"Lessons in Philosophical Anthropology" re-establishes from the outset the foundation upon which to build philosophy, human endeavor, and even the positive sciences. Furthermore, it conceives of human history as "logos"; that is, a history of the manifestation and discovery of being in the world. A history of the truth of being and its concealment (lies or oblivion). It is a history of fundamental ontology, a history of the introduction to philosophical thought. The question that confronts us today is: what meaning does this history hold for us, today, in Latin America?
"Toward a Destruction of the History of Ethics" proposes a history of human action. The "ethics" we are discussing is neither the "ethos" prevalent in each of us or in cultures and groups, but rather an ontological ethics (ethica perennis) whose history has been forged in the dark wellspring of given philosophic...read more









