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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Edmund Husserl |  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Hermann Weyl - Topological groups Lie groups and representation theorySee main articles Peter-Weyl theorem, Weyl group, Weyl spinor,Weyl algebra
From 1923 to 1938, Weyl developed the theory of compact groups, in terms of matrix representations. In the compact Lie group case he proved a fundamental character formula.
These results are foundational in understanding the symmetry structure of quantum mechanics, which he put on a group-theoretic basis. This included spinors. Together with the mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics, in large measure due to John von Neumann, this gave the ...
See also:Hermann Weyl, Hermann Weyl - Early life and interests, Hermann Weyl - Geometric foundations of manifolds and physics, Hermann Weyl - Foundations of mathematics, Hermann Weyl - Mathematics of relativity, Hermann Weyl - Topological groups Lie groups and representation theory, Hermann Weyl - Harmonic analysis and analytic number theory, Hermann Weyl - Later career, Hermann Weyl - Personality, Hermann Weyl - Quotes Read more here: » Hermann Weyl: Encyclopedia II - Hermann Weyl - Topological groups Lie groups and representation theory |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Hermann Weyl - Foundations of mathematicsHe became very interested in the foundational questions raised by the intuitionists. George Pólya and Weyl, during a mathematicians' gathering in Zürich (February 9, 1918), made a bet concerning the future direction of mathematics. Weyl predicted that in the subsequent 20 years, mathematicians would come to realize the total vagueness of notions such as real numbers, sets, and countability, and moreover, that asking about the truth or falsity of the least upper bound property of the real numbers was as meaningful as asking about truth of the b ...
See also:Hermann Weyl, Hermann Weyl - Early life and interests, Hermann Weyl - Geometric foundations of manifolds and physics, Hermann Weyl - Foundations of mathematics, Hermann Weyl - Mathematics of relativity, Hermann Weyl - Topological groups Lie groups and representation theory, Hermann Weyl - Harmonic analysis and analytic number theory, Hermann Weyl - Later career, Hermann Weyl - Personality, Hermann Weyl - Quotes Read more here: » Hermann Weyl: Encyclopedia II - Hermann Weyl - Foundations of mathematics |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Freiburg - CultureBecause of its scenic beauty, relatively warm and sunny climate and easy access to the Black Forest, Freiburg is a hub for regional tourism. The longest cable car in Germany (3.6 km, or about 2.25 miles) runs from just outside the city to a nearby mountain called Schauinsland. The city has an unusual system of gutters (called Bächle) that run throughout its centre. These Bächle, once used to provide water to fight fires and refresh livestock, are constantly flowing with water diverted from the Dreisam. Local tradition has it that if you step in a Bäch ...
See also:Freiburg, Freiburg - History, Freiburg - Culture, Freiburg - Politics, Freiburg - Sister cities, Freiburg - Transportation, Freiburg - Famous Freiburgers, Freiburg - Sports, Freiburg - Gallery Read more here: » Freiburg: Encyclopedia II - Freiburg - Culture |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Hermann Weyl - Later careerIn 1928 and 1929, he was a visiting professor at Princeton University.
Weyl left the professorship at the Technische Hochschule in Zürich, Switzerland, in the year of 1930 and he became Hilbert's successor at Göttingen where he held the chair of mathematics. The rise of the National Socialism in Germany in 1933, resulted in Weyl accepting an offer of going to the Institute for Advanced Study; Weyl's wife Hella (nee Joseph) was Jewis ...
See also:Hermann Weyl, Hermann Weyl - Early life and interests, Hermann Weyl - Geometric foundations of manifolds and physics, Hermann Weyl - Foundations of mathematics, Hermann Weyl - Mathematics of relativity, Hermann Weyl - Topological groups Lie groups and representation theory, Hermann Weyl - Harmonic analysis and analytic number theory, Hermann Weyl - Later career, Hermann Weyl - Personality, Hermann Weyl - Quotes Read more here: » Hermann Weyl: Encyclopedia II - Hermann Weyl - Later career |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Atheism - Reasons for atheismAlthough not all atheists claim to have a rational justification for their stance, a majority of explicit atheists do assert that their stance has a rational basis, and there are some especially common reasons given by them.
Atheism - Philosophical reasons.
A majority of explicit atheists base their stance on rational or philosophical grounds, arguing that their position is based on logical analysis, and subsequent rejection, of theistic claims. These arguments against the existence of deities consist of a number of different problems with theism. Chief among these problems is a perceiv ...
