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Examples

  • A Logic that is in-itself and for-itself (as Hegel demanded) is most remarkable.

    Ambiguity Tolerance 2008

  • Alternatively, a logic that is merely in-itself is entirely grounded in full disclosure (a call to reveal).

    Ambiguity Tolerance 2008

  • This Logic is again found in-itself and for-itself, as demanded by Hegel.

    Ambiguity Tolerance 2008

  • A Logic that is in-itself and for-itself is entirely self-consistent: the motivation for free speech is grounded in full disclosure.

    Ambiguity Tolerance 2008

  • My trinitarian views grew out of Hegel's Logic, a Logic that I already noted and that is found in-itself and for-itself.

    Ambiguity Tolerance 2008

  • Funny how I needed the critical eye of an irate reader to catch that, and to prove once again that the trinitarian Logic calls upon itself to be in-itself and for-itself where we find that free speech is properly clothed in full disclosure.

    Ambiguity Tolerance 2008

  • Insofar as a group of people who constitute a structurally defined class fails to acquire such attitudes, Marx denies that the group is a class in the full sense at all a class-for-itself as well as -in-itself.

    Archive 2009-06-01 Daniel Little 2009

  • Sartre's formulation, in which, as a matter of fact, it is we who are the nothingness and the in-itself that is the being — "like a gigantic object in a desert world" (as Sartre puts it) (246) — what we are forgetting here, in our fixation, is precisely the original nonseparation of subject and object — what

    Hegel on Buddhism 2007

  • Buddhist soteriological practice as Insichsein or "being-within-self" (that is, ultimately without concrete determinants); or whether Buddhism did influence him indirectly; my thesis stands: that there is a remarkable and historically probable collusion between Hegel's view of the nothingness of the in-itself — or, as first stated in the

    Hegel on Buddhism 2007

  • Insofar as a group of people who constitute a structurally defined class fails to acquire such attitudes, Marx denies that the group is a class in the full sense at all a class-for-itself as well as -in-itself.

    Marx's theory of political behavior Daniel Little 2009

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