Volume 19 (2023)
Volume 18 (2022)
Volume 17 (2021)
Volume 16 (2020)
Volume 15 (2019)
Volume 14 (2018)
Volume 13 (2017)
Volume 12 (2016)
Volume 11 (2015)
Volume 10 (2014)
Volume 9 (2013)
Volume 8 (2012)
Volume 7 (2011)
Volume 6 (2010)
Volume 5 (2009)
Volume 4 (2008)
Volume 3 (2007)
Volume 2 (2006)
Volume 1 (2005)
The Status of Reason in the Scientific Methodology of Galen

Roohollah Fadaei; Mohammad Saeedimehr

Volume 18, Issue 70 , June 2022, , Pages 55-83

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2022.60683.1971

Abstract
  Galen is one of the most prominent thinkers and scientists in antiquity, who paid special attention to the methodology of natural sciences. On the other hand, the transition of Galenic tradition to the Islamic world had a wide impact on different areas of thought, one of which was methodology. Accordingly, ...  Read More

Living in Felicity or in the Shadow of Death: A Kierkegaardian Existentialistic Reading of Ionesco’s The Killer

Alireza Nazari; Fazel Asadi Amjad

Volume 14, Issue 56 , January 2019, , Pages 113-145

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2019.12219.1210

Abstract
  Eugène Ionesco in his play, The killer (1960) depicts a true reflection of the human condition; he depicts the images of life and death, being and non-being, and the reality of man’s reduction into the cypher of non-being. He wants man to come to grips with his true situation; hence, man's ...  Read More

Motahari’s Philosophical approach to the question of the relation between Reason and Religion

mehdi behniafar; hamideh mokhtari

Volume 11, Issue 44 , January 2016, , Pages 79-94

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2016.6732

Abstract
  The relationship between Reason and Religion is one of the most fundamental matters in the territory of Philosophy of Religion and philosophical epistemology. Theologians have considered especially religious aspects of it from many centuries ago and have presented different perspectives on this issue. ...  Read More

Schopenhauer’s Critique of Kant’s Moral Philosophy

Mohammadreza Abdulahnezhad

Volume 10, Issue 37 , March 2014, , Pages 45-62

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2014.6143

Abstract
  The concept of ‘free will’ is central in both Kant’s and Schopenhauer’s moral philosophy. In the Kantian moral system, ‘free will’ is only regarded as moral when it dutifully follows reason and its a priori, absolute rules. Schopenhauer, on the other hand, holds that ...  Read More

A Comparative Study of Allameh Majlesi's and Allameh Tabataba'i's Views on the Nature and Functions of Reason

eynollah khademi; alireza arabi

Volume 8, Issue 30 , July 2012, , Pages 69-92

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2012.5846

Abstract
  Bihar al-Anwar is the most important and comprehensive hadith collection compiled by the Shia scholar Allameh Majlesi, who represents the philosophical thought of transcendental hikmah or al-hikmah al-muta'aliyah at modern time. The annotations Allameh Tabataba'i made to this book are mainly criticisms ...  Read More

Ibn Arabi's Veiw about the Role of Imagination in the Process of Perception

davoud esparham

Volume 7, Issue 26 , July 2011, , Pages 7-36

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2011.5821

Abstract
  Befor Inb Arabi, according to the Helenistic view, the human perception was confined to sensations and objects of reason. And, for the sensation was regarded as an instrument for reason, the latter was thought as the final perceptive faculty. Furthermore, the reason supported by logics, was regarded ...  Read More

The Importance of the Sublime in Kant's Philosophy of Art

reza mahuzi

Volume 7, Issue 26 , July 2011, , Pages 53-74

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2011.5823

Abstract
  In the analysis of natural and artistic beauty, Kant explains the pleasure of the taste based on free play between Imagination and Understanding upon the principle of teleology of nature. Hence, the aesthetic judgments are produced by indeterminate harmony between Imagination and Understanding. Kant ...  Read More

A Comparative Study of the Epistemological Views of Duns Scotus and Ibn Sina

mehdi abbas zadeh

Volume 6, Issue 23 , October 2010, , Pages 53-74

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2010.5809

Abstract
  This paper is an endeavor to conduct a comparative study of the viewpoints of Johannes Duns Scotus, Scottish philosopher and theologian (1266- 1308), on epistemology and knowledge, and Ibn Sina’s beliefs on the same issues. Given the fact that Scotus had studied the Latin translation of Ibn Sina's ...  Read More

Irreconcilable relation of "Reason" and "Faith" in Kierkegaard's Thought

mohammad asghari

Volume 5, Issue 19 , October 2009, , Pages 103-116

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2009.5778

Abstract
  This article considers the relation of reason and faith in Kierkegaard's existentialist Thought. Kierkegaard describes the faith as a kind of "passion", "leap" or "relation to God" and believes that it is over reason and sometimes has position that is completely against reason. According to Kierkegaard, ...  Read More

Plato on Perception According to Parmenides’ System

ebrahim musavi

Volume 4, Issue 16 , January 2009, , Pages 9-26

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2009.5758

Abstract
  For a long time, Plato's thought has been affected by the interpretations of Aristotelianism or Neo-Platonism. However, some remarks which have been recently made regard the core of Plato's own thought in his dialogues. This becomes critical when we find something totally different from our traditional ...  Read More

The Difference between "Understanding" and "Reason" in Kant's Terminology

Mohammad Shafii

Volume 4, Issue 15 , October 2008, , Pages 137-144

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2008.5757

Abstract
  While Kant presupposes the existence of science and ethic, he studies their boundaries and limits as well. For doing this, he applies two terms and expressions, i.e., “reason” and “understanding”. In this paper, we take a look at the definitions of those two concepts in Kant’s ...  Read More

Derrida and Mowlavi on Philosophers' Reason

amer gheyturi; hamid taheri; jafar mirzaee

Volume 3, Issue 12 , January 2008, , Pages 77-92

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2008.5856

Abstract
  This article aims to bring the French philosopher Jacques Derrida into conversation with the Persian mystic poet Mowlavi. What might link the two thinkers is their critical approach toward philosophers' claim as to the authority of reason upon the truth. According to both, reason should acknowledge its ...  Read More