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  1. (1 other version)The "paradox" of knowledge and power: Reading Foucault on a bias.Tom Keenan - 1987 - Political Theory 15 (1):5-37.
    What if thought freed itself from common sense and decided to think only at the extreme point of its singularity? What if it mischievously practiced the bias of paradox, instead of complacently accepting its citizenship in the doxa? What if it thought difference differentially, instead of searching out the common elements underlying difference?1.
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  • History and Friedrich Nietzsche's Philosophy of Time.Carl E. Pletsch - 1977 - History and Theory 16 (1):30.
    Though Nietzsche never developed a theory of history, his comments on time yield a radical approach to historical interpretation. Central to this philosophy is the concept of eternal recurrence. Time, with neither boundary nor purpose, returns from the past to repeat itself in its same form. This generates a psychological and moral problem for men, as it fails to provide the elements of meaning which Nietzsche considered essential to the human psyche. Men survive the aimlessness of history by living in (...)
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  • (1 other version)Nietzsche et la métaphore.Sarah Kofman - 1983 - Paris,: Editions Galilée.
    Deux textes parus dans "Critique" et un dans "Poétique 5" sont à l'origine de ce travail exposé en 1969-1970 au séminaire de Jacques Derrida sur la métaphore.
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