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  1. Values, Knowledge and Solidarity: Neglected Convergences Between Émile Durkheim and Max Scheler. [REVIEW]Spiros Gangas - 2011 - Human Studies 34 (4):353-371.
    Within the purview of the sociology of knowledge Durkheim and Scheler appear among its important inaugurators theorizing the social foundations of knowledge, seemingly from mutually exclusive perspectives. Scheler’s phenomenology of values and community is often juxtaposed with Durkheim’s attempt to integrate values in reality, represented by the social configuration of organic solidarity. This essay argues that the affinity between Scheler and Durkheim deserves reexamination. Means employed for pursuing this aim include a reconsideration of how values mediate reality, but, above all, (...)
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  • Max Scheler.Zachary Davis - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Scheler, Heidegger and the Hermeneutics of Value.J. Edward Hackett - 2013 - Journal of Applied Hermeneutics 2013 (1).
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  • What might Scheler say to Rawls?': A Schelerian critique of Rawls's Concept of 'the Perosn'.Christopher Murphy - 2017 - Public Reason 9 (1-2).
    I argue that Rawls’s political philosophy relies on a moral conception of the person which he inherits from Kant’s conception of the person, despite Rawls’s claim that he is doing political philosophy first. Scheler’s critique of Kant contains a critique of his concept of the person and I apply this critique to Rawls’s use of it as a founding part of his political philosophy. This is done not to argue against Rawls’s politics per se, but to argue, in the light (...)
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