Ethics in Progress, 2016, Volume 7, Issue 2
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Browsing Ethics in Progress, 2016, Volume 7, Issue 2 by Subject "eudaimonia"
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Item O podstawowych stanowiskach w etyce antycznej(Wydawnictwo Naukowe Instytutu Filozofii UAM, 2016) Husserl, EdmundTranslated text comes from Edmund Husserl’s course “Einleitung in die Ethik” [“Introduction into Ethics”] from the spring semester 1920, repeated and extended in the spring semester 1924, each time in Freiburg. Husserl presents Socrates as a reformer of philosophy and philosophical practice – in his criticism of sophistic, skepsis and empiricism. As Bogaczyk-Vormayr emphasizes in her introduction, Husserl does not evoke any historical paradigm, he does not want to – simply said – be a historian of philosophy; on the contrary, he presents his view of ethics, which we should call a phenomenological one. That means he offers a critical history of philosophy – his analyses are focused on philosophical ideas and only their philosophical potential is what matters to him.