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Political Sciences and Civic Responsibility
APPLIED HEIDEGGERIAN STUDIES VIII
The purpose of the course is to introduce
students to the revolutionary work of Martin
Heidegger. Martin Heidegger is the most
important of all the philosophers because he is
the last of them. The implications of his work
are only now starting to emerge as a critique
and overcoming of the present way of thinking
of the West, that is, scientific thinking, and even
more in particular a critique of Human Sciences
such as economics. The course covers the main
concepts and methods of his philosophy and
aims to apply these tools to reconstruct thinking
in regard to technology, theology, psychology,
sociology, anthropology and economics. The
course will attempt to go beyond Heidegger in
as much as his work leads to what he called
‘The Leap’. To take this leap is in our
understanding nothing other than arriving at
Islam.
· Understanding the End of Metaphysics of
Martin Heidegger as the foundation for
methodological critique. Realising a
Phenomenological Reconstruction of the key
concepts of Value and Ownership and their
implications for trade contracts and trade
freedom.
· Having a phenomenological understanding of
usury, the exchange of commodities, and the
different types of commodities in relation to
the different types of exchange.
· Having a phenomenological understanding of
the philosophy of open trade and the five
pillars of trading: contracts, money, markets,
guilds, and caravans. |
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Sessions
hrs |
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Audio
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Video
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PDF |
- acrobat reader required |
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