Good by nature : Shadow of God and Neuroethics
Abstract
<span class="tlid-translation translation">Hardly a word has gained more fame in the last 100 years than Nietzsche's speech on the "death of God". Nietzsche has thus expressed a prognosis for the future that is as problematic as it is highly topical. While his diagnosis has been extensively discussed in the context of the resulting moral-practical questions about the validity of values, it has remained essentially unthematized in terms of the status and self-understanding of the theoretical sciences. At present, however, it is becoming increasingly clear that the methodological restrictions of ontological, theological and axiological nature, which ensure the effectiveness of scientific access, do not remain inconsequential in the field of practice, but rather seem to undermine it. It is this insight, expressed in his Word of the "death of God", into the implications of the consequences of a seemingly neutral science, which Nietzsche makes current for the present questions. At this point, the contributions made by expressly refer to each other the specific knowledge type of modern science and its ontological, theological and axiological vacancy.</span>
Anno di pubblicazione
2010
ISSN
Non Disponibile
ISBN
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Numero di citazioni Wos
Nessuna citazione
Ultimo Aggiornamento Citazioni
Non Disponibile
Numero di citazioni Scopus
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Ultimo Aggiornamento Citazioni
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Settori ERC
Non Disponibile
Codici ASJC
Non Disponibile
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