The relation between metaphysics and theology is immersed in a deep obscurity and only by looking into the phenomena of revelation will we be able to lighten this darkness. Without any chronological order, this paper takes into consideration some \u201ctraces\u201d that can be found in works by Nietzsche, Heidegger, Schleiermacher, Kant and L\ue9vinas. In this way both the ethical and religious origin of philosophical thought and the human meaning of religious revelation are brought to light. In this network of \u201ctraces\u201d the question about Good and Evil is worthy of some attention and it plays an important part in this context, while religion and philosophy, though distinct, prove to be inseparable
UID/FIL/00183/2013The role that the horizon of faith plays in Nietzsche’s philosophy assumes a relev...
The following essay advances the thesis that metaphysics is, above all, a domain of ultimate questio...
What is “Phenomenology of Religion”? This article maintains that it is not a discipline but the form...
In the understanding of metaphysics from its origins woth the Greeks, Heidegger's onto-theological p...
The aim of this text is to focus the relationship between philosophy and religion starting from the ...
Does the concept of metaphysic involve some form of faith in a transcendent domain or is this a too ...
From Plato to Aristotle, from Augustine to Aquinas from Pascal to Freud and Heidegger the world and...
The article expresses the philosophical thoughts of an Italian philosopher, G.Vattimo and his develo...
The relationship between metaphysics and ethics in classical Greek philosophy is understood not as a...
The paper will discuss the contemporary crisis of metaphysics by assuming as background the idea of...
Nietzsche and Heidegger thought assert that the metaphysical tradition acknowledged a relict fundame...
In his 1936 lecture-course on the Philosophical Inquiries into the Essence of Human Freedom Heidegge...
This paper aims reflect about de meaning of distinction between metaphysical and postmetaphysical th...
The philosophy of religion deals with the reflection of the nature of religion. The main task of the...
The theme of the article is the Greek character of philosophy understood as metaphysics in accordanc...
UID/FIL/00183/2013The role that the horizon of faith plays in Nietzsche’s philosophy assumes a relev...
The following essay advances the thesis that metaphysics is, above all, a domain of ultimate questio...
What is “Phenomenology of Religion”? This article maintains that it is not a discipline but the form...
In the understanding of metaphysics from its origins woth the Greeks, Heidegger's onto-theological p...
The aim of this text is to focus the relationship between philosophy and religion starting from the ...
Does the concept of metaphysic involve some form of faith in a transcendent domain or is this a too ...
From Plato to Aristotle, from Augustine to Aquinas from Pascal to Freud and Heidegger the world and...
The article expresses the philosophical thoughts of an Italian philosopher, G.Vattimo and his develo...
The relationship between metaphysics and ethics in classical Greek philosophy is understood not as a...
The paper will discuss the contemporary crisis of metaphysics by assuming as background the idea of...
Nietzsche and Heidegger thought assert that the metaphysical tradition acknowledged a relict fundame...
In his 1936 lecture-course on the Philosophical Inquiries into the Essence of Human Freedom Heidegge...
This paper aims reflect about de meaning of distinction between metaphysical and postmetaphysical th...
The philosophy of religion deals with the reflection of the nature of religion. The main task of the...
The theme of the article is the Greek character of philosophy understood as metaphysics in accordanc...
UID/FIL/00183/2013The role that the horizon of faith plays in Nietzsche’s philosophy assumes a relev...
The following essay advances the thesis that metaphysics is, above all, a domain of ultimate questio...
What is “Phenomenology of Religion”? This article maintains that it is not a discipline but the form...