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  1. Beyond the Pleasure Principle.Sigmund Freud - 1975 - Broadview Press.
    Beyond the Pleasure Principle is Freud's most philosophical and speculative work, exploring profound questions of life and death, pleasure and pain. In it Freud introduces the fundamental concepts of the "repetition compulsion" and the "death drive," according to which a perverse, repetitive, self-destructive impulse opposes and even trumps the creative drive, or Eros. The work is one of Freud's most intensely debated, and raises important questions that have been discussed by philosophers and psychoanalysts since its first publication in 1920. The (...)
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  • (1 other version)One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society.Herbert Marcuse - 2002 - Routledge.
    One of the most important texts of modern times, Herbert Marcuse's analysis and image of a one-dimensional man in a one-dimensional society has shaped many young radicals' way of seeing and experiencing life. Published in 1964, it fast became an ideological bible for the emergent New Left. As Douglas Kellner notes in his introduction, Marcuse's greatest work was a 'damning indictment of contemporary Western societies, capitalist and communist.' Yet it also expressed the hopes of a radical philosopher that human freedom (...)
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  • Civilization and its discontents.Sigmund Freud - 1972 - In John Martin Rich, Readings in the philosophy of education. Belmont, Calif.,: Wadsworth Pub. Co..
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  • Schiller as philosopher: a re-examination.Frederick C. Beiser - 2005 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Fred Beiser, renowned as one of the world's leading historians of German philosophy, presents a brilliant new study of Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805), rehabilitating him as a philosopher worthy of serious attention. Beiser shows, in particular, that Schiller's engagement with Kant is far more subtle and rewarding than is often portrayed. Promising to be a landmark in the study of German thought, Schiller as Philosopher will be compulsory reading for any philosopher, historian, or literary scholar engaged with the key developments (...)
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  • Practical reason and the possibility of error.Douglas Lavin - 2004 - Ethics 114 (3):424-457.
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  • Heidegger and Marcuse: The Catastrophe and Redemption of History.Andrew Feenberg - 2004 - New York: Routledge.
    First published in 2005. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  • Aesthetic reconstructions: the seminal writings of Lessing, Kant, and Schiller.Anthony Savile - 1987 - New York, NY, USA: Blackwell.
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  • Freedom and Autonomy in Schiller.Sabine Roehr - 2003 - Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (1):119-134.
    This essay provides a systematic as well as chronological account of Schiller's concepts of freedom and autonomy. Its main thesis is that the duality of Schiller's moral/aesthetic ideal in the Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man - of beauty and the sublime, of play and the moral law - is a result of his use of conflicting concepts of autonomy. While it is widely accepted that Schiller took over Kant's concept of autonomy, I argue that he simultaneously employed another (...)
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  • The Proper Telos of Life: Schiller, Kant and Having Autonomy as an End.Katerina Deligiorgi - 2011 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 54 (5):494 - 511.
    Abstract In this paper I set the debate between Kant and Schiller in terms of the role that an ideal of life can play within an autonomist ethic. I begin by examining the critical role Schiller gives to emotions in tackling specific motivational concerns in Kant's ethics. In the Kantian response I offer to these criticisms, I emphasise the role of metaphysics for a proper understanding of Kant's position whilst allowing that with respect to moral psychology, Kant and Schiller are (...)
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  • Towards the aesthetic: A journey with Friedrich Schiller.Eva Schaper - 1985 - British Journal of Aesthetics 25 (2):153-168.
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  • Schiller and the ideal of freedom: a study of Schiller's philosophical works with chapters on Kant.Ronald Duncan Miller - 1970 - Oxford,: Clarendon P..
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  • Idleness, Usefulness and Self-Constitution.Brian O’Connor - 2013 - Critical Horizons 14 (2):181-199.
    The core argument of the paper is that the modern philosophical notion of self-constitution is directed against the prospect of human beings dissolving into idleness. Arguments for self-constitution are marked by non-philosophical presuppositions about the value of usefulness. Those arguments also assume a particular conception of superior experience as conscious integration of a person’s actions within an identifiable set of chosen commitments. Exploring particular arguments by Hegel, Kant, Korsgaard and Frankfurt the paper claims that those arguments are problematic in the (...)
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  • Reason and Revolution: Hegel and the Rise of Social Theory. [REVIEW]G. Watts Cunningham - 1943 - Philosophical Review 52 (1):73-76.
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