And the “concrete,” for Marx, is the diametric opposite of the appeal to the German “Volk” and their tie to the land in different strains of German pagan traditions, philosophy and then Nazism. What is “concrete” for Marx is itself something to be conceptualised, grasped, he says,...
Horton points out that “through practical philosophy or the active life of the Christian…some believers…through mystical union…were able to move further still, from the mind of Christ to his very Godhead.”21For Christians such a union with Christ was desired, for in Greco- Roman society...
In honour of Azriel SCHOCHAT on the occasion of his seventieth birthday. Editor: U. RAPPAPORT, University of Haifa 1978, 359 (modern Hebrew) and XXIV (summary in English) pp., cloth Isr. £ 150doi:10.1163/157006379X00417Van Der WoudeS.Journal for the Study of Judaism...
Bachelard, coming from a background in the philosophy of science, is aware of the seemingly scientific impulse toward precision (Bachelard 1964, pp. 1–14). But he recognizes that the literary impulse is poetic and produces images rather than language easily reducible to “principe” (Bachelard ...