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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 24 page bundle includes a 20 page paper, 12 Powerpoint slides and complimentary slide notes. The content focuses on of Marx, Nietzsche, Hegel, Kant and Habermas. How each theorist contemplated family, society and government in the context of German political ideology is considered. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
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24 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA819Ger.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
into morality. These ideas are often referred to as philosophy. Philosophers have emerged through a number of decades and in philosophy classes all over the world certain names come up
a great deal over and over again. Many of the great philosophers have come from Europe, but contemporary philosophers are found in many corners of the globe. It should also
be said that many theorists view the world sociologically but also embrace philosophical components of society, thus creating a vision from the reality they help to define. In Germany,
many theorists have emerged over the centuries to discuss what is right and wrong and how society and family are inextricable and how they relate to government. All of these
things make up the structures of society and help to explain why things are the way they are. Also, in suggesting such issues, what becomes clear is that society as
a whole is perhaps more complicated than appears on the surface. Through looking at Marxs theories as well as that of Nietzsche, Hegel, Kant and Habermas one can see that
family, society and government have unique relationships. They each in their own right help to explain the social order, the relevance of the family, and how the state gets into
the picture. II. German Political Theory When it comes to German political theory, there is much to say. Great philosophers have risen from Germany, but
when looking at the body of knowledge as a whole, one would have to include the Third Reich and Democracy. Yet, when digging up the roots of German political thought
one sees at the very least a hodge podge of theoretical paradigms exist. Stirk (2006) examines political thought in Germany in contemporary times. He notes that in exploring philosophy in
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