Description
This book examines the principles of expression and indication upon which the philosophical concept is built. It also examines the methods of signification and contrast that the philosopher employs in defining his concepts and utilizing them within the context of his discourse. It clarifies how adopting these methods leads to the generation of concepts that are robust in their questioning and argumentation, and how deviating from them results in the creation of concepts that are uprooted in their questioning and unstable in their argumentation. The author then focuses on…
This book examines the principles of expression and indication upon which the philosophical concept is built. It also examines the methods of signification and contrast that the philosopher employs in defining his concepts and utilizing them within the context of his discourse. It clarifies how adopting these methods leads to the generation of concepts that are robust in their questioning and argumentation, and how deviating from them results in the creation of concepts that are uprooted in their questioning and unstable in their argumentation. The author then examines exemplary applications of established philosophical concepts in the works of four philosophers in their respective native languages: Plato, Descartes, Heidegger, and Deleuze. He also explores a exemplary application of philosophical concepts derived from Arabic philosophy.











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