We kindly inform you that, as long as the subject affiliation of our 300.000+ articles is in progress, you might get unsufficient or no results on your third level or second level search. In this case, please broaden your search criteria.
One talks about the Enlightenment and its opposite, the counter-Enlightenment, as though thinkers in intellectual history could easily be deposited in one or other of the categories. The aim of this special edition is twofold: one, to discuss whether such a poorly nuanced historical categorization does service to those thinkers on the periphery of ethical, political and social thought. And two, to trace the relationship of the counter-enlightenment (and necessarily its opposite) to violence, conflict and protest. The aim of the journal as a whole is to reinstate certain possible alternatives into the heart of our historical tradition through the reorientation and weakening of the Enlightenment and counter-Enlightenment binary opposition.
More...
This publication is a part of a broader attempt to revisit the place and role of contemporary science, especially the humanities and social sciences, in face of an increasing socio-political condition of conflict. More specifically, it is an attempt to call into question our basic epistemic approach to conflicts, our basic understanding of the nature of conflicts. This inquiry does so by explicitly asking about the epistemology of conflicts, and by formulating the fundamental question of such an epistemology: what are conflicts — social, political, cultural, religious, cognitive, emotional, moral — as events of knowledge?
More...
Аnnual Contents of Bulgarian Language and Literature Scientific Jurnal Volume LXII (2020)
More...
There are events in one's intellectual life that are simultaneously enormously rewarding and demanding. Taking up the editorship of East European Politics and Societies (EEPS) is one of these events, and, if I may remark, this occurrence speaks volumes for the openmindedness of the American academic community. Years ago, the late Ferenc Feher, himself a contributor to EEPS, called me "a walking Who's Who in Eastern Europe." If he had said, 16 years ago, when I arrived in the United States, that I would be invited to edit the most prestigious journal focused on the region where I was born and educated, I would have thought that he was dreaming. Nevertheless, the dream has become a reality, and the invitation to the editorship is one of the most felicitous events of my life. [...]
More...