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Summary Human Conditions 1

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This lecture series explores philosophical anthropology, covering Kant’s critiques of reason, hermeneutics, and evolutionary theories. It examines human cognition, positionality, and models of human evolution. Thinkers like Dilthey and Plessner are discussed, alongside globalization and the future of humanity in the context of information culture and technological development.

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March 18, 2025
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2023/2024
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Human conditions I




Jurian Traas
FW-WB3926

, Table of contents
Lecture I...................................................................................................................................................................2
Three different images of man in the human sciences.........................................................................................3
Relationship between the three models................................................................................................................4

Lecture II..................................................................................................................................................................4
Transcendental philosophy..................................................................................................................................4
Kant’s general critique on reason........................................................................................................................4
The critique of pure reason, 1781........................................................................................................................5

Lecture III................................................................................................................................................................6
The synthesis of reason........................................................................................................................................6
Critique of practical reason, 1787.......................................................................................................................7
Critique of judgement, 1790.................................................................................................................................7
Implications of Kant’s ontological subjectivism..................................................................................................8

Lecture IV................................................................................................................................................................8
Hermeneutic understanding.................................................................................................................................8
A horizon of experience........................................................................................................................................9
Three types of hermeneutics.................................................................................................................................9
Globalization........................................................................................................................................................9

Lecture V................................................................................................................................................................10
Evolutionary theories: Lamarck & Darwin.......................................................................................................10
Neo-Darwinism..................................................................................................................................................10

Lecture VI..............................................................................................................................................................11
Overview of the main species.............................................................................................................................11
Three models of human evolution......................................................................................................................11
The cognitive evolution of homo sapiens...........................................................................................................11
Fundamental characteristics of information culture.........................................................................................12

Lecture VII.............................................................................................................................................................12
Plessner’s three types of positionality................................................................................................................12
The double aspectivity........................................................................................................................................12
Three anthropological laws...............................................................................................................................13
Three different images of man in the human sciences.......................................................................................13

Lecture VIII...........................................................................................................................................................13
Homo sapiens 3.0...............................................................................................................................................13
Philosophical anthropology 2.0.........................................................................................................................14


Lecture I
Philosophical anthropology: what does it mean to be a human being?

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