41.
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Deutsches Jahrbuch Philosophie:
Volume >
8
Philip Pettit
History in the Service of Philosophy
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42.
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Deutsches Jahrbuch Philosophie:
Volume >
8
Dagfinn Føllesdal
Philosophy of Language and Husserl’s Phenomenology
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43.
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Deutsches Jahrbuch Philosophie:
Volume >
8
Christopher Gill
Why Should We Care about Stoic Ethics Today?
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44.
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Deutsches Jahrbuch Philosophie:
Volume >
8
Micha Werner
The Morality Club and the Moral Sceptic:
A Defence of Social Constitutivism
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45.
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Deutsches Jahrbuch Philosophie:
Volume >
8
Chung-ying Cheng
Receptivity and Creativity in Hermeneutics:
Focusing on Gadamer with Reference to Onto-Hermeneutics
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There are two aspects of the hermeneutic: the receptive and the creative. The receptive of the hermeneutic consists in coming to know and acknowledge what has happened, observing what there is as historically effected, foretelling what will happen as a matter of projection of future possibilities, and disclosing / discovering transcendental conditions, fore-structures or horizons of human understanding and interpretation; the creative of the hermeneutic, on the other hand, consists in realizing and demonstrating human sensibilities and human capabilities and needs, conceptualizing what is factual and real based on human cognitive and volitional faculties and experiences, developing values and pursuing regulative ideals of actions, and searching for best possible ways or methods to reach for individual and communal end-goals which will enhance human beings as autonomous entities and moral agents in the world. The receptive is represented by the phenomenological approach to Being and reality whereas the creative is conveyed by an ontology of reflection of human being for self-definition and self-cultivation of human faculties. This amounts to bringing out an existing distinction between ming (what is imparted) and li (the presupposed ground) on the one hand and xing ( human potentiality for being in oneself) and xin (human understanding and interpretation toward action) on the other in the tradition of Confucian metaphysics.Next, I shall focus on Heidegger and Gadamer as taking ontological receptivity (as a matter of fore-structures of Being or Language of human understanding) as the source of meaning of existence and meaningfulness of texts. Th ere are of course creative elements to be identifi ed with forming investigative projects of the Dasein for disclosing truth of the Being, but the main tone is to realize the Being or Language as base structures of our hermeneutic consciousness or hermeneutic space of understanding. Because of spacelimitation, however, I shall leave to another occasion the discussion of the creative formation and positive projection of a transformative cosmological philosophy in the Yijing tradition as represented in my onto-hermeneutics which takes experiences of ≫comprehensive observation≪ (guan) and ≫feeling- refl ection≪ (gan) as two avenues toward human understanding and hermeneutic enterprise of interpretation.
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46.
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Semiotics:
1980
Robert S. Hatten
Explaining Style Growth and Change:
A Richer Semiotic Mode
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47.
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Semiotics:
1980
Kenneth Laine Ketner
Peirce’s Existential Graphs as the Basis for An Introduction to Logic:
Semiosis in the Logic Classroom
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48.
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Semiotics:
1980
William L. Benzon
System and Observer in Semiotic Modeling:
An Essay on Semiotic Realism
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49.
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Semiotics:
1980
Alexandre Kimenyi
A Semiotic Account of Polysemy and Homonymy
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50.
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Semiotics:
1980
Jeffrey Mark Golliher
On Discovering the Semiotic Organization of Experience:
The Public Meanings and Private Meanings of Objects
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51.
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Semiotics:
1980
Marlies Kronegger
The Impact of Speech-Act Theory and Phenomenology on Proust and Claude Simon
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52.
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Semiotics:
1980
Richard Bunt
Mind, Object, Object, Artifact II
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53.
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Semiotics:
1980
Nancy P. Hickerson
Naturalness Vs. Arbitrariness in the Domain of Color
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54.
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Semiotics:
1980
Geoffrey Broadbent
Buildings as Symbols of Political Ideology
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55.
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Semiotics:
1980
Jarrett Brock
Peirce’s Anticipation of Game Theoretic Logic and Semantics
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56.
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Semiotics:
1980
Robert Cantrick
The Reference Relation in Music
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57.
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Semiotics:
1980
Barry Russell
The Appearance of Appearance:
Architecture, Communication and Value Systems
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58.
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Semiotics:
1980
Erika Freiberger-Sheikholeslami
Forgotten Pioneers of Soviet Semiotics
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59.
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Semiotics:
1980
Bruce E.R. Thompson
The Application of the Peircean Semiotic to Logic
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60.
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Semiotics:
1980
Charls Pearson
The Mark VI:
A New Eidometer Design Concept
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