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Philosophy and Religion in German Idealism

William Desmond ; Ernst-Otto Onnasch ; Paul Cruysberghs (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Philosophy of Religion; Modern Philosophy

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-2324-8

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-2325-5

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer Science + Business Media, Inc. 2005

Tabla de contenidos

Philosophy of Religion After the Death of God

Walter Jaeschke

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 1-19

Kant on Religion in the Role of Moral Schematism

Martin Moors

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 21-33

“Wishful Thinking” Concerning Fichte’s Interpretation of the Postulates of Reason in His (1792)

Daniel Breazeale

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 35-69

The Unsatisfied Enlightenment Faith and Pure Insight in Hegel’s

Ludwig Heyde

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 71-79

Religion, Morality and Forgiveness in Hegel’s Philosophy

Stephen Houlgate

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 81-110

The Finite Does Not Hinder Hegel’s Philosophy of Christian Religion Placed Against the Backdrop of Kant’s Theory of the Sublime

Sander Griffioen

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 111-124

Hegel on Reason, Faith and Knowledge

Tom Rockmore

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 125-137

Religion and the Poverty of Philosophy

William Desmond

In Chapters 7 and 8we invested a good deal of time and energy in developing the many results we need from differential geometry. The time has now come to begin to reap the benefits of our investment, while at the same time developing some themes a little further for later exploitation. This chapter focuses on the celebrated volume-of-tubes formula of Wey1 [73, 168], which expresses the Lebesgue volume of a tube of radius ρ around a set embedded in ℝ or S(ℝ{sl}) in terms of the radius of the tube1 and the Lipschitz–Killing curvatures of (see Theorem 10.5.6). It is an interesting fact, particularly in view of the fact that this is a book about probability that is claimed to have applications to statistics, and despite the fact thatWeyl’s formula is today the basis of a large literature in geometry, that the origins of the volume-of-tubes formulas were inspired by a statistical problem. This problem, along with its solution due to Hotelling [79], were related to regression analysis and involved the one-dimensional volume-of-tubes problem on a sphere, not unrelated to the computation we shall do in a moment.

Pp. 139-170