scholarly journals Peter Nikolaj Skougaard. Grundtvigs mathematiske ven

1966 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-38
Author(s):  
E. Brandt Nielsen

Peter Nikolaj Skougaard and Grundtvig By E. Brandt Nielsen P. N. Skougaard was born in the island of Bornholm in the same year as Grundtvig and belonged to his circle of young fellow students. Grundtvig called him the only friend of his youth or his “mathematical friend”, Skougaard’s interests being mathematics and, especially, history. The common interest which brought them together was indeed history and dramatic art. History became their real sphere. The diary tells of Grundtvig’s struggle with historical matter and Skougaard’s energetic attempt to make him approach the study of the Arnemagnæan collection in a scholarly way. Skougaard is victorious, but only as regards the scholarly method and only in so far as Grundtvig leaves historical narrative in favour of linguistic and historical studies. In his way of getting to know the spiritual content of Norse poetry Grundtvig differed widely from his friend. Skougaard was a man of enlightenment, and Grundtvig’s existential interpretation of the Eddie poetry could only be very strange to him and double Dutch. The importance of Skougaard to the young Grundtvig is very great as indicated by numerous writings, printed as well as unprinted. Grundtvig compares him to people like Snorre, Schiønning, Gräter, and Nyerup, and he draws a parallel to the influence which he received from Henrik Steffens. Although they probably did not see each other after their meeting in the island of Langeland in 1807, and although he often changed his opinion of other people, Grundtvig’s opinion of P. N. Skougaard remained remarkably unaltered from the early poetry, the diaries, to Kirke-Speil, the work of his old age. Skougaard became Grundtvig’s scholarly conscience and his personal adviser in the “Egeløkke”- crisis— indeed, Grundtvig does not hesitate to describe his encounter with the young Skougaard in 1801 as decided by fate itself. As human beings the two friends could hardly have been less alike, and Grundtvig points to the fact himself. Skougaard’s life became something of a tragedy, determined more by inward tendencies than by outward circumstances. He let himself be defeated by adversity— a young historical writer he was subjected to life censorship according to the printing ordinance of 1799; he did not, like Grundtvig, eventually obtain exemption— Grundtvig, on the other hand, always made external adversity become a challenge and an incitement to still greater achievements. The purely psychological relationship between the two young friends may seem rather puzzling. For instance, revising the article on the investigation of antiquity for Danne-Virke Grundtvig tries to objectify his relations with Skougaard, just as he leaves out the highly personal words about him in the final version of the poem “Strandbakken ved Egeløkke”— an attempt, in other words, at an objective limitation of Skougaard’s influence; but elsewhere, not least in the foot-note to the preface of Nordens Mytologi 1808, the expression of personal feelings is given free scope. But, as the scholar who chooses, first and foremost, the literature for Grundtvig to take with him to “Egeløkke” and who energetically forces him away from his aesthetic and historical mistake: the historical narrative— and by his strong and original personality, Skougaard acquired an importance for Grundtvig which was unique,— it was so great that in my opinion one might well ask how Grundtvig would have developed, had not Skougaard influenced his scholarly work and personal life. For this reason the name of Peter Nikolaj Skougaard should be remembered and rehabilitated. He deserves it.

2022 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pham Thi Lan

Comprehensive human development is an important content in Ho Chi Minh's thought on human beings. "To reap a return in ten years, plant trees. To reap a return in 100, cultivate the people" (Minhd, 2011). A comprehensive person is someone who has both virtue and talent, of which virtue is the root. Virtue is morality, but unlike conservative morality which aims at personal glory, the new and great morality serves the common interest of the communist party, the people and mankind. The basic requirements of that morality are being loyal to the country and faithful to the people, loving people, being diligent, thrifty, honest, righteous and selfless, and having proletarian international spirit. Talent means a person's capability to fulfill assigned tasks, which is demonstrated through continuous learning and improving of academic, scientific, technical and theoretical qualifications (Minhb, 2011). Vietnam is being strongly influenced by the trend of international integration with many complicated changes in the society. In the face of manifestations of degradation in morality and lifestyle seen in students, moral education for Vietnamese students becomes even more important and necessary.


2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Yusuf Hamdan ◽  
Anne Ratnasari ◽  
Aziz Taufik Hirzi

Entrepreneurs as a business negotiator, in order to successfully improve the deal with his business partner needs to be supported by a variety of aspects. One of them through negotiation capability. This study aims to determine the ability of employers’ views on aspects of the negotiations digging courage, patience persists, ask for more courage, integrity, and their activities as a listener when negotiating. This research method qualitative single case study. Data collected by observation, interview, and literature. The informants were women entrepreneurs officers and members of Ikatan Wanita pengusaha Indonesia (IWAPI) West Java. The findings of this study, women entrepreneurs were able to dig up information, is able to give a sense of comfort to the other party during negotiations, have the patience to last longer than the other negotiator to provide timely and positive thinking, dare to ask for more focus on the purpose and process sequence achievement, integrity presses win-win solutions through commitment and attention to the common interest, capable of being a good listener through providing discussion time and as empathetic listener


