scholarly journals Truth in Nietzsche’s and Dostoevsky’s Philosophy: A Comparative Study

2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-26
Author(s):  
Ashra Abu-Fares

The German philosopher Fredrick Nietzsche is one of the most significant thinkers whose work immensely impacted modern intellectual history. Likewise, the Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky is an influential figure whose philosophy and contribution to literature is also huge. However, there are common grounds that these two prominent figures share, especially with the fact that they were contemporaries and influenced each other. The aim of this paper is to explore the connection between Nietzsche and Dostoevsky in terms of the concept of truth. Nietzsche’s concept of ‘perspectivism’, which he proposes in some of his works, will be linked to Dostoevsky’s novel Notes from Underground to show how these two prominent figures share a common ground in this respect.

2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christel Björkstrand

This paper is an interdisciplinary analysis of Friedrich Schiller’s play Wilhelm Tell (1804). An initial study of its dramatic structure suggests a change in the relationship between the Swiss peasants and nobles. A further analysis, based on Brown’s and Levinson’s politeness theory confirms the development of a social utopia in the play, but also reveals that Wilhelm Tell plays a minor role in the social development described. The comparison of the play with earlier versions of the Tell legend highlights the roles of peasants and nobles in the establishment of the Swiss Confederation and suggests that Schiller elaborated extensively on the idea of a ‘common ground’ among the Swiss from different classes. The comparison between Schiller’s play and the contemporary German philosopher Johann Benjamin Erhard’s essay Über das Recht des Volks zu einer Revolution illustrates that Schiller’s social utopia develops in accordance with contemporary social visions. However, Tell’s act of murder separates him from the other Swiss protagonists in Schiller’s attempt to outline a righteous revolution, different from the one in France.


Pro Ecclesia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-252
Author(s):  
Jonathan M. Platter

In this essay, I engage Robert Jenson ecumenically by offering a reading of his theology that gives appropriate weight to his radical identification of God’s eternal being (immanent life) with God’s historical acts (economy), while also arguing that his arguments have a striking point of contact with the classical denial of a real relation of God to creation. I argue that both positions share a desire to express a radical intimacy between God and creation as well as God’s boundlessness and simplicity. The benefit of this comparative study is that it illuminates potential commonalities between Jenson’s revisionary metaphysics and one aspect of “classical” metaphysics. The recognition of such metaphysical common ground provides opportunity for mutual enrichment.


2011 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 222-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phiroze Vasunia

On the basis of a random sample of English-language internet websites about empires, we can now formulate the first law of comparative imperialisms as follows: as an online discussion of empire grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving the Roman Empire approaches 1. (This is a variant of the general law that states that ‘as an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1’.) The comparative study of empires is thriving, and the recent intensity of interest is connected, at least in part, to the international military interventions of the United States. But comparisons between empires are nothing new, and, in the 1960s, Peter Brunt wrote an insightful article on British and Roman imperialism. That analysis was the product of the age of decolonization, an age which also acted as a spur to comparative approaches within classical scholarship: witness Nicole Loraux's suggestion that it was anti-colonial movements associated with the Algerian and Vietnam wars that led Jean-Pierre Vernant to embark on his series of comparative investigations into Greek thought and religion. Brunt's article was written in a retrospective key at a time when it was possible to look back to the completion, or the near completion, of a major period of European colonialism and arrive at a sort of reckoning. Some two generations prior to Brunt, in the early twentieth century and at the apogee of the British Empire, Lord Cromer delivered an address to the Classical Association on ‘Ancient and Modern Imperialism’ in which he found it unimaginable to think of independence for Britain's overseas colonies. Francis Haverfield responded sympathetically to Cromer and in his own writings associated the British and the Roman empires. Any discussion of comparative imperialisms, therefore, will need to consider not just the recent concentration of debates over empire but also a lengthy trajectory that extends back to Cromer and Haverfield and indeed further beyond into the eighteenth century. None of the books under review reflects in detail on the intellectual history in which they may be situated, but this is a subject that at least needs to be acknowledged and that we shall have occasion to return to later.


1985 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 452-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen L. Dyson

The fiftieth anniversary of a journal, especially one as important and influential asAmerican Antiquity, is a time for celebration. It is also a moment for reflection both on the achievements of the past and the potential for the future. Major journals are mirrors of the intellectual history of the disciplines that they represent. They are also both intentionally or unintentionally shapers and trendsetters of that discipline. Time past, time present, and time future become inextricably woven in a consideration of their printed pages.


