Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 11 de abr. de 2012 · The examined life : philosophical meditations. by. Nozick, Robert. Publication date. 1990. Topics. Philosophy, Life, History & Surveys - Modern, Philosophy / General, Human behavior, Conduct of life, Philosophy, American, Zin van het leven, Filosofische aspecten. Publisher. New York : Simon & Schuster.

  2. 15 de dic. de 1990 · The Examined Life: Philosophical Meditations. Paperback – December 15, 1990. by Robert Nozick (Author) 4.4 52 ratings. See all formats and editions. One of this century’s most original philosophical thinkers, Nozick brilliantly renews Socrates’s quest to uncover the life that is worth living.

  3. 1 de ene. de 1989 · In brave and moving meditations on love, creativity, happiness, sexuality, parents and children, the Holocaust, religious faith, politics, and wisdom, The Examined Life brings philosophy back to its preeminent subject, the things that matter most.

  4. Examined Life: Philosophical Meditations. Robert Nozick. Simon and Schuster, Dec 15, 1990 - Philosophy - 308 pages. One of the twentieth century's most original and controversial...

  5. 15 de oct. de 1989 · by Robert Nozick (Author) 4.4 51 ratings. See all formats and editions. The author states that by examining his understanding of dying, sex, love, the Holocaust, politics, and other topics, they bring forth ideas, questions, and statements, and that the subjects automatically project into the mind. Read more.

  6. The Examined Life is a 1989 collection of philosophical meditations by the philosopher Robert Nozick. The book drew a number of critical reactions. The work is drawn partially as a response to Socrates assertion in Plato 's " The Apology of Socrates " that the unexamined life is one not worth living [2] [3]

  7. Robert Nozick's first book, "Anarchy, State, and Utopia", has been widely touted as the philosophical bible of libertarianism in America, the most rigorous case ever argued against redistributive justice and the welfare state, the Summa of anarcho-capitalism. Here's what Nozicks writes in chapter 25, near the end, of The Examined Life: