Modernity and Postmodernism: Defining Cultural Eras

Modernity: An Era of Progress and Reason

Modernity is a period in European history dating from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. It coincided with the end of the Old Regime and the liberal revolutions, implying significant societal change. Modernity effectively began with the French Revolution and the Industrial Revolution.

Key Tenets of Modernity

  • Social Utopias: This period featured grand social visions and cultural movements like the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment, a French cultural
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Hume on Knowledge, Causality, and Moral Sentiment

Hume: Impressions, Ideas, and Knowledge Sources

For David Hume, sense experience is the ultimate source of our knowledge; he argued against the existence of innate ideas. He referred to anything that enters our mind through the senses as a perception. Hume distinguished between two kinds of perceptions: impressions and ideas.

  • Impressions: Perceptions that enter the mind with greater force and vivacity.
  • Ideas: Fainter images or copies of impressions, used in thinking, reasoning, and imagining.

The impression

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Descartes, Rationalism, and the Scientific Revolution

Renaissance Influences on Descartes

In the Renaissance, there was a return to the classics alongside a significant influence from Stoicism and Epicureanism. Stoicism, for instance, is evident in Descartes’s very morals. He was also influenced by Skepticism. However, his focus became a question of method for attaining certainty that could not be doubted.

The Rise of New Science and Its Impact

For the development of the new science, Platonism, Pythagoreanism, and the importance of number and geometry

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Core Human Rights Concepts and Contemporary Ethical Debates

Key Characteristics of Human Rights

Natural Rights

Human rights, framed as natural rights, transcend the boundaries of specific laws, customs, or cultural beliefs. Unlike legal rights, they are not contingent on the recognition of any particular authority. Instead, they are often rooted in scriptural, religious teachings, philosophical principles, or what is commonly referred to as “common sense.” This implies that human beings possess inherent rights by virtue of their humanity.

Inviolable

The term

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Thomas Aquinas: Core Philosophical and Theological Concepts

Theology and Philosophy: Faith and Reason

Contrary to the theory advocated by some Averroists, Thomas Aquinas (TA) posits that there are truths specific to faith (theology), others specific to reason (philosophy), and some shared by both (preambles of faith, such as the existence of God). There can be no contradiction between these two forms of wisdom. In the event of an apparent conflict, faith must prevail as it originates from God’s revelation. Therefore, philosophy is considered the handmaid

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Making Win-Win Decisions: A Step-by-Step Process

How to Make Win-Win Decisions

Teachability: Are You Ready to Learn?

Are you teachable?

  • Willingness to learn and do things differently.
  • Willingness to accept change and do things differently.
  • What are you willing to give up?
  • What are you willing to invest in time and money?

Be Aware: Understanding Your Inner Self

  • Of your belief systems.
  • Of your predominant mental attitude.
  • Of your focus.
  • Of your thoughts that lead to action.
  • That your outer life is the effect and your inner life the cause.

Before Making a Decision:

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