LDR | | 00000nmm u2200205 4500 |
001 | | 000000330223 |
005 | | 20241025144244 |
008 | | 181129s2018 ||| | | | eng d |
020 | |
▼a 9780438021754 |
035 | |
▼a (MiAaPQ)AAI10827257 |
035 | |
▼a (MiAaPQ)ucla:16907 |
040 | |
▼a MiAaPQ
▼c MiAaPQ
▼d 248032 |
049 | 1 |
▼f DP |
082 | 0 |
▼a 100 |
100 | 1 |
▼a Taiwo, Olufemi. |
245 | 10 |
▼a Autobiography. |
260 | |
▼a [S.l.] :
▼b University of California, Los Angeles.,
▼c 2018 |
260 | 1 |
▼a Ann Arbor :
▼b ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,
▼c 2018 |
300 | |
▼a 125 p. |
500 | |
▼a Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 79-10(E), Section: A. |
500 | |
▼a Adviser: Alexander Julius. |
502 | 1 |
▼a Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2018. |
520 | |
▼a The project of my dissertation, "Autobiography", is to answer the question: How can we be free? Many philosophers describe the problem of freedom as arising from the limits of our agential powers, given the existence of other individuals and asp |
520 | |
▼a But there is another way of framing the philosophical problem of freedom: how can we be free? When asked from the first person plural rather than the singular, our understanding of the problem of freedom shifts from asking how to rescue the poss |
520 | |
▼a In chapter one, I engage with "National Liberation and Culture", an essay by Amilcar Cabral that characterizes colonialism as a particular kind of historical unfreedom. I argue that the kind of unfreedom Cabral identifies both establishes what p |
590 | |
▼a School code: 0031. |
650 | 4 |
▼a Philosophy. |
690 | |
▼a 0422 |
710 | 20 |
▼a University of California, Los Angeles.
▼b Philosophy 0651. |
773 | 0 |
▼t Dissertation Abstracts International
▼g 79-10A(E). |
773 | |
▼t Dissertation Abstract International |
790 | |
▼a 0031 |
791 | |
▼a Ph.D. |
792 | |
▼a 2018 |
793 | |
▼a English |
856 | 40 |
▼u http://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T14999003
▼n KERIS |
980 | |
▼a 201812
▼f 2019 |
990 | |
▼a 관리자
▼b 관리자 |