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KoolGuy
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Posted on 10-23-05 6:03
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hey guys !! cOULd anybody help me writing philosophy paper on any topic. possible topics are: 1. Descartes' dictum "I think, therefore i am"...Show how he reached this conclusion and why he had to use methodological doubt that led to this claim ???? 2. Any philosophical topic, like "Innate Knowledge'. " Animism", OR Kant's topic of "How are synthetic judgments a priori possible " ? MAN this philosophy is gonna burst up my head.....Please Help me. Any help will be truly Appreciated.!!!! Thanks.
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santoshgiri
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Posted on 10-23-05 6:07
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Write something on nepal so as to contribute to the making of a new Nepal. possible topic: 1) Transformation of Nepal: Issues 2) Popular will 3) sustainable democracy 4) Peace process 5) Untying the deadlock in Nepal
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u_day
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Posted on 10-24-05 6:17
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kool! Write about love and socrates' definition of love.
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Hushpuppy
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Posted on 10-24-05 2:46
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animism A term variously used, in particular for the view that apparently inanimate parts of the universe (rivers, mountains, stars, and so on, as well as plants) are in fact animated and activated by souls or spirits; for example, Naiads (springs), Dryads (oak-trees) and so on. Usually the term is applied to primitive beliefs of this nature rather than to philosophical views claiming to see life in the apparently lifeless (for which also see: hylozoism, panpsychism, vitalism). 'Teleological animism' has been used for the view that some wholes organize themselves and their parts so as to fulfill certain aims which they themselves originate. reference: http://www.philosophyprofessor.com/philosophies/animism.php
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Hushpuppy
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Posted on 10-24-05 2:55
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Rene Descartes was one of the modern world?s great intellects. He was principally a philosopher, mathematician and scientist, but he also pursued a wide variety of other interests including metallurgy and fencing (on which he wrote treatises?now lost). Working with the comprehensive and acute energy of the third ray soul his philosophical approach advocated a method of ?systematic doubt? intended to lead to certainty in all areas of thought which the human mind might explore. He is best known in philosophical circles for his dictum, ?Cogito ergo sum? (?I think, therefore I am?) and for proposing a metaphysics which strictly divided mind from matter. As a mathematician he is credited with inventing analytic geometry (presented in his book Geometry) as well as number of important conventions in mathematical notation which are still in use today. He also studied a number of scientific subjects. In his Dioptrics, he presented the law of refraction, and in his Meteorology he explained the rainbow. He was also a moral philosopher and (although nominally a Catholic), was an outspoken (if wary) advocate of religious tolerance. Descartes surely believed in God, but found his calling in the glorification of reason. The conclusions he reached when thinking about God, the universe and man (and especially his advocacy of Copernicus? astronomical theories) placed him on a collision course with Church dogma, for which reason he was ever-vigilant about his safety. refer to:http://www.esotericastrologer.org/EA%20Essays/EAessaysMDR29.htm
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