Every economics textbook says the same thing: Money was invented to replace onerous and complicated barter systemsβto relieve ancient people from having to ...
Continue Reading βFaust: The First Part of the Tragedy is the first part of Goethe’s Faust and is considered by many as the greatest work ...
Continue Reading βRenΓ© Girard is one of the mostly widely-cited thinkers in contemporary European thought. First published in 1972, Violence and the Sacred marked the ...
Continue Reading βIn Sacrifice, RenΓ© Girard interrogates the Brahmanas of Vedic India, exploring coincidences with mimetic theory that are too numerous and striking to be ...
Continue Reading βTo provide entertainment at a dinner held by the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Galileo debated the Aristotelian physicist Lodovico delle Columbe on the ...
Continue Reading βWith the fall of Berlin Wall in 1989 the threat of the Cold War which had dominated the second half of the twentieth ...
Continue Reading βLeonardo da Vinci fascinated Freud primarily because he was keen to know why his personality was so incomprehensible to his contemporaries. In this ...
Continue Reading βThe simple but convincing explanations of things familiar to everybody are explained here: the sudden forgetting of names, of sets of words, impressions ...
Continue Reading βIn reasoned progression he outlined core psychoanalytic concepts, such as repression, free association and libido. Of the various English translations of Freud’s major ...
Continue Reading βWith vast erudition, Foucault cuts across disciplines and reaches back into seventeenth century to show how classical systems of knowledge, which linked all ...
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