Drengson, Alan
The Selected Works of Arne Naess
1. Interpretation and Preciseness
1. Basic Terms
2. Basic Terms Continued
3. Misinterpretation and Pseudoagreement
4. Definitoid Statements
5. Elementary Analysis
6. Occurrence Analysis
7. Introduction of a Group of Concepts or Tests of Synonymity
8. Synonymity Questionnaires in Use
2. Scepticism
9. Pyrrho’s Scepticism According to Sextus Empiricus
10. The Psychological Possibility of Scepticism
11. Scepticism and Positive Mental Health
12. Conceptual Complementarity of Evidence and Truth Requirements
13. Dialectics of Modern Epistemological Scepticism
3. Which World Is the Real One?
14. Descriptions of Maximally Comprehensive Perspectives
15. Comparison of Different Total Views
16. Metaphysics as Exposure of Presuppositions
17. Can There Be, Ultimately, Only One Valid Total System?
18. Cultures Construed as All-Embracing Systems
19. Some Conclusions
4. The Pluralist and Possibilist Aspect of the Scientific Enterprise
20. The Impact of the New Historiography of Science
21. Experimental Setup, Rank Dimensions, and Pluralism
22. Theory and Theoretical Idea
23. The Unimpressiveness of Impossibilities
24. The New Historiography Applied to Itself: General Possibilism
5. Gandhi and Group Conflict
25. Gandhi's Experiments
26. The Metaphysics of
27. Norms and Hypotheses of Gandhian Ethics and Strategy of Group Struggle
28. Nonviolence and the “New Violence”
29. Comparison with Certain Other Philosophies of Conflict
6. Freedom, Emotion, and Self-Subsistence
30. The Fundamental Dual Distinction: “In Itself” and “In Something Else”
31. Existence and Freedom
32. Causation, Cognition, and Action
33. Grading Basic Distinctions
34. The Road to Freedom Through Active Emotion
35. Joy
36. Good and Bad and Usefulness
37. Virtue and Reason
38. Self-Satisfaction
7. Communication and Argument
39. Interpretation
40. Precization and Definition
41. Analytic and Synthetic Sentences
42. Agreement and Disagreement
43. Surveys of Arguments for and Against a Standpoint
44. Effective Discussion
8. Common Sense, Knowledge, and Truth
45. Common Sense and Truth
46. Logical Equivalence, Intentional Isomorphism, and Synonymity as Studied by Questionnaires
47. A Study of Or
48. Typology of Questionnaires Adapted to the Study of Expressions with Closely Related Meanings
49. The Empirical Semantics of Key Terms, Phrases, and Sentences: Empirical Semantics Applied to Nonprofessional Language
50. A Necessary Component of Logic: Empirical Argumentation Analysis
51. “You Assert This?”: An Empirical Study of Weight Expressions
52. Husserl on the Apodictic Evidence of Ideal Laws
53. Can Knowledge Be Reached?
54. Pyrrhonism Revisited
55. Trust and Confidence in the Absence of Strict Knowledge and Truth: An Answer to Nicholas Rescher's Critical Reappraisal of Scepticism
