The Theory of Time as an Aspect of Thought
A philosophical study exploring the theory that time is merely an aspect of our thoughts, rooted in subjectivism and challenging objective truth.
A philosophical study exploring the theory that time is merely an aspect of our thoughts, rooted in subjectivism and challenging objective truth.
Subjectivism, a philosophical idea that truth and reality are found within an individual's mind or experience, has had a profound impact on Western philosophy, influencing various intellectual traditions and shaping the way we think about truth and reality.
The Evolution of Subjectivism from Ancient Greece to Early Christianity explores how a focus on individual salvation replaced civic engagement as Western philosophy's central concern.
Exploring the relativism of Protagoras, a pre-Socratic philosopher who argued that 'man is the measure of all things', and its implications for ethics, politics, and epistemology.
Exploring the concept of objective truth in ethics, its significance, and implications.
An ancient Greek philosopher's theory that challenges objective truth, emphasizing individual perspectives on reality.
Protagoras' theory of relativism challenges traditional notions of objective truth and morality, influencing thinkers such as Plato, Aristotle, and Immanuel Kant.
A critical examination of the evolution of subjectivism in modern philosophy, exploring its various forms, implications for society, and key figures and concepts.
The emergence of subjectivism in ethics, a philosophical perspective that emphasizes individual feelings, intuitions, and perspectives over objective principles or rules, has far-reaching implications for morality, individualism, and social norms.
An examination of the connection between subjectivism in philosophy and anarchism in politics, exploring how individual autonomy and moral relativism lead to radical critiques of authority and government.
The 16th century saw a significant shift in Western philosophy from authority-based knowledge to individual introspection, affecting politics, religion, and literature.