Results for 'Boldizsár Czéh'

14 found
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  1.  11
    Examining the Relationship Between Executive Functions and Mentalizing Abilities of Patients With Borderline Personality Disorder.Nándor Németh, Ágnes Péterfalvi, Boldizsár Czéh, Tamás Tényi & Maria Simon - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  2.  8
    Examining the Influence of Early Life Stress on Serum Lipid Profiles and Cognitive Functioning in Depressed Patients.Ágnes Péterfalvi, Nándor Németh, Róbert Herczeg, Tamás Tényi, Attila Miseta, Boldizsár Czéh & Maria Simon - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
  3.  15
    History and the Spectre of Unprecedented Change: A Conversation with Zoltán Boldizsár Simon.Alexandre Leskanich & Zoltán Boldizsár Simon - 2021 - The Philosopher 109 (3):79-88.
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  4.  18
    From Apology to Utopia—The structure of international legal argument.Boldizsár Nagy - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (4):428-429.
  5.  16
    Earth System Science, Anthropocene Historiography, and Three Forms of Human Agency.Zoltán Boldizsár Simon & Julia Adeney Thomas - 2022 - Isis 113 (2):396-406.
  6.  17
    Historical Thinking and the Human: Introduction.Marek Tamm & Zoltán Boldizsár Simon - 2020 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 14 (3):285-309.
    In recent years the age-old question “what is the human?” has acquired a new acuteness and novel dimensions. In introducing the special issue on “Historical Thinking and the Human”, this article argues that there are two main trends behind the contemporary “crisis of human”: ecological transformations, and technological ones. After discussing the respective anthropocenic and technoscientific redefinitions of the human, the paper theorizes three elements in an emerging new historicity of the human: first, the move from a fixed category to (...)
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  7.  28
    Experience as the Invisible Drive of Historical Writing.Zoltán Boldizsár Simon - 2013 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 7 (2):183-204.
    From time to time our tiny intellectual worlds are simultaneously shaken by big ideas – ideas that, however big they are, have their expiration-date. Such is the case with the idea of the impossibility to find life outside language. In this essay, I picture what I think is the current state of the philosophy of history after the so-called linguistic turn and what I think the direction is where the philosophy of history might be headed by taking into account the (...)
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  8. The story of humanity and the challenge of posthumanity.Zoltán Boldizsár Simon - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (2).
    Today’s technological-scientific prospect of posthumanity simultaneously evokes and defies historical understanding. On the one hand, it implies a historical claim of an epochal transformation concerning posthumanity as a new era. On the other, by postulating the birth of a novel, better-than-human subject for this new era, it eliminates the human subject of modern Western historical understanding. In this article, I attempt to understand posthumanity as measured against the story of humanity as the story of history itself. I examine the fate (...)
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  9. The Limits of Anthropocene Narratives.Zoltán Boldizsár Simon - 2020 - European Journal of Social Theory 23 (2):184-199.
    The rapidly growing transdisciplinary enthusiasm about developing new kinds of Anthropocene stories is based on the shared assumption that the Anthropocene predicament is best made sense of by narrative means. Against this assumption, this article argues that the challenge we are facing today does not merely lie in telling either scientific, socio-political, or entangled Anthropocene narratives to come to terms with our current condition. Instead, the challenge lies in coming to grips with how the stories we can tell in the (...)
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  10.  18
    Historicism and constructionism: rival ideas of historical change.Zoltán Boldizsár Simon - 2019 - History of European Ideas 45 (8):1171-1190.
    A seemingly unitary appeal to history might evoke today two incompatible operations of historicization that yield contradictory results. This article attempts to understand two co-existing senses of historicity as conflicting ideas of historical change and rival practices of temporal comparison: historicism and constructionism. At their respective births, both claimed to make sense of the world and ourselves as changing over time. Historicism, dominating nineteenth-century Western thought and overseeing the professionalization of historical studies, advocated an understanding of the present condition of (...)
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  11.  28
    Zoltán Boldizsár Simon. The Epochal Event.Forrest Clingerman - 2023 - Environmental Philosophy 20 (2):343-345.
  12.  26
    The Sword and the Crucible. Count Boldizsár Batthyány and Natural Philosophy in Sixteenth-Century Hungary.Rafał T. Prinke - 2011 - Early Science and Medicine 16 (4):361-363.
  13. The Analytic-Continental Debate.Istvan Farago-Szabo - 2009 - Filozofia 64 (2):107-113.
    In 2007, a debate took place between Hungarian representatives of the analytic and continental schools of philosophy. Boldizsár Eszes and János T?zsér concluded their article about the history of analytic philosophy by the claim that the only possible method of philosophising is analytic. Answering on behalf of continental philosophers, Tibor Schwendtner approached the topic from the points of view of the sociology of knowledge and academic politics. Tamás Ullmann also defended continental philosophy, emphasizing that it is not vague or (...)
     
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  14.  41
    History on the Move: Reimagining Historical Change and the (Im)possibility of Utopia in the 21st Century.Juhan Hellerma - forthcoming - Journal of the Philosophy of History:1-14.
    In his meticulously researched and conceptually innovative book, Zoltán Boldizsár Simon aims to capture the historical sensibility emergent during the postwar period broadly conceived, spanning from the 1940s to our present moment. Attending particularly to the debates concerning ecological and technological outlooks, Simon theorizes that our historical horizon is increasingly shaped by the expectations of an unprecedented event that challenges the sustainability of the human subject as known today. Arguing that the concept of unprecedented change can best be explained (...)
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