1950 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 510-512

Eighth SessionThe eighth session of the Consultative Council of Western Powers was held in Brussels on April 16 and 17, 1950. The main business of the meeting was to discuss how the costs of the joint defense projects could be shared. Up to this time each government had paid the costs of its own contingents at the disposal of the organization and all expenditure incurred within its own territory. From the French point of view this had tended to make the common effort relatively more expensive for France than for the other countries while from the United Kingdom point of view, simply fixing the percentages that each country should, bear of the total expenditure would not necessarily be fair, as an airfield built under the treaty plans could in peace time be an advantage to the country in which it was located. This point of view was, in turn, not particularly favored by the Belgians who felt that Belgium had contributed to the common defense proportionally as much as the other powers. The relative amount in each country's budget devoted to the common pool was not an accurate indication as each budget had been drawn up in an entirely different manner, making comparisons difficult. The only thing which counted was the final result: the number of men trained and equipped as well as the material which each country could put on the line; in this regard the Belgians felt they were certainly not lagging behind. It was finally agreed at the meeting that projects of common interest should be paid for in common. The procedure for such payment was to be the subject of proposals submitted to the governments.


Author(s):  
Tamra Wright

Martin Buber covered a range of fields in his writings, from Jewish folklore and fiction, to biblical scholarship and translation, to philosophical anthropology and theology. Above all, however, Buber was a philosopher, in the lay-person’s sense of the term sense: someone who devoted his intellectual energies to contemplating the meaning of life. Buber’s passionate interest in mysticism was reflected in his early philosophical work. However, he later rejected the view that mystical union is the ultimate goal of relation, and developed a philosophy of relation. In the short but enormously influential work, Ich und Du (I and Thou). Buber argued that the I emerges only through encountering others, and that the very nature of the I depends on the quality of the relationship with the Other. He described two fundamentally different ways of relating to others: the common mode of ‘I–It’, in which people and things are experienced as objects, or, in Kantian terms, as ‘means to an end’; and the ‘I–Thou’ mode, in which I do not ‘experience’ the Other, rather, the Other and I enter into a mutually affirming relation, which is simultaneously a relation with another and a relation with God, the ‘eternal Thou’. Buber acknowledged that necessity of I–It, even in the interpersonal sphere, but lamented its predominance in modern life. Through his scholarly work in philosophy, theology and biblical exegesis, as well as his translation of Scripture and adaptations of Hasidic tales, he sought to reawaken our capacity for I–Thou relations.


2016 ◽  
Vol 78 (2) ◽  
pp. 307-308
Author(s):  
Charles Blattberg

Ronald Beiner wants to have it both ways. We know this because, near the end of his book, he tells us that he is a “dualist,” someone for whom “philosophy and citizenship are defined by radically distinct purposes: the job of philosophy is to strive unconditionally for truth, and the job of citizenship is to strive for good and prudent judgment about the common purposes of civic life, and each should focus strictly on fulfilling its own appointed end without worrying too much about the other.” So there needs to be “a steady appreciation of the fundamental chasm between what we (as citizens) need in the world of practice and what we (as human beings) need from the world of theory” (224). This, however, would be abhorrent to most of the political philosophers Beiner covers. Because they are not dualists but monists; to them, theory and practice should be one.


Author(s):  
Christine M. Korsgaard

This chapter argues that human beings are neither better (because of our moral nature) nor better off (because of our higher capacities) than the other animals. Our moral nature does not make us better because moral standards do not apply to animal action. Our higher capacities do not make us better off because the good of a creature is relative to the creature’s capacities. The two views share a common error. One thing can be better or better off than another only as measured by a standard common to both, not because different standards apply to them. The chapter also offers an explanation of the common intuition that death and certain harms are worse for more cognitively and emotionally sophisticated animals than for cognitively and emotionally simpler ones. While the explanation supports the intuition, doubts are raised about whether death is really less bad for some creatures than others.


1981 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 375-380
Author(s):  
R. B. Rutherford

The epistle to Florus (Ep. 2. 2) has usually been grouped with the epistle to Augustus and the Ars Poetica, partly because of its length, which sets it, like the other two, apart from the letters of the first book, and partly because of the common interest in literary theory which is manifested in all three. These poems have always been the subject of controversy; but 2. 2 has received less attention than the others, perhaps because the elegance and humour of the poem, which have been so often praised, have eclipsed the possibility that it may have something to say, especially about Horace himself, his personality and his changing allegiances to philosophy and poetry. The object of this paper is to offer a reading of 2. 2, not as a piece of autobiography, nor as a mosaic of conventional motifs, but as an examination by Horace of his own poetry and poetic aims, in which he is testing and criticizing his own achievement, and himself. In this he continues one of the most attractive and impressive practices of the earlier book of epistles.Horace here abnegates his role as a lyric poet, and this is generally taken literally as placing the poem quite precisely between the completion of Epistles 1 and Horace's resumption of lyric writing in the Carmen Saeculare and Odes 4. But more important is the way in which Horace in Ep. 2. 2 itself expresses a judgement about his own poetic ambitions. The philosophic themes of the Epistles and the more frivolous lyric subjects (‘iocos, Venerem, convivia, ludum’, 2. 2. 56) which he presents as the essence of his Odes, are both aspects of Horace's poetry and personality; the question is whether one should be considered more valid than the other in the poet's own mature judgement, whether Horace should in fact have outgrown either or both kinds of poetry. In this poem, then, it is important not only that he renews the renunciation of poetry and the gay life which he made at Ep. 1. 1. 10–11, but also that this decision is to some extent forced on him, and reluctantly made (2. 2. 55–7).


