How To Use Freedom Of The Press To The Max


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How to Use Freedom of the Press to the Max


How to Use Freedom of the Press to the Max

Author: Andrew Bushard

language: en

Publisher: Free Press Media Press Inc.

Release Date:


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Have you ever thought about what you should do with our freedom of the press? What can we do with it? Ever so much! This book will empower you to get the absolute most out of freedom of the press. Read this book so you can help make the free world even better! 32 pages.

The Max Planck Handbooks in European Public Law


The Max Planck Handbooks in European Public Law

Author: Armin von Bogdandy

language: en

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Release Date: 2023


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This edited volume reports the antecedents, foundations, organization, basic principles, and challenges to fourteen European constitutions. They include countries with long-lasting and recently amended constitutions, decentralized or unitary, with different political systems and institutional settings.

Max Stirner's Dialectical Egoism


Max Stirner's Dialectical Egoism

Author: John F. Welsh

language: en

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Release Date: 2010-01-01


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Max Stirner (1806-1856) is recognized in the history of political thought because of his egoist classic The Ego and Its Own. Stirner was a student of Hegel, and a critic of the Young Hegelians and the emerging forms of socialist and communist thought in the 1840s. Max Stirner's Dialectical Egoism: A New Interpretation examines Stirner's thought as a critique of modernity, by which he meant the domination of culture and politics by humanist ideology. In Stirner's view, 'humanity' is the supreme being of modernity and 'humanism' is the prevailing legitimation of social and political domination. Welsh traces Stirner's thought from his early essays to The Ego and Its Own and Stirner's responses to his critics. He also examines how Benjamin Tucker, James L. Walker, and Dora Marsden applied Stirner's dialectical egoism to the analysis of (a) the transformations of capitalism, (b) culture, ethics, and mass psychology, and (c) feminism, socialism, and communism. All three viewed Stirner as a champion of individuality against the collectivizing and homogenizing forces of the modern world. Welsh also takes great care to dissociate Stirner's thought from that of the other great egoist critic of modernity, Friedrich Nietzsche. He argues that the similarities in the dissidence of Stirner and Nietzsche are superficial. The book concludes with an interpretation of Stirner's thought as a form of dialectical egoism that includes (a) a multi-tiered analysis of culture, society, and individuality; (b) the basic principles of Stirner's view of the relationship between individuals and social organization; and (c) the forms of critique he employs. Stirner's critique of modernity is a significant contribution to the growing literature on libertarianism, dialectical analysis, and post-modernism.