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marisel Adriana Somale

ABSTRACTA comparative study of a prestigious figure of speech is carried out –that of the metaphor- and research is done on the strange unfolding of quest, awareness and descent into the human condition accomplished by both Joseph Conrad in “Heart of Darkness” and Eustasio Rivera in “The Vortex” in the complexity of two voyages that take place in the diversity of the exotic jungle, although analogous, in its natives, and in its unexpected strange fascination.RESUMENSe realiza un seguimiento comparativo de un recurso estilístico prestigioso –la metáfora—y se estudia el extraño despliegue de búsqueda, conocimiento y descenso en la condición humana que Joseph Conrad, en “Heart of Darkness”, y Eustasio Rivera, en “La Vorágine”, llevan adelante desde la complejidad de dos viajes que tienen lugar en geografías diversas si bien análogas en el exotismo devorador de la selva y sus habitantes, y en su inesperada, extraña fascinación.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 478-486
Author(s):  
Zahra Sonia Barghani

Abstract Throughout human history bereavement has always imposed its undeniable and inevitable impact on the life of those affected by it. Despite all discrepancies what can be considered the common ground in bereavement among all nations regardless of cultural, ideological, religious and ethical values is the fact that bereavement infuses an indispensable change into the lives of those encountering it. The comparative study of Burial and The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World by Iranian and Colombian authors, respectively, points out the unconventional reversed handling of bereavement which results in obtaining insight into the human capacity to mature. Both authors make their characters inseminate their barren lives with grief to produce a change which is drastic and flourishing in Gabriel Garcia Marquez and soothing and stabilizing in Bijan Najdi. Through the course of the stories the childless couple in Najdi and the villagers in Garcia Marquez are gradually exposed to the truth of their lives ironically by the corpses coming up their ways quite unexpectedly and learn to develop new identities, attaching themselves to and possessing the bodies. This comparative study sheds light on how the revelation they experience inculcates a joyful, fluid mobility in the villagers and stability in the couple’s life. The study of these texts reveals the absolute notion that the actual change originates from the world within and what lies in the world without is dead.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-50
Author(s):  
Usha Sanyal

The ‘Introduction’ sets out the framework for this comparative study of different kinds of religious education for South Asian Muslim women. The study is divided into two parts. The term adab encapsulates what the madrasa is trying to achieve. Adab is a classical term often translated as ‘etiquette’ in English, though it carries a complex resonance of meanings that go much deeper. In part 2, in contrast, I use the term da‘wa to characterize Al-Huda. The Arabic term Da‘wa (also referred to as tabligh, from balagha, discourse) means ‘call’ or ‘invitation’. Today’s da‘wa movements are no longer confined to preachers’ sermons during weekly Friday prayers, but have become a popular phenomenon with wide reach through the use of the Internet and other media sources. These two Arabic terms frame my discussion of the two case studies in the book. The ‘Introduction’ also examines what unites the two ethnographies, which seem at first sight to be so different as to share no common ground.


2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 573-603
Author(s):  
Alexander Schaefer ◽  
Robert Weston Siscoe ◽  

A strength of liberal political institutions is their ability to accommodate pluralism, both allowing divergent comprehensive doctrines as well as constructing the common ground necessary for diverse people to live together. A pressing question is how far such pluralism extends. Which comprehensive doctrines are simply beyond the pale and need not be accommodated by a political consensus? Rawls attempted to keep the boundaries of reasonable disagreement quite broad by infamously denying that political liberalism need make reference to the concept of truth, a claim that has been criticized by Joseph Raz, Joshua Cohen, and David Estlund. In this paper, we argue that these criticisms fail due to the fact that political liberalism can remain non-committal on the nature of truth, leaving the concept of truth in the domain of comprehensive doctrines while still avoiding the issues raised by Raz, Cohen, and Estlund. Further substantiating this point is the fact that Rawls would, and should, include parties in the overlapping consensus whose views on truth may be incoherent. Once it is seen that political liberalism allows such incoherence to reasonable parties, it is clear that the inclusion of truth and the requirement of coherence urged by Raz, Cohen, and Estlund requires more of reasonable people than is necessary for a political consensus.


Author(s):  
Nanna Holm

This article deals with metaphor translation emphasising the common ground between translation theory and Cognitive Linguistics (CL). Within the framework of CL, a comparative study of two Danish translations of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca ’s ‘Poeta en Nueva York’ is presented, focusing on a selection of metaphors that form networks throughout the work in question. It is then analysed if and how these metaphoric networks have been successfully transferred into the target language (TL). In conclusion, some remarks are made on the contribution of CL to the overall discussion of the translatability of metaphors.


2019 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-109
Author(s):  
Elka Dimitrova

Abstract The approach of this text is a comparative reading of particular thematic and ideological similarities and differences between two emblematic Bulgarian poets: Hristo Botev (1848–1876) and Pencho Slaveykov (1866–1912). As they are also representative figures of two significant cultural periods – the National Revival (in its Romantic appearances) and Modernism – the current study develops wider analytical parallels. A number of Friedrich Nietzsche’s concepts and conceptions are selected as a basis for these comparisons. Although Botev did not have direct access to Nietzsche’s works, while Slaveykov, by contrast, was the first active and committed supporter of the German philosopher in Bulgaria, Botev’s views are often surprisingly close to Nietzsche’s, while Slaveykov sounds at times more like a cultural missionary than an organic continuator. Thus, while in the course of the study hidden dialogues and invisible motifs — especially in Slaveykov’s cultural argument with Botev — were revealed, valid starting points were also unearthed for new interpretations of this well-researched literary period. Such points include the romantic characteristics of the Bulgarian National Revival, the connections between the Revival and Modernism, based on the “Romantic common ground” in both movements, and intentions regarding the assertion and/or construction of a native genealogy of Bulgarian Modernism.


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