Kategori: English

How does Nietzsche explain the public’s support for authoritarianism?

Friedrich Nietzsche interprets the public’s support for authoritarianism not only on a political or historical basis, but also on a deeper philosophical-psychological basis. His approach focuses on the individual’s inner world, value systems and existential orientation. In order to understand this tendency, it is necessary to consider Nietzsche’s basic concepts

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Is Sisyphus a figure of submission or a symbol of resistance for individuals to whom the system imposes meaningless tasks?

Sisyphus is a figure in Greek mythology who was condemned by the gods to a meaningless punishment: rolling a boulder up a mountain, only to have it roll back down each time. This story has become a powerful metaphor for the existential condition of modern man, especially in Albert Camus’s

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Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” questions legal but immoral practices such as slavery. Is an individual morally right when they break an unjust law?

Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a work that deeply examines the conflict between individual conscience and social laws. The novel questions legal but morally controversial practices of the period, such as slavery, and places the moral legitimacy of an individual’s defiance of an unjust law in a philosophical

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Is Steinbeck emphasizing the lack of solidarity of workers in the novel “Of Mice and Men”?

John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, while addressing the existential and social struggles of migrant workers in the Great Depression-era America, strikingly emphasizes the workers’ lack of solidarity. This lack is at the center of the novel not only as a historical and sociological phenomenon but also as an object

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What are the Philosophical Foundations of Freud’s Concept of the Unconscious?

Sigmund Freud’s concept of the unconscious is considered one of the cornerstones of modern psychology and has penetrated not only clinical psychoanalysis but also the depths of philosophical thought. In Freud’s theoretical framework, the unconscious is defined as a dynamic area of ​​the human psyche that operates beyond observable consciousness,

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Does Dostoyevsky see the nature of humanity as chaotic in her / his novels?

In Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky’s novels, human nature is essentially chaotic, contradictory and paradoxical. In his literary and intellectual universe, man can neither be fully explained by reason nor reduced to a fixed moral or ideological category. This complex nature constitutes the fundamental conflicts of Dostoyevsky’s novels. Dostoevsky’s understanding of man

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Do the characters in Victor Hugo’s novels take a stance against social injustice, inequality, and authority?

In Hugo’s works, themes such as social injustice, class inequalities, poverty and social exclusion are at the center of the characters’ existential struggles. The protagonist of Les Misérables, Jean Valjean, is the strongest symbol of these themes. Valjean is a character who was sentenced to years of hard labor for

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In his novel The Trial, is Kafka suggesting that justice is tied to power relations rather than a universal principle, as he describes the justice system as arbitrary and unpredictable?

The Arbitrary Nature of Justice In Kafka’s novel The Trial, Josef K. learns one morning that he has been arrested without cause; however, no clear information is given about the crime he is accused of or the functioning of the judicial process. This uncertainty reveals the arbitrary and unpredictable nature

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How does Lev Tolstoy’s novel Anna Karenina depict the class dynamics between the Russian aristocracy and the peasantry?

Leo Tolstoy’s novel Anna Karenina provides a profound portrayal of the complex class dynamics of 19th-century Russian society, the tensions between the aristocracy and the peasantry, and the political and economic roles of these classes. The novel presents the luxurious, ostentatiously, and status-oriented lifestyle of the Russian aristocracy, and the

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Does the legal system in Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov dispense justice or is it an ideological device?

Law in The Brothers Karamazov: Institution of Justice or Theater of Ideology? Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov is a philosophical novel in which not only individual conflicts but also the mechanisms of social structure, authority and ideology are deeply questioned. In this context, although the legal system in the

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Is Shakespeare’s tragedy Timon of Athens a mirror that questions the fragility of human nature between generosity, friendship and expediency?

Timon of Athens and the Test of Human Nature by Self-interest Shakespeare’s tragedy Timon of Athens is a mirror that questions human nature’s fragile dance between generosity, friendship, and self-interest. Timon’s story tells how a man’s friends, who gather in the shadow of his wealth, become shadows when that wealth

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How are media, technology, or ideologies a source of “illusion” in the context of Francis Bacon’s theory of idols?

Francis Bacon’s theory of the “idols of the mind” (idola mentis), as set forth in Novum Organum, categorizes the sources of illusion through which the human mind tends to distort the truth: tribal idols (general tendencies of human nature), cave idols (individual prejudices), marketplace idols (the fallibility of language and

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Solidarity in the Face of Suffering in Albert Camus’s The Plague: Humanity’s Salvation or Temporary Consolation?

Albert Camus’s novel The Plague (La Peste, 1947) deeply questions not only the physical destruction of an epidemic disease, but also the absurd nature of human existence and how individuals seek meaning in the face of this absurdity. Through the plague outbreak in the city of Oran, the novel examines

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According to Socrates, is life worth living if it is not questioned?

The Political Critique of Unexamined Life: Socrates’ Philosophical Resistance Socrates’ dictum, “The unexamined life is not worth living” (Ἀνεξέταστος βίος οὐ βιωτὸς ἀνθρώπῳ), is not only an individual ethical call; it is also a radical political challenge directed at the entirety of power, society, and normative structure. The philosophical-political implication

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How true is Nietzsche’s words, “What does not kill me makes me stronger”? Does suffering make you stronger, or is it just an illusion?

The aphorism “What does not kill me makes me stronger” (Was mich nicht umbringt, macht mich stärker) from Friedrich Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra is often discussed as one of the cornerstones of his philosophical system. Although this statement may seem like a summary of Nietzsche’s thoughts on life, pain, and

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