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|aUKPGM|beng|cUKPGM
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|aB2430.F724|bF68213 2010
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|a194|222
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|aAPTA
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100 |
1
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|aFoucault, Michel,|d1926-1984.
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240 |
10
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|aGouvernement de soi et des autres.|lEnglish
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245 |
14
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|aThe government of self and others|h[electronic resource] /|cMichel Foucault ; edited by Frâedâeric Gros ; general editors, Franðcois Ewald and Alessandro Fontana ; translated by Graham Burchell.
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260 |
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|aHoundmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire :|bPalgrave Macmillan ;|aNew York:|bSt Martin's Press ,|c2010.
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300 |
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|axvi, 402 p.
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533 |
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|aElectronic reproduction.|bBasingstoke, England :|cPalgrave Macmillan,|d2010.|nMode of access:World Wide Web.|nSystem requirements: Web browser.|nTitle from title screen (viewed on Sep. 27, 2010).|nAccess may be restricted to users at subscribing institutions.
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|aThe lectures given by Michel Foucault in 1983 at the Colèlge de France launch an inquiry intothe notion of parresia and continue his rereading of ancient philosophy. Through the study of this notion of truth-telling, of speaking out freely, Foucault re-examines Greek citizenship,showing how the courage of truth forms the forgotten ethical basis of Athenian democracy. He describes how, withthe decline of the city-states, the courage of truth is transformed and becomes directed personallytothe Prince's soul, giving us a new reading of Plato's seventh letter. The platonic figure of the philosopher king, the condemnation of writing, and Socrates' rejection of political involvement are some of the many topics of ancient philosophy revisited in Foucault's lectures. In the midst of brilliant interpretations of Greek tragedy, political theory, and philosophy, Foucault allows us to rethink the role, the significance, and the transformation of practices of parresia from antiquity to the present. Moreover, in these lectures Foucault constructs a figureof the philosopher in which he recognized himself and with this rereading of Greek thinkers he assures his own placement in philosophical modernity, problematizes his own function, and defines his mode of thinking and being. 'Modern philosophy is a practice which tests its reality in its relationship to politics. It is a practice which finds its function of truth in the criticism of illusion, deception, trickery, and flattery. Finally, it is a practice which finds the object of its exercise in the transformation of the subject byhimself and of the subject by the other. Philosophy as exteriority with regard to a politics which constitutes its test of reality, philosophy as critique of a domain of illusion which challenges it to constitute itself as true discourse, and philosophy as ascesis, that is to say, as constitutionofthe subject byhimself, are what constitute the modern mode of being of philosophy'.
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|aForeword: Fraçnois Ewald and Alessandro Fontana -- Introduction: Arnold I. Davidson -- Translator's Note -- 5 January 1983: First Hour -- 5January 1983: Second Hour -- 12 January 1983: First Hour -- 12 January1983: Second Hour -- 19 January 1983: First Hour -- 19 January 1983: Second Hour -- 26 January 1983: First Hour -- 26 January 1983: Second Hour -- 2 February 1983: First Hour -- 2 February 1983: Second Hour -- 9 February 1983: First Hour -- 9 February 1983: Second Hour -- 16 February1983: First Hour -- 16 February 1983: Second Hour -- 23 February 1983: First Hour -- 23 February 1983: Second Hour -- 2 March 1983: First Hour -- 2 March 1983: Second Hour -- 9 March 1983: First Hour-- 9 March 1983: Second Hour -- Course Context -- Index of Notions -- Index of Names.
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|aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
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546 |
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|aTranslated from the French.
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650 |
0
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|aPhilosophy, Modern|y20th century|xStudy and teaching.
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650 |
0
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|aPolitical science|xPhilosophy|y20th century|xStudy and teaching.
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650 |
0
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|aTruthfulness and falsehood.
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650 |
0
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|aFreedom of speech|xPhilosophy.
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655 |
7
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|aElectronic books.|2local.
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700 |
1
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|aFoucault, Michel,|d1926-1984.|tLectures at the Colláege de France.
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740 |
0
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|aLectures at the Colláege de France.
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776 |
08
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|iPrint version:|aFoucault, Michel, 1926-1984.|sGouvernement de soi etdes autres. English.|tGovernment of self and others.|dHoundmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire : Palgrave Macmillan ; New York : StMartin's Press , 2010|z9781403986665|w(DLC) 2010281342|w(OCoLC)499078856
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710 |
2
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|aPalgrave Connect (Online service)
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856 |
40
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|3Palgrave Connect|uhttp://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230274730|zaccess to fulltext (Palgrave)
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