made manifest and concealed. To say this another way, in feeling freedom is brought to light as dark. Its presence is given immediately, but its essence, what it is, lies concealed. Thus an investigation, a deed, an undertaking is ...
Freydberg traces these dark sources to the poetry of Hesiod, the fragments of Heraclitus and Parmenides, and the Platonic dialogues and claims that they rear their heads again in the work of Spinoza, Schelling, and Nietzsche.
The Kerygma of the Wilderness Traditions in the Hebrew Bible examines biblical writers' use of the wilderness traditions in the books of Exodus and Numbers, Deuteronomy, the Prophets, and the...
In the first book of its kind, Bernard Freydberg places David Hume firmly in the tradition of the Platonic dialogues, and regards him as a proper ancestor of contemporary continental philosophy.
Places imagination squarely at the core of Kant's moral law and ethics.