See also:Atheism, Atheism - Etymology, Atheism - Types and typologies of atheism, Atheism - Atheism as lack of theism, Atheism - Atheism as immorality, Atheism - Weak and strong atheism, Atheism - Ignosticism, Atheism - Gnostic and agnostic atheism, Atheism - Atheism in philosophical naturalism, Atheism - Antitheism, Atheism - History, Atheism - Distribution of atheists, Atheism - Atheism in the United Kingdom, Atheism - Atheism in the United States, Atheism - Atheism studies and statistics, Atheism - Statistical problems, Atheism - Religion and atheism, Atheism - Spiritual and religious atheism, Atheism - Judaism, Atheism - Christianity, Atheism - Islam, Atheism - Asian spirituality, Atheism - Reasons for atheism, Atheism - Philosophical reasons, Atheism - Personal and social reasons, Atheism - Three famous atheists: Freud Marx and Nietzsche, Atheism - Criticisms of atheism, Atheism - Atheism is incoherent, Atheism - Atheism doesn't exist, Atheism - Atheism leads to poor morals and ethics, Atheism - Atheism is a belief as much as theism is, Atheism - Related concepts, Atheism - Organizations, Atheism - Satire Read more here: » Atheism: Encyclopedia II - Atheism - Reasons for atheism |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Tests of consciousnessAs there is still not a clear definition of consciousness, no empirical tests currently exist to test consciousness as a whole. Some have even argued that empirical tests of consciousness are intrinsically impossible. However, some researchers have devised tests to detect what they feel are certain aspects of consciousness. A test similar to this was used in the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K. Dick to see if a person was a robot or an actual human. In the Ridley Scott movie, Blade Runner, which was inspired by that book, it is known as th ...
See also:Consciousness, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Phenomenal and access consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Miscellaneous Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Tests of consciousness |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Spiritual approachesSpiritual approaches to consciousness involve the idea of altered states of consciousness or religious experience. Changes in the state of consciousness or a religious experience can occur spontaneously or as a result of religious observance. It is also maintained by some religions and religious factions that the universe itself is consciousness.
In shamanic practices, changes in states of consciousness are induced by activities that create trance states, such as drumming, dancing, fasting, sensory deprivation, exposure to extremes of ...
See also:Consciousness, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Phenomenal and access consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Miscellaneous Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Spiritual approaches |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Physical approachesEven at the dawn of Newtonian science, Leibniz and many others were suggesting physical theories of consciousness. Modern physical theories of consciousness can be divided into three types: theories to explain behaviour and access consciousness, theories to explain phenomenal consciousness and theories to explain the quantum mechanical (QM) Quantum mind. Theories that seek to explain behaviour are an everyday part of neuroscience, some of these theories of access consciousness, such as Edelman's theory, contentiously identify phenomenal cons ...
See also:Consciousness, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Phenomenal and access consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Miscellaneous Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Physical approaches |
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| |  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Criminology - Types and definitions of crimeBoth the positivist and classical schools take a consensus view of crime – that a crime is an act that violates the basic values and beliefs of society. Those values and beliefs are manifested as laws that society agrees upon. However, there are two types of laws:
Natural laws are rooted in core values shared by many cultures. Natural laws protect against harm to persons (e.g. murder, rape, assault) or property (theft, larceny, robbery).
Statutory laws are passed by legislatures and reflect current cultural mores. In ...
See also:Criminology, Criminology - Schools of thought, Criminology - Classical school, Criminology - Positivist school, Criminology - Strain Theory, Criminology - British and American Sub-Cultural Theories, Criminology - Symbolic Interactionism, Criminology - Types and definitions of crime, Criminology - Educational programs Read more here: » Criminology: Encyclopedia II - Criminology - Types and definitions of crime |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - 1938 - Births
1938 - January-February.
January 2 - Hans Herbjørnsrud, Norwegian author
January 2 - Ian Brady, British serial killer
January 5 - King Juan Carlos I of Spain
January 7 - Roland Topor, French illustrator (d. 1997)
January 8 - Bob Eubanks, American game show host
January 10 - Donald Knuth, American mathematician and computer scientist
January 10 - Willie McCovey, baseball player
January 14 - Jack Jones, American singer and actor
January ...
See also:1938, 1938 - Events, 1938 - January-March, 1938 - April-June, 1938 - July-September, 1938 - October-December, 1938 - Unknown dates, 1938 - Ongoing events, 1938 - Births, 1938 - January-February, 1938 - March-April, 1938 - May-July, 1938 - August-October, 1938 - November-December, 1938 - Fictional, 1938 - Deaths, 1938 - Nobel Prizes Read more here: » 1938: Encyclopedia II - 1938 - Births |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Criminology - Educational programsThere are now a huge variety of undergraduate and postgraduate criminology degrees available around the world. The present popularity of such degrees may in part be due to criminal and police television dramas that capture students imaginations, but could also be because of growing awareness as to the continuing importance of issues relating to law, rules, compliance, politics, terrorism, security, fo ...
