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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Immanuel Kant published by this site and its partners.

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Displaying items 1-12 of 14
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    Apr 13, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. The poetry of discussion

    <strong>Our story</strong>
    Our story Our Sulzer Regional Library Great Books Discussion Group has been meeting for more than 30 years. Annually, we pick a theme to guide our book selections and discussions. This year's theme is morality. Last year we read books dealing with...

    Tags: Seamus Heaney, Anthony Powell, Marcel Proust, Literature, Upton Sinclair

  2. Dec 14, 2011 |Story| Daily American
  3. Classical liberalism defined

    Somerset
    I'm a classical liberal. I am very open about my philosophical beliefs and do not fear sharing them. Oftentimes, though, I am asked, what makes me a classical liberal? What makes anybody a classical liberal? A classical liberal is somebody who believes...

    Tags: Penn Jillette, Politics, Culture, Religion and Belief, Thomas Jefferson

  4. Sep 1, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  5. The birth of a Twitter trend: #replacebooktitleswithbacon

    Jacket Copy
    Lots of great book titles with bacon! And if you've seen too many go by on Twitter lately, blame Carolyn Kellogg and Elissa Schappell....
  6. Mar 25, 2011 |Story| Petoskey News
  7. Are you a part of the problem, or answer?

    When listening to the news on television, computers, reading our newspapers that speak of all the problems we face at home and abroad, I can’t help but think of the song that we sang years ago, “Stop the world, I want to get off!” I...

    Tags: Wesleyan University, Human Interest, Colleges and Universities, Martin Luther King Jr., Education

  8. Mar 4, 2011 |Story| Daily Pilot
  9. The God Squad: Some aspects of cremation spiritually unwise

    Question: With all due respect, I felt that your response to a recent question regarding cremation might have offended some readers. Your opinions that keeping ashes in an urn on the mantel seemed "creepy," and scattering them in public places "slightly...

    Tags: Health, Human Interest, Surgery, Judaism, Marc Gellman

  10. Jan 11, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Jared Lee Loughner: A Troubled Mind

    On Saturday morning just after 11, the quiet, working-class Tucson neighborhood suddenly filled with sheriff's patrol cars and FBI agents. They quickly cordoned off the North Soledad Avenue home of Amy and Randy Loughner, who were out shopping.
    Staff Writer
    On Saturday morning just after 11, the quiet, working-class Tucson neighborhood suddenly filled with sheriff's patrol cars and FBI agents. They quickly cordoned off the North Soledad Avenue home of Amy and Randy Loughner, who were out shopping. Moments...

    Tags: NASA, Colleges and Universities, Human Interest, Nike, Inc., Family

  12. Nov 11, 2009 | Los Angeles Times
  13. Novelist Jonathan Safran Foer tackles nonfiction with his latest effort, 'Eating Animals'

    L.A. Unleashed
    Animal advocates everywhere are talking about author Jonathan Safran Foer's latest book, "Eating Animals." Foer, known primarily as a novelist whose prior works include "Everything is Illuminated" and "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close," went the...
  14. Jul 29, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Francis Collins: fit to head the NIH?

    <i>Today's topic: Some have made the argument that President Obama's nomination of Francis Collins, a born-again Christian geneticist, to head the National Institutes of Health is a disservice to the science community because it promotes someone who is known as an apologist for religion. Are they correct? Does the fact that Collins is considered so unique because of his open embrace of religion demonstrate that most scientists believe there is a conflict between science and religion?</i>
    Today's topic: Some have made the argument that President Obama's nomination of Francis Collins, a born-again Christian geneticist, to head the National Institutes of Health is a disservice to the science community because it promotes someone who is known...

    Tags: Awards and Prizes, Genes and Chromosomes, Health Organizations, Health, Genetics

  16. Nov 24, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. The iPod lecture circuit

    Baxter Wood is one of Hubert Dreyfus' most devoted students. During lectures on existentialism, Wood hangs on every word, savoring the moments when the 78-year-old philosophy professor pauses to consider a student's comment or relay how a meaning-of-life question had him up at 2 a.m.
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    Baxter Wood is one of Hubert Dreyfus' most devoted students. During lectures on existentialism, Wood hangs on every word, savoring the moments when the 78-year-old philosophy professor pauses to consider a student's comment or relay how a meaning-of-...

    Tags: Colleges and Universities, Apple iPod, Gaming, Retirement, Family

  18. Jan 22, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. For Ailing Twins' Parents, Hope Vies With Anguish

    She steered with one knee, reached into the back seat and stroked the tears from her little boy's cheek. Drivers honked and shouted behind their rolled-up windows. One gave her the single-finger salute. She hardly noticed. She had something more important...

    Tags: Health, Colleges and Universities, California, Road Transportation, Travel

  20. Apr 12, 2008 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. An elusive dream

    By Jeremi Suri
    By Jeremi Suri The United Nations is the most frustrating international institution. In its charter, its structure and its leadership, it embodies the idealistic ambition to make the world a better place for everyone. What other institution on this...

    Tags: Colleges and Universities, University of Paris, Politics, East Timor, Cambodia

  22. May 5, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. 'La Petite Jérusalem'

    Philosophy and religion become entangled with love and sex in Karin Albou's intelligent, sensual drama "La Petite J&#233;rusalem." Set in a rundown, predominately Jewish neighborhood in suburban Paris, the film follows the path of a passionate young philosophy student as she attempts to wall off her heart, using Immanuel Kant as the gatekeeper.
    Times Staff Writer
    Philosophy and religion become entangled with love and sex in Karin Albou's intelligent, sensual drama "La Petite Jérusalem." Set in a rundown, predominately Jewish neighborhood in suburban Paris, the film follows the path of a passionate young philosophy...

    Tags: Judaism, Literature, Arts and Culture, Crime, Law and Justice, Movies

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