For a mass of people to be led to think coherently and in the same coherent fashion about the real present world, is a "philosophical" event far more important and "original" than the discovery by some philosophical "genius" of a truth which remains the... Marginal Spaces - Side 1redigert av - 1995 - 146 siderBegrenset visning - Om denne boken
| Paul E. Willis - 1981 - 244 sider
...contained in the notion of socialisation. For a mass of people to be led to think coherently (. . .) about the real, present world, is a 'philosophical'...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals (...) it is not a question of introducing from scratch a scientific form of thought into everyone's... | |
| Paul E. Willis - 1981 - 244 sider
...socialisation. 9 Monday morning and the millennium For a mass of people to be led to think coherently (. . .) about the real, present world, is a 'philosophical'...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals (. . .) it is not a question of introducing from scratch a scientific form of thought into everyone's... | |
| John Smyth - 1989 - 260 sider
...fashion about the real present world, is a "philosophical" event far more important and "otiginal" than the discovery by some philosophical "genius"...truth which remains the property of small groups of inrellectuals' (Gramsci, 1971, p. 325). When this is achieved, and clearly it is an educational achievemenr,... | |
| Jeffrey C. Alexander, Steven Seidman - 1990 - 388 sider
...making them the basis of vital action, an element of coordination and intellectual and moral order. For a mass of people to be led to think coherently...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals. Connection between "common sense," religion, and philosophy Philosophy is intellectual order, which... | |
| Dae-Sook Suh - 1994 - 332 sider
...transformation and humanization of societies to benefit everyone, not just a select few. Gramsci wrote, "For a mass of people to be led to think coherently...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals." 19 Like Tasan, Gramsci's basic concern regarding philosophy accordingly had less to do with its breadth... | |
| Stephen Duncombe - 2002 - 466 sider
...making them the basis of vital action, an element of coordination and intellectual and moral order. For a mass of people to be led to think coherently...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals. Connection between 'Common Sense', Religion and Philosophy Philosophy is intellectual order, which... | |
| Kate Crehan - 2002 - 236 sider
...making them the basis of vital action, an element of co-ordination and intellectual and moral order. For a mass of people to be led to think coherently...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals. (SPN: 325) For Gramsci, Marxism itself should be seen as a new cultural synthesis that captured the... | |
| James Martin - 2002 - 560 sider
...think coherently . . . about the real present world, is a 'philosophical' event far more significant and 'original' than the discovery by some philosophical...truth which remains the property of small groups of intellectuals."'02 The philosophical significance of the cultural incorporation of the masses resides... | |
| Carmel Borg, Joseph A. Buttigieg, Peter Mayo - 2002 - 348 sider
...be enabled to think coherently about their present reality, then this is of even greater importance than "the discovery by some philosophical 'genius'...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals" (p. 325). Although the "philosophers of praxis" may, at first, be a small group, their task is to help... | |
| 592 sider
...making them the basis of vital action,4 an element of co-ordination and intellectual and moral order. For a mass of people to be led to think coherently...remains the property of small groups of intellectuals. Connection between "common sense", religion and philosophy Philosophy is intellectual order, which... | |
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