56. How Can the Empirical Movement Be Promoted Today? A Discussion of the Empiricism of Otto Neurath and Rudolf Carnap
57. The Glass Is on the Table
58. Logical Empiricism and the Uniqueness of the Schlick Seminar: A Personal Experience with Consequence
59. The Spirit of the Vienna Circle Devoted to Questions of
60. Do We Know That Basic Norms Cannot Be True or False?
61. We Still Do Not Know That Norms Cannot Be True or False: A Reply to Dag Österberg
62. The Principle of Intensity
63. Creativity and Gestalt Thinking
64. Gestalt Thinking and Buddhism
65. Kierkegaard and the Values of Education
9. Reason, Democracy, and Science
66. The Function of Ideological Convictions
67. Analytical Survey of Agreements and Disagreements
68. Ideology and Rationality
69. Science as Behavior: Prospects and Limitations of a Behavioral Metascience
70. A Plea for Pluralism in Philosophy and Physics
71. The Case Against Science
72. On the Structure and Function of Paradigms in Science
73. Why Not Science for Anarchists Too?
74. Nonmilitary Defense
75. Can Violence Lead to Nonviolence? Gandhi's Point of View
76. Consequences of an Absolute
77. Is Freedom Consistent with Spinoza's Determinism?
78. Through Spinoza to Mahayana Buddhism or Through Mahayana Buddhism to Spinoza?
79. An Application of Empirical Argumentation Analysis to Spinoza's Ethics
80. Spinoza's Finite God
81. Einstein, Spinoza, and God
82. How My Philosophy Seemed to Develop
83. Deep Ecology and Education: A Conversation with Arne Naess
10. Deep Ecology of Wisdom
84. Nature Ebbing Out
85. The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology Movement: A Summary
86. The Basics of Deep Ecology
87. Deepness of Questions and the Deep Ecology Movement
88. The Deep Ecology Movement: Some Philosophical Aspects
89. The Deep Ecology “Eight Points” Revisited
90. Equality, Sameness, and Rights
91. The Breadth and the Limits of the Deep Ecology Movement
92. The Apron Diagram
93. What Do We as Supporters of the Deep Ecology Movement Stand for and Believe In?
94. A Note on the Prehistory and History of the Deep Ecology Movement
95. Antifascist Character of the Eight Points of the Deep Ecology Movement
96. Deep Ecology and Lifestyle
97. The Place of Joy in a World of Fact
98. Beautiful Action: Its Function in the Ecological Crisis
99. Should We Try to Relieve Clear Cases of Suffering in Nature?
100. Sustainability! The Integral Approach
101. Expert Views on the Inherent Value of Nature
102. The Arrogance of Antihumanism
103. Politics and the Ecological Crisis: An Introductory Note
104. The Politics of the Deep Ecology Movement
105. The Three Great Movements
106. The Encouraging Richness and Diversity of Ultimate Premises in Environmental Philosophy
107. The Third World, Wilderness, and Deep Ecology
108. Cultural Diversity and the Deep Ecology Movement
109. Population Reduction: An Ecosophical View
110. Migration and Ecological Unsustainability
111. Self-Realization in Mixed Communities of Human Beings, Bears, Sheep, and Wolves
112. Philosophy of Wolf Policies I: General Principles and Preliminary Exploration of Selected Norms (coau
113. Deep Ecology and Conservation Biology
114. The Tragedy of Norwegian Whaling
115. Letter Sent October 1971 to the King of Nepal
116. An Example of a Place: Tvergastein
117. Some Ethical Considerations with a View to Mountaineering in Norway
118. Modesty and the Conquest of Mountains
119. The South Wall of Tirich Mir East
120. Spinoza and Attitudes Toward Nature
121. Spinoza and the Deep Ecology Movement
122. A Systematization of Gandhian Ethics of Conflict Resolution
123. The World of Concrete Contents
124. Gestalt Ontology and Gestalt Thinking
125. Reflections About Total Views
126. Notes on the Methodology of Normative Systems
127. Paul Feyerabend—A Green Hero?
128. Self-Realization: An Ecological Approach to Being in the World
129. The Connection of “Self-Realization!” with Diversity, Complexity, and Symbiosis
130. Integration of the “Eight Points” into Ecosophy T
131. A Note on Definition, Criteria, and Characterizations
132. Docta Ignorantia and the Application of General Guidelines
133. Ranking, Yes, but the Inherent Value Is the Same: An Answer to William C. French
134. The Heart of the Forest
135. Metaphysics of the Treeline
136. Avalanches as Social Constructions
137. Sustainable Development and Deep Ecology
138. Industrial Society, Postmodernity, and Ecological Sustainability
139. An Outline of the Problems Ahead
140. Deep Ecology for the Twenty-second Century
DRM-restrictions
Printing: not available
Clipboard copying: not available
Avainsanat: PHILOSOPHY / General PHI000000
- Tekijä(t)
- Drengson, Alan
- Julkaisija
- Springer
- Julkaisuvuosi
- 2005
- Kieli
- en
- Painos
- 1
- Kategoria
- Filosofia
- Tiedostomuoto
- E-kirja
- eISBN (PDF)
- 9781402045196