Tag Archives: Holocaust survivor testimonies
Truth and truths
Truth and truths It was early in my philosophy major at Barnard College when a professor returned a paper of mine, to which he had given a less than stellar grade, with the comment, “By now you should know better … Continue reading →
Posted in Academe, Action, Afterlife, Art of Living, Autonomy, books, Contemplation, Contradictions, Cultural Politics, Culture, Desire, dialectic, Freedom, Friendship, Heroes, hidden God, hierarchy, history of ideas, Idealism, Ideality, Identity, Jews, life and death struggle, Love, Male Power, Martyrdom, Memoir, memory, Modernism, Moral action, Moral evaluation, Moral psychology, morality, Mortality, non-violence, Ontology, Oppression, pacifism, Past and Future, Peace, Philosophy, politics of ideas, post modernism, Power, presence, Public Intellectual, Reading, Reductionism, relationships, Religion, Roles, scientism, secular, social construction, Social Conventions, social ranking, spiritual journey, spiritual not religious, Spirituality, status, Suffering, Terror, The Examined Life, The Problematic of Men, The Problematic of Woman, the profane, the sacred, Theism, Time, twentieth century, victimhood, victims, War, Work, Writing, Zeitgeist
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Tagged Anglophone philosophers, atomic facts, atomic propositions, Cheryl Misak’s Frank Ramsey: A Sheer Excess of Powers, clarification, concentration camp, concentration camp survivor, Divine Truth, early Wittgenstein, Epistemology, Gandhi, Gandhi’s Experiments with Truth, God is Truth, Holocaust, Holocaust survivor testimonies, honesty, ideal certainties, integrity, kinds of truth, language and reality, lying, Nazi official, ordinary experience, personal integrity, philosopher’s biography, philosophic dialogue, philosophic friendship, philosophy major, postulated entities, pragmatism, protestant pastor v Nazi, Ray Monk’s Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius, realm of ideas, refuting instance, reliabilism, scientific truth, self-trust, the test of experience, the what and the who, truth, truth as cash-value, truth as what works, truths, Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations, Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, world of truth, Young India
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