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T. Szmrecsanyi [3]Tamás Szmrecsányi [1]
  1. Archetypes as the basic sources of Milesian protophilosophy.T. Szmrecsanyi - 2002 - Filozofia 57 (1):31-47.
    The Milesian protophilosophy was an important phase in the development of Western thought. The first philosophical ideas of the origin and the nature of the world arose from the mythological images. The author tries to show, that the Milesian conceptions do not draw on the particular Greek myths, but on the archaic mythology embodying various mythological motives - the archetypes. The latter emerge spontaneously from human unconciousness and become a part of consciousness. Thales' idea, that "water is the origin of (...)
     
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  2. Archetypes in Chinese cosmogony and in'Tao Te Ching'-Chinese cosmogony in the context of Classical ontology.T. Szmrecsanyi - 2000 - Filozofia 55 (8):632-648.
     
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  3. Parmenides: The founding father of the European dualistic thinking.T. Szmrecsanyi - 2002 - Filozofia 57 (4):233-244.
    The rational conceptual philosophical thinking originated in ancient Greece on the basis of mythical imaginary thinking. The bipolar-complementary thinking still had its place in Miletian philosophy, although not in the form of images, but in the form of conceptual variants and archetypal representations of archaic ontology. The Dyonisian cult and orfism contributed to the development of rational thinking through the realization of the individuality and the notion of the only genuine divinity - Zeus, which at the same time embodied the (...)
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