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)
Measuring the Relation between Wittgenstein's Early and Later Thought with the Epistemological Schema of Subjectivism

amir samsami; jahangir masoodi

Volume 15, Issue 57 , April 2019, , Pages 91-116

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2019.30298.1525

Abstract
  Subjectivism as an epistemological schema is a fundamental element of modern thought. This schema was based on the Cartesian cogito and considering human as the “thinking substance”, and with Kant’s transcendental Philosophy and granting human a self-grounded role in the act of cognition, ...  Read More

An Interpretation of Heidegger’s Criticism of the Starting Point and the Matter of Husserl’s Transcendental Phenomenology

Ahmad Rajabi

Volume 13, Issue 49 , April 2017, , Pages 23-42

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2017.7617

Abstract
  In the lecture History of the Concept of Time: Prolegomena Heidegger levels an immanent phenomenological criticism at Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology. In the lecture, Heidegger accuses Husserl that he neglects to raise two fundamental questions for the phenomenology: the question concerning ...  Read More

"Art" and "Truth" in Adorno's Aesthetic Theory

noushin shahandeh; hussein ali nozari

Volume 9, Issue 35 , October 2013, , Pages 35-60

Abstract
  Adorno's conception about the roles that art can play in various areas of human's life is absolutely different from the dogmatic thoughts of the traditional culture and philosophy. According to Adorno, the most important function of art consists in its "critical" approach and "redemptionary" character ...  Read More

Schopenhauer׳s interpretation of “The Principle of Sufficient Reason”

abdollah amini; mohammad javad safian

Volume 7, Issue 27 , October 2011, , Pages 55-72

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2011.5830

Abstract
  The principle of sufficient reason is one of the most significant philosophical principles. Arthur Schopenhauer, the well-known German philosopher, has emphasized on this principle and taken it as the entrance key element to his philosophical system. He tries to characterize the limits and conditions ...  Read More

Cartesian Subjectivism: Departure of Philosophers in the Modern Age

simin esfandiari

Volume 5, Issue 17 , April 2009, , Pages 113-128

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2009.5771

Abstract
  This article begins with a brief description of Descartes' cogito and its effect on man's authenticity and his development. In fact, by establishing the principle of cogito, and analyzing it as the established basis of the universe, he considers human ego as the real subject because there is an "I" who ...  Read More

Kant's Influence on Brouwer

mohammad ardeshir

Volume 1, Issue 1 , April 2005, , Pages 6-15

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2005.6902

Abstract
  There are at least three elemental parts in Brouuer's philosophy ef mathematics that mqy have their origin in Kant. These three parts are (1) the intuition ef time, (2) the synthetic a priority of mathematical kn01vledge, and (3) the inter-suf?jectiviry ef mathematical constructions. Brouwer borrowed ...  Read More

Logical Semantics of Speech and Transition to an Intersubjective World in Husserlian Phenomenology

alireza Faraji

Volume 17, Issue 66 , July 1999, , Pages 75-97

https://doi.org/10.22054/wph.2021.54827.1888

Abstract
  Husserl in his method of phenomenology casts a new light on the discussion of experience through a new definition of cognition and avoids the error of preceding philosophers, classic empiricists, in particular; thus the cognition is no longer based on the immediate experiences of the world but it is ...  Read More