A model for the modern malaise
Philosophia 14 (1-2):25-40 (1984)
| Abstract | This article has no associated abstract. (fix it) | |||||||||
| Keywords | No keywords specified (fix it) | |||||||||
| Categories | No categories specified (fix it) | |||||||||
| Options |
|
|||||||||
| PhilPapers Archive |
Upload a copy of this paper Check publisher's policy on self-archival Papers currently archived: 5,705 |
| External links |
|
| Through your library | Configure |
Mark Waymack (2005). The Malaise of Managed Care. Business Ethics Quarterly 15 (1):171-174.
Mark Elchardus & Jessy Siongers (2001). The Malaise of Limitlessness. Ethical Perspectives 8 (3):179-201.
Joseph Malaise (1958). Know Yourself. Academy Library Guild.
Bogdan-Catalin Buduru (1995). Malaise in Postcommunist Romania. Business Ethics 4 (3):157–161.
Paul Davis (2005). The Myth of Moral Malaise. The Philosopher's Magazine (30):29-32.
Henk J. van Leeuwen (2009). Only a God Can Save Us: Heidegger, Poetic Imagination and the Modern Malaise. Common Ground Publishing.
X. Chen & R. Fan (2010). The Family and Harmonious Medical Decision Making: Cherishing an Appropriate Confucian Moral Balance. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 35 (5):573-586.
Bernard Stiegler (2011). Technics and Time, 3: Cinematic Time and the Question of Malaise. Stanford University Press.
John Cleary (1984). The Modern Malaise: A Case History. Philosophy and Social Criticism 10 (2):97-107.
Joseph Malaise (1939). ... Know Yourself. San Francisco, University of San Francisco Press.
Monthly downloads
Sorry, there are not enough data points to plot this chart.
|
Added to index2009-01-28Total downloads1 ( #274,982 of 549,370 )Recent downloads (6 months)0How can I increase my downloads? |

