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Stephen Frederick Schneck [3]Stephen F. Schneck [2]
  1.  3
    Person and Polis: Max Scheler's Personalism as Political Theory.Stephen F. Schneck - 1987 - SUNY Press.
    Martin Heidegger cited him as “the most potent philosophical power... in all of contemporary philosophy.” Ortega y Gasset called him “the first man of genius, the Adam of the new Paradise.” Writing at a crucial time in intellectual history, his influence has extended to persons as diverse as Dietrich von Hildebrand, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Karol Wojtyla, Jurgen Habermas, Ernst Bloch, and members of the generation of thinkers that developed in the German universities during the Weimar years. Despite this far-reaching impact, the (...)
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  2.  67
    Michel Foucault on power/discourse, theory and practice.Stephen Frederick Schneck - 1987 - Human Studies 10 (1):15 - 33.
  3.  29
    Habits of the Head.Stephen Frederick Schneck - 1989 - Political Theory 17 (4):638-662.
    Nothing conceivable is so petty, so insipid, so crowded with paltry interestsin one word, so anti-poeticas the life of a man in the United States. [Tocqueville];1Anyone who allows the growing respectability of mass culture to seduce him into equating a popular song with modem art because of a few false notes squeaked by a clarinet; anyone who mistakes a triad studded with "dirty notes" for atonality, has already capitulated to barbarism. Art which has degenerated to culture pays the price of (...)
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  4.  4
    Letting Be: Fred Dallmayr's Cosmopolitical Vision.Stephen Frederick Schneck (ed.) - 2006 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    This volume gathers essays by fourteen scholars, written to honor Fred Dallmayr and the contributions of his political theory. Stephen F. Schneck's introduction to Dallmayr's thinking provides a survey of the development of his work. Dallmayr's “letting be,” claims Schneck, is much akin to his reading of Martin Heidegger's “letting Being be,” and should be construed neither as a conservative acceptance of self-identity nor as a nonengaged indifference to difference. Instead, he explains, endeavoring to privilege neither identity nor difference, the (...)
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  5. Religion and the American framing.Stephen F. Schneck - 2006 - Journal of Dharma 31 (1):81-94.
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