Volume 14 (2023)
Volume 13 (2022)
Volume 12 (2021)
Volume 11 (2020)
Volume 9 (2018)
Volume 8 (2017)
Volume 7 (2016)
Volume 6 (2015)
Volume 5 (2015)
Volume 4 (2013)
Volume 3 (2012)
Volume 2 (2012)
Volume 1 (2010)
Western representation in the political discourse of Ali Shariati

mahsa adibi; Majid Tavassoli Roknabadi; Seyed Mohammad Ali Taghavi

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 1-18

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4244

Abstract
  The way of dealing with the West is one of the main components of Iran's thought space, and the outbreak of the Islamic Revolution of Iran is also a product of this concern. In the form of Western-critique paradigm, Shariati tried to create new meanings and themes derived from traditional, religious, ...  Read More

Insight and Conceptual Incompleteness Occidentology, Beginning of

Mazdak Rajabi

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 19-38

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4245

Abstract
   I delineate the conceptions of “the West” and "Occidentology" in Davari's On the West in order to explain them and their relationship with the concept of “us”. The explication of The West seems to be necessary to conceptualize the modern world as universality and condition ...  Read More

Philosophy of History and the End of History in Fukuyama's View

GHolamali Soleimani

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 39-64

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4246

Abstract
  End-of-history theory as an important idea of ​​the last decade of the twentieth century spoke of the end of several centuries of ideological conflict. A conflict between various human ideologies that claimed the discovery of the rule of history. This conflict had been going on since the Enlightenment. ...  Read More

The Relations of "Philosophy and Cultural Translation" in Contemporary Iran Case study(The Development of Wisdom in Europe/Seyr-E Hekmat Dar Urupa)

Malek SHojaei jeshvaghani

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 65-83

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4247

Abstract
  cultural translation is a translation that adaptsthe text message and the source culture to the target culture. Such a translation often increases and decreases and is not a verbal translation. In cultural translation, the translator transcends the meaning of the material, the context, and the context ...  Read More

Superiority of conceptual approach over the Ontological one and cultural consequences of it in contemporary history (with the focus on views of Niche Heidegger)

Bijan Abdolkarimi; Afzal Sadat Hossein; Seyed Mahdi Sajadi; tahsim elyasi

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 85-108

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4248

Abstract
  Because of hybrid nature of language, it has conceptual and existential aspects. Ideas of Socrates caused conceptual aspect to be focused on and the existential one neglected. In Heidegger and Niche’s view, neglect of the relation between phsysis and logos and forgetting the role of language in ...  Read More

Heidegger and education; Dewlling and Disclosedness in an oriental context

felora askarizadeh; Ehsan Pouyafar; Seyedjavad Miri

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 109-128

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4249

Abstract
  Based on Heidegger's views, in this paper we examine Confucius way of teaching as is expressed in analects books. Heidegger's hermeneutical phenomenology was used as an Approach "to understand Being of things” and “to let them unfold themselves”. Examining some essential concepts of ...  Read More

Reflexivity; Contested Ideas of Anthony Giddens and Michel Foucault

sajedeh allameh; reza navah

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 129-147

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4250

Abstract
  Reflexivity not only is one of the most remarkable characteristics of modern life but also depicts an important idea challenge of the contemporary social sciences’ thinkers.  For such sociologists like Anthony Giddens reflexivity plays a key role in modern era as an inseparable part of political ...  Read More

The "Time" as the Horizon of beings Manifestation, and the Provider of the Objectivity in Kant, According to Heidegger’s Interpretation

Mouhammad GHaribzade; Houssein kalbasi

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 149-173

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4251

Abstract
  The Kant's categories must be necessarily related to the object-relatedness. Because of the spontaneity of understanding faculty and the receptivity of Sensibility faculty, there should be a common thing that make possible the relation between these two faculties of conception. Heidegger recognizes that ...  Read More

Criticism of Neoliberalism from the Critical Theory Perspectives

Abdollah Ghanbarloo

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 175-198

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4252

Abstract
  The current global economic governance is dominated by the ideology of neoliberalism and contemporary globalization has been driven by neoliberal ideas. Neoliberalism has been severely criticized from different types of perspectives. In this article, the question is related to the major devastating consequences ...  Read More

Nietzsche and the Origin of “On the History of Moral Sensations”

Hamidreza Mahboobi arani

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 199-220

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4254

Abstract
  “On the History of the Moral Sensation”, the second chapter of Human All Too Human, is Nietzsche’s first serious and immediate encounter with the problem of morality through his published works till then. Hence, its significance in forming Nietzsche’s complicated views on morality. ...  Read More

The concept of humanities in the first thought of Wilhelm Dilthey

fakhri maleki; Reza DavariArdakani

Volume 10, Issue 1 , November 2019, Pages 221-238

https://doi.org/10.30465/os.2019.4255

Abstract
  In the history of thinking, especially in the field of the humanities, the idea of ​​Wilhelm Dilthey is a turning point. The era of Dilthey coincided with full-fledged science. Those who were scientific did not differ significantly between the method of the natural sciences and the humanities. Dilthey ...  Read More