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Martha Klein
Hardcover - $315.95
This book casts new light on the traditional disagreement between those who hold that we cannot be morally responsible for our actions if they are causally determined, and those who deny this. Klein suggests that reflection on the relation between ju ...
Peter B. Kyne
Paperback - $27.95
A story that tells you how to be one. This book tells the tale of a man who made up his mind what he wanted and how he went about getting that which he desired. It is an intriguing story, well-written and hard to put down.
Christian D. Larson
Paperback - $30.95
What man is and what man does, determines in what conditions, circumstances and environments he shall be placed. Since man can change both himself an his actions, he can determine what his fate is ti be.
Tibor R. Machan
Hardcover - $317.95
In i Classical Individualism, /i Tibor Machan argues that individualism is far from being dead. Machan identifies, develops and defends what he calls classical individualism: the sort with roots in Aristotle rather than Hobbes. This type of individua ...
Asa Mahan
Hardcover - $38.95
MAHAN ON THE WILL. This is an important work upon an important subject. The liberty of the human will I regard as a first truth. But like some other first truths, it has been extensively denied in theory. A most false and injurious philosophy of the ...
John McCumber
Paperback - $44.95
Derrida, Foucault, Habermas, and Rorty belong to a transitional generation of thinkers whose philosophy, in the wake of Hegel and Heidegger, has become a project of liberation rather than a search for truth. But precisely what does philosophy liberat ...
Peter McLaren
Paperback - $90.95
This book consists of a collection of original essays on the work of Paulo Freire, based on diverse experiences of First and Third world contexts. All of authors argue that Paulo Freire is the cornerstone upon which a new vision and strategies of lib ...
Alfred R. Mele
Paperback - $65.95
This book addresses two related topics: self-control and individual autonomy. In approaching these issues, Mele develops a conception of an ideally self-controlled person, and argues that even such a person can fall short of personal autonomy. He the ...