Volume 52 (1997), 1
Papers
Abstract
The essay follows the Heideggerian questioning the possibility of standing out in the "Lichtung" given by a contrasted background. Individual beings show themselves on the background of something that makes this showing ontically and ontologically possible, i.e. on the background of something nonspatial and timeless, which, however, makes the spatiality and… Read more
Abstract
The paper examines the development of the Hungarian philosophy of the 19th century. The author focuses on four main periods: the first one was the period of the establishment of the Hungarian philosophy (the Enlightenment, the discussion of Kant's philosophy and the introduction of the Hungarian terminology). The second one was marked by an attempt to articulate a… Read more
Abstract
In the epoch where the rational affirmed itself through competing with the non-rational through the employment of the strategies of division, limitation, and demarcation of borders (or colonization of the non-rational), reason constituted and imposed itself as a system ofprinciples. In the course of the 19th century, however, both separational… Read more