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 59-68
Author(s):  
Peter Takáč

AbstractLookism is a term used to describe discrimination based on the physical appearance of a person. We suppose that the social impact of lookism is a philosophical issue, because, from this perspective, attractive people have an advantage over others. The first line of our argumentation involves the issue of lookism as a global ethical and aesthetical phenomenon. A person’s attractiveness has a significant impact on the social and public status of this individual. The common view in society is that it is good to be more attractive and healthier. This concept generates several ethical questions about human aesthetical identity, health, authenticity, and integrity in society. It seems that this unequal treatment causes discrimination, diminishes self-confidence, and lowers the chance of a job or social enforcement for many human beings. Currently, aesthetic improvements are being made through plastic surgery. There is no place on the human body that we cannot improve with plastic surgery or aesthetic medicine. We should not forget that it may result in the problem of elitism, in dividing people into primary and secondary categories. The second line of our argumentation involves a particular case of lookism: Melanie Gaydos. A woman that is considered to be a model with a unique look.


Author(s):  
Mauro Rocha Baptista

Neste artigo analisamos a relação do Ensino Religioso com a sua evolução ao longo do contexto recente do Brasil para compreender a posição do Supremo Tribunal Federal ao considerar a possibilidade do Ensino Religioso confessional. Inicialmente apresentaremos a perspectiva legislativa criada com a constituição de 1988 e seus desdobramentos nas indicações curriculares. Neste contexto é frisado a intenção de incluir o Ensino Religioso na Base Nacional Curricular Comum, o que acabou não acontecendo. A tendência manifesta nas duas primeiras versões da BNCC era de um Ensino Religioso não-confessional. Uma tendência que demarcava a função do Ensino Religioso em debater a religião, mas que não permitia o direcionamento por uma vertente religioso qualquer. Esta posição se mostrava uma evolução da primeira perspectiva histórica mais associada à catequese confessional. Assim como também ultrapassava a interpretação posterior de um ecumenismo interconfessional, que mantinha a superioridade do cristianismo ante as demais religiões. Sendo assim, neste artigo, adotaremos o argumento de que a decisão do STF, de seis votos contra cinco, acaba retrocedendo ante o que nos parecia um caminho muito mais frutífero.Palavras-chave: Ensino Religioso. Supremo Tribunal Federal. Confessional. Interconfessional. Não-confessional.Abstract: On this article, we analyze the relation between Religious education and its evolution along the currently Brazilian context in order to understand the position of the Supreme Court in considering the possibility of a confessional Religious education. Firstly, we are going to present the legislative perspective created with the 1988 Federal Constitution and its impacts in the curricular lines. On this context it was highlighted the intention to include the Religious Education on the Common Core National Curriculum (CCNC), which did not really happened. The tendency manifested in the first two versions of the CCNC was of a non-confessional Religious Education. A tendency that delineated the function of the Religious Education as debating religion, but not giving direction on any religious side. This position was an evolution of the first historical perspective more associated to the confessional catechesis. It also went beyond the former interpretation of an inter-confessional ecumenism, which kept the superiority of the Christianity over the other religions. As such, in this paper we adopt the argument that the decision of the Supreme Court, of six votes against five, is a reversal of what seemed to be a much more productive path on the Religious Education.Keywords: Religious Education. Brazilian Supreme Court. Confessional. Inter-confessional. Non- confessional.Enviado: 23-01-2018 - Aprovado e publicado: 12-2018


2019 ◽  
Vol 62 (6) ◽  
pp. 88-99
Author(s):  
Andrey A. Lukashev

The typology of rationality is one of major issues of modern philosophy. In an attempt to provide a typology to Oriental materials, a researcher faces additional problems. The diversity of the Orient as such poses a major challenge. When we say “Oriental,” we mean several cultures for which we cannot find a common denominator. The concept of “Orient” involves Arabic, Indian, Chinese, Turkish and other cultures, and the only thing they share is that they are “non-Western.” Moreover, even if we focus just on Islamic culture and look into rationality in this context, we have to deal with a conglomerate of various trends, which does not let us define, with full confidence, a common theoretical basis and treat them as a unity. Nevertheless, we have to go on trying to find common directions in thought development, so as to draw conclusions about types of rationality possible in Islamic culture. A basis for such a typology of rationality in the context of the Islamic world was recently suggested in A.V. Smirnov’s logic of sense theory. However, actual empiric material cannot always fit theoretical models, and the cases that do not fit the common scheme are interesting per se. On the one hand, examination of such cases gives an opportunity to specify certain provisions of the theory and, on the other hand, to define the limits of its applicability.


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