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Köp båda 2 för 505 krTheodor W. Adorno (1903-1969) was a prominent member of the Frankfurt School and one of the most influential thinkers of the twentieth century in the areas of social theory, philosophy and aesthetics.
Part I: . 1. Moral Philosophy as a Theoretical Discipline. 2. The Concept of Practice. 3. Theory as Resistance and a 'Testing of Reality' Against Practicism. 4. Naivety and Reflection. 5. On the Tension between Theory and Practice. 6. Spontaneity and Resistance. 7. The Irrational. 8. Hostility to Moralities Confined to Particulars. 9. Ethics as Bad Conscience: on Behalf of a Morality Bluntly Incompatible with Our Experience. Part II:. 10. 'Morality and its Discontents'. 11. The Problem of Ethos and Personality. 12. The Ethical is no Natural Category. 13. Morality and Social Crisis. 14. The Sociology of the Repressive Character. 15. The General and the Particular. 16. Plan of the Lecture Course. 17. Texts to Be Studied. Part III:. 18. Arguments ad homines. 19. Lectures: Attempts at Critical Models. 20. The Dual Nature of Reason in Kant: Theory and Practice, Epistemology and Metaphysics. 21. The Problem of Freedom. 22. On the Theory of Antimonies. 23. Dialectics. 24. The Distinction between Scepticism and 'The Sceptical Method'. Part IV:. 25. The Nature of the Antinomies. 26. Causality and Freedom: Spontaneity. 27. The Thesis of the Third Antinomy. 28. The Proof of the Thesis. 29. The Motif of a Causality Born of Freedom. 30. The Antithesis. Part V:. 31. The Principle of Causality and the Necessity of the Antinomies. 32. Dialectics in Kant and Hegel. 33. Problem of the prima philsophia: The First Cause. 34. Causality, Law and Freedom. 35. External Nature of the Concept of Causality; Freedom as a Given. Summary: Causality born of freedom. Part VI:. 36.The Dual Character of Kantian Philosophy. 37. The One and the Many. 38. Once Again: Theory and Practice. 39. On the Doctrine of Method: The Nature of Reason. 40. Speculation. 41. Freedom and the Domination of Nature. 42. The Disappointing of Metaphysical Expectations. 43. The Rejection of Philosophical Indifference. 44. The Idea of God and the Rights of Criticism. 45. The Priority of Practice. Part VII:. 46. Theory and Practice of the 'Doctrine of Method'. 47. Form and Content in Practical Philosophy. 48. Practice as the Exclusion of Experience. 49. Freedom as Reason. 50. What is Primary and What is Secondary?. 51. The Moral Law as a Given. 52. Can Social Contradictions be Resolved?. 53. Bourgeois Optimism. 54. Can the Moral Law be Learnt Through Experience?. Part VIII:. 55. Difficulty of Distinguishing Between a Priori Knowledge and Knowledge from Experience. 56. Necessity and Universality: A 'Second-Order Given'. 57. The Coercive Character of Empirically Given Morality. 58. Psychoanalytical Objection. 59. The Ethics of Conviction. 60. The Return of Teleology. 61. The Element of Heteronomy. Part IX: . 62. Laws of Freedom. 63. The Principle of Exegesis. 64. The 'Extinction Ofintention'. 65. The Dual Character of Nature. 66. Kant 'Breaks off' the Argument. 67. Resistance to and Acceptance of Heteronomy. 68. The Element of the Absurd. 69. The Historical Dialectics of Morality. 70. The 'Growing Old of Morality'. Part X: . 71. The Intolerable Dualism of Freedom and Law. 72. The Protestant Tradition. 73. The Experience of Spirit and Nature as Opposed to Domination. 74. Methodological Excursus: Literal Interpretation Versus the History of Ideas. 75. Kantian Ethics is the Moral Philosophy Par Excellence. 76. Formalism and Rigorism. Part XI: . 77. The Grounding of Morality in Reason: Against 'the Education of the Heart';Prince Hamlet. 78. The Element of Non-Identity. 79. Coercion by a Third Party. 80. Reason Aspractice. 81. The Restricted Nature of Kantian Ethics. 82. Bourgeois Calculus and Bureaucratic Virtue. 83. The Ambivalence of the Unmediatedgood. 84. Autonomy and Heteronomy. Part XII: . 85. Self-Determinati