See also:Criminology, Criminology - Schools of thought, Criminology - Classical school, Criminology - Positivist school, Criminology - Strain Theory, Criminology - British and American Sub-Cultural Theories, Criminology - Symbolic Interactionism, Criminology - Types and definitions of crime, Criminology - Educational programs Read more here: » Criminology: Encyclopedia II - Criminology - Educational programs |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Philosophical approachesSome philosophers suggest that consciousness resists or even defies definition. Others believe it can be usefully distinguished between phenomenal consciousness and access or psychological consciousness, while still others disagree. There are many philosophical stances on consciousness, including: behaviorism, dualism, idealism, functionalism, phenomenalism, physicalism, emergentism, and mysticism.
C ...
See also:Consciousness, Consciousness - Etymology, Consciousness - Consciousness and language, Consciousness - Cognitive neuroscience approaches, Consciousness - Philosophical approaches, Consciousness - Phenomenal and access consciousness, Consciousness - The description and location of phenomenal consciousness, Consciousness - Access consciousness, Consciousness - Physical approaches, Consciousness - Spiritual approaches, Consciousness - Functions of consciousness, Consciousness - Tests of consciousness, Consciousness - Turing Test, Consciousness - Mirror test, Consciousness - Cognitive Neuroscience, Consciousness - Philosophy, Consciousness - Physical Theories of Consciousness, Consciousness - People, Consciousness - Miscellaneous Read more here: » Consciousness: Encyclopedia II - Consciousness - Philosophical approaches |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Critiques of AnthroposophyAnthroposophy's combination of clearly thought-through understanding with spiritual content is novel and thus can be controversial. Though spiritually based, it is an approach that strongly emphasizes individual freedom. Still, some critics maintain that some anthroposophists tend to elevate Steiner's personal opinions to the level of absolute truths. Supporters claim that if there is a degree of truth to this criticism, most of the blame belongs not to Steiner, but to a few of his students. They point out that Steiner frequently asked that everything he said be tested ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - See Also Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - DescriptionAnthroposophy, though appreciative of all religions and cultural developments, emphasizes recent Western (rather than older Hindu or Buddhist) esoteric thought as being more appropriate to contemporary needs, and perceives Christ and His mission on earth as having a particularly important place in human evolution, though these are not viewed in the same way as in the mainstream Christian churches. Steiner emphasized that the being that manifests in Christianity also manifests in all faiths and religions; it is the being that unifies all reli ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - See Also Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Description |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - 1859 - Births
1859 - January-June.
January 11 - Lord George Nathaniel Curzon, British statesman and Viceroy of India (d. 1925)
January 13 - Karl Bleibtreu, critic (d. 1928)
January 27 - Wilhelm II of Germany, last Emperor of Germany and King of Prussia (d. 1941)
February 1 - Victor Herbert, Irish-born composer (d. 1924)
February 3 - Hugo Junkers, German industrialist and aircraft designer (d. 1935)
February 6 - Elias Disney, American farmer and father of Walt Disney (d. 1941)< ...
See also:1859, 1859 - Events, 1859 - January, 1859 - February, 1859 - March, 1859 - April, 1859 - May, 1859 - June, 1859 - July, 1859 - August, 1859 - September, 1859 - October, 1859 - November, 1859 - December, 1859 - Unknown Dates, 1859 - Births, 1859 - January-June, 1859 - July-December, 1859 - Deaths Read more here: » 1859: Encyclopedia II - 1859 - Births |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - ApplicationsPractical results of Anthroposophy include work in:
Architecture (Goetheanum),
Biodynamic agriculture,
Holistic Waldorf Education
Astrosophy as opposed to Astrology,
Anthroposophical Medicine (Weleda),
Philosophy (The "Philosophy of Freedom"),
Goethean Science resulting in new developments in the Arts,
Eurythmy ("movement as visible speech"),
Centres for helping the mentally handicapped (Camphill Villages) and ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - See Also Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Applications |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Social Goals of AnthroposophyFor a period after World War I, Steiner was extremely active and well-known in Germany in part because in many places he gave lectures on social questions. A petition expressing his basic social ideas (signed by Herman Hesse, among others) was very widely circulated. His main book on social questions, Die Kernpunkte der Sozialen Frage (available in English today as Toward Social Renewal) sold tens of thousands of copies.
