Self-Knowledge (Essay)
Traffic (Parkville) 2002, Jan, 1
-
- £2.99
-
- £2.99
Publisher Description
The aspiration to self-knowledge was at the centre of all reflection for the classical Greek philosophers. All knowledge or desire for knowledge, which is not merely instrumental, must proceed only from a genuine passion, a genuine awareness of what one is and could be. While there is in our time an unusual emphasis on the self, nothing better characterises that emphasis than the denial of the possibility of self-knowledge. This denial has deep roots in the fundamental theses of modern thought, which in turn issue from a critique of the classics. If we wish to think seriously about ourselves, our most urgent task is to re-examine these respective viewpoints. I
Re-Imagining the Female Hysteric: Helene Cixous' Portrait of Dora (Critical Essay)
2008
Molecular Biology of Brain Cancer (Clinical Report)
2004
'the Spiritual Mind': The Neuroscience of Spiritual Experience.
2006
Transitory Ghosts and Angels in the Photography of Francesca Woodman (Critical Essay)
2007
Hordes and Massed Machines: Samuel Huntington in Russia (History)
2005
Something is Rotten in Blue Velvet ... an Exploration of David Lynch's Blue Velvet Via Shakespeare's Hamlet.
2006