - 1988 - History of the Human Sciences 1 (1):47-73.
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  • Christ and caesar: Spengler and the ethical dilemma of statecraft.John Farrenkopf - 1992 - Ethics and International Affairs 6:119–140.
    Farrenkopf argues that Western triumphalism, precipitated by the crisis of Communism, is symptomatic of the failure in the U.S. to reflect upon the prospects for ameliorating the tragic nature of international political developments in the twentieth century.
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  • Framing Hunger: Eating and categories of self-development.Robert E. Innis - 2011 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 25 (2):184-202.
    Hunger seems, at first glance, to be primarily a biological state, emerging first incipiently and then with insistent, yet extremely varying, sharpness in the wide continuum of sentient and feeling beings. The pervasive lived through, but not necessarily attended to, tonus of somatic well-being is unbalanced by the experience of lack that initiates attempts to restore equilibrium in a cycle that continues until death or its equivalent. Hunger in this sense provokes appetite or appetition. It is satisfied by an appropriate (...)
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  • Who’s Your Daddy?: Or: Using Semiotic Tools to Deconstruct Legal Determinations of Who Holds Parenthood Obligations and Privileges.Michelle Louise Wirth - 2009 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 22 (1):83-104.
    This paper provides a brief explanation and illustration of the phenomenon of semiotics. It then describes the conceptual tools of semiotics and how lawyers can use semiotics in law to create compelling arguments. Last, the paper applies the tools of semiotics to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court case Ferguson v. McKiernan, 940 A.2d 1236 (Pa. 2008), to reveal the shift in social context that made the lines of legal reasoning behind the outcome appear “self-evident.”.
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