Today around the world there are a number of innovative banks, companies, charitable institutions, an ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - See Also Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Successes of AnthroposophyOut of the anthroposophical movement have come nearly a thousand schools world-wide. These are often called Waldorf Schools, after the first such school, founded in 1919; they are also sometimes called Steiner Schools. They have been supported by the United Nations and other distinguished organizations and receive full or partial governmental funding in most European nations. They are successful in an unusual range of circumstances: in the impoverished barrios of San Paulo and the wealthy suburbs of New York City, in India, Egypt, Aus ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - See Also Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic ThinkingAccording to Steiner, a real spiritual world exists out of which the material one gradually condensed, and evolved. The spiritual world, Steiner held, can in the right circumstances be researched through direct experience, by persons practicing rigorous forms of ethical and cognitive self-discipline. Steiner described many exercises he said were suited to strengthening such self-discipline. Details about the spiritual world, he said, could on such a basis be dis ...
See also:Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - History, Anthroposophy - Description, Anthroposophy - Place in Western Philosophy, Anthroposophy - Applications, Anthroposophy - Social Goals of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Steiner's Outlook on Social History, Anthroposophy - Social Threefolding, Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking, Anthroposophy - Successes of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - Critiques of Anthroposophy, Anthroposophy - See Also Read more here: » Anthroposophy: Encyclopedia II - Anthroposophy - Aspects of Anthroposophic Thinking |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Atheism - EtymologyIn early Ancient Greek, the adjective atheos (from privative a- + theos "god") meant "without gods" or "lack of belief in gods". The word acquired an additional meaning in the 5th century BCE, expressing a total lack of relations with the gods; that is, "denying the gods, godless, ungodly", with more active connotations than asebēs, "impious". Modern translations of classical texts sometimes translate atheos as "atheistic". As an abstract noun, there was also atheotēs: "atheism". Cicero translitera ...
See also:Atheism, Atheism - Etymology, Atheism - Types and typologies of atheism, Atheism - Atheism as lack of theism, Atheism - Atheism as immorality, Atheism - Weak and strong atheism, Atheism - Ignosticism, Atheism - Gnostic and agnostic atheism, Atheism - Atheism in philosophical naturalism, Atheism - Antitheism, Atheism - History, Atheism - Distribution of atheists, Atheism - Atheism in the United Kingdom, Atheism - Atheism in the United States, Atheism - Atheism studies and statistics, Atheism - Statistical problems, Atheism - Religion and atheism, Atheism - Spiritual and religious atheism, Atheism - Judaism, Atheism - Christianity, Atheism - Islam, Atheism - Asian spirituality, Atheism - Reasons for atheism, Atheism - Philosophical reasons, Atheism - Personal and social reasons, Atheism - Three famous atheists: Freud Marx and Nietzsche, Atheism - Criticisms of atheism, Atheism - Atheism is incoherent, Atheism - Atheism doesn't exist, Atheism - Atheism leads to poor morals and ethics, Atheism - Atheism is a belief as much as theism is, Atheism - Related concepts, Atheism - Organizations, Atheism - Satire Read more here: » Atheism: Encyclopedia II - Atheism - Etymology |
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|  |  |  | Edmund Husserl: Encyclopedia II - Atheism - HistoryAlthough the actual term atheism originated in 16th Century France, ideas that would be recognized as atheistic today existed even before Classical Antiquity. Epicurus proposed theories that can be classified as atheistic, such as a lack of belief in an afterlife, though he remained ambiguous concerning the actual existence of deities. Before him, Socrates was sentenced to death partly on the grounds that he was an atheist, although he did express belief in several forms of divinity, as recorded in Plato's Apology. This crimina ...
See also:Atheism, Atheism - Etymology, Atheism - Types and typologies of atheism, Atheism - Atheism as lack of theism, Atheism - Atheism as immorality, Atheism - Weak and strong atheism, Atheism - Ignosticism, Atheism - Gnostic and agnostic atheism, Atheism - Atheism in philosophical naturalism, Atheism - Antitheism, Atheism - History, Atheism - Distribution of atheists, Atheism - Atheism in the United Kingdom, Atheism - Atheism in the United States, Atheism - Atheism studies and statistics, Atheism - Statistical problems, Atheism - Religion and atheism, Atheism - Spiritual and religious atheism, Atheism - Judaism, Atheism - Christianity, Atheism - Islam, Atheism - Asian spirituality, Atheism - Reasons for atheism, Atheism - Philosophical reasons, Atheism - Personal and social reasons, Atheism - Three famous atheists: Freud Marx and Nietzsche, Atheism - Criticisms of atheism, Atheism - Atheism is incoherent, Atheism - Atheism doesn't exist, Atheism - Atheism leads to poor morals and ethics, Atheism - Atheism is a belief as much as theism is, Atheism - Related concepts, Atheism - Organizations, Atheism - Satire Read more here: » Atheism: Encyclopedia II - Atheism - History |
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