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Contains the collected poems and songs of Howard N. Tuttle, from 1997 - 2015, including sections on Nature (especially that of the Wasatch Mountains in Utah), Birds & Animals, Historical Figures, Places and Times, and Alphabet Poems. Also contains the song, "Remember Me", which is archived at the Ground Zero Memorial.
This book argues that the mass is the most characteristic socio-historical feature of our century. Kierkegaard was the first to anticipate and delineate this phenomenon philosophically. Heidegger appropriated much from Kierkegaard, but recast the mass into the fundamental ontology of Das Man. Moreover, his work was informed by Nietzsche's understanding of nihilism and the will of power. Finally, the masses are considered from the vision of Ortega y Gasset's philosophy of human life. This book relates all four of these thinkers into a philosophical perspective upon the nature of the mass.
The twenty-first century needs a new paradigm for philosophy, because both Anglo-American and Continental philosophy have ended in analytic sterility and deconstructive nihilism. They have ignored the radical reality of human life, which all other realities must presuppose. Three European philosophers in the twentieth century - Dilthey, Heidegger, and Ortega y Gasset - began to develop this idea, but never before has it been systematically conceptualized and adequately expounded. With reference to the works of these philosophers, this book examines the major categories and essential properties of human life as it is lived, for example, in time, circumstance, history, and understanding.
Henry Tuthill was baptized 28 June 1612 in Tharston, Norfolk County, England. He came to America prior to 1637 at which time he had a lot in Hingham, Massachusetts. In 1644 he sold his lot and went to Southold, Long Island where his brother, John, had located. John Tuthill returned to England and died there. Henry stayed on Long Island and his descendants lived there until the American Revolution when they began, slowly to disperse to all parts of the nation and a few went to Canada. Some of them spelled their name as Tuttle.
This book is a philosophical delineation, analysis, and comparison of the historicality (Geschichtlichkeit) of human existence in the thought of Wilhelm Dilthey (1833-1911), Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), and José Ortega y Gasset (1883-1955). Historicality is fundamental for the structure and content of their thought. These thinkers are interdependent and self-consciously interrelated. All of them presuppose that human existence in history requires a discursive thought form that is uniquely appropriate to it. The author labels the birth and development of this form as the dawn of historical reason.
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