Anthropology's interrogation of philosophy from the eighteenth to the twentieth century
- Submitting institution
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University of Nottingham, The
- Unit of assessment
- 26 - Modern Languages and Linguistics
- Output identifier
- 3840770
- Type
- A - Authored book
- DOI
-
-
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield
- ISBN
- 9781498558006
- Open access status
- -
- Month of publication
- December
- Year of publication
- 2017
- URL
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- Supplementary information
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- Request cross-referral to
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- Output has been delayed by COVID-19
- No
- COVID-19 affected output statement
- -
- Forensic science
- No
- Criminology
- No
- Interdisciplinary
- No
- Number of additional authors
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0
- Research group(s)
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- Proposed double-weighted
- Yes
- Double-weighted statement
- This 90,000-word monograph, based on 10 years research, introduces English readers to the key aspects of philosophical anthropology, a two-hundred-year-long tradition in German thought whose prehistory and debates are largely unavailable to an English readership. For the first time in German or English-language scholarship, Carroll analyses the connections between the philosophical debates associated with anthropology at the end of the eighteenth century and ongoing philosophical issues in the twentieth century, dealing substantively with nine major thinkers (Herder, Platner, Husserl, Heidegger, Scheler, Gehlen, Löwith, Blumenberg, and Taylor).
- Reserve for an output with double weighting
- No
- Additional information
- -
- Author contribution statement
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- Non-English
- No
- English abstract
- -