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Robert Hahn [26]Robert W. Hahn [1]Robert O. Hahn [1]Robert S. Hahn [1]
Robert Alan Hahn [1]
  1.  30
    The metaphysics of the Pythagorean theorem: Thales, Pythagoras, engineering, diagrams, and the construction of the cosmos out of right triangles.Robert Hahn -2017 - Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
    Metaphysics, geometry, and the problems with diagrams -- The Pythagorean theorem: Euclid I.47 and VI.31 -- Thales and geometry: Egypt, Miletus, and beyond -- Pythagoras and the famous theorems -- From the Pythagorean theorem to the construction of the cosmos out of right triangles.
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  2.  27
    Anaximander and the Architects: The Contributions of Egyptian and Greek Architectural Technologies to the Origins of Greek Philosophy.Robert Hahn -2001 - State University of New York Press.
    Uses textual and archaeological evidence to argue that emerging Egyptian and Greek architectural technologies were crucial to the origins and development of Greek philosophy.
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  3.  49
    Archaeology and the Origins of Philosophy.Robert Hahn -2010 - State University of New York Press.
    _Detailed study of how Anaximander’s cosmological and philosophical conceptions were affected by architectural technologies._.
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  4.  42
    Anaximander in Context: New Studies in the Origins of Greek Philosophy.Dirk L. Couprie,Robert Hahn &Gérard Naddaf -2002 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Places the development of Anaximander's thought within social, political, cosmological, astronomical, and technological contexts.
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  5.  37
    Heraclitus, Milesian Monism, and the Felting of Wool.Robert Hahn -2017 - In Enrica Fantino, Ulrike Muss, Charlotte Schubert & Kurt Sier,Heraklit Im Kontext. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 187-210.
  6.  44
    Aristotle as Ontologist or Theologian?: Or, Aristotelian Form in the Context of the Conflicting Doctrines of Being in the Metaphysics.Robert Hahn -1979 -Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 10 (1):79-88.
  7.  92
    Being and non-being in rig Veda X, in the writings of the Lao-Tzu and Chuang-Tzu, and in the "later" Plato.Robert Hahn -1981 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 8 (2):119-142.
  8.  10
    Remembering Lewis E. Hahn.Sharon Crowell,George C. H. Sun,John Howie,Thomas M. Alexander,Kenneth W. Stikkers,Randall E. Auxier,Robert Hahn,Sen Wu,Elizabeth Ramsden Eames,Martin Lu,George Kimball Plochmann,Matt Sronkoski,D. S. Clarke,Eugenie Gatens-Robinson,Hans H. Rudnick,Stephen Bickham &Don Mikula -2006 -Philosophy East and West 56 (1):1-15.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Remembering Lewis E. HahnGeorge C. H. Sun, President, John Howie, Professor Emeritus, Thomas Alexander, Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Kenneth W. Stikkers, Professor and Chair, Randall Auxier, Professor, Robert Hahn, Professor, Joseph Wu, Professor Emeritus, Elizabeth R. Eames, Professor Emeritus, Martin Lu, Professor of Philosophy, George Kimball Plochmann, Professor Emeritus, Matt Sronkoski, Philosophy Graduate and Academic Adviser, Dave Clarke, Professor Emeritus, Eugenie Gatens-Robinson, Professor Emerita, Hans H. Rudnick, (...) Professor Emeritus, Stephen Bickham, Professor EmeritusPresident, and Don Mikula (bio)The following testimonials were offered on the occasion of a memorial gathering for Dr. Lewis E. Hahn held on February 19, 2005, and were compiled for presentation here by Sharon (Hahn) Crowell.A Tribute to Dr. Lewis E. Hahn (1908-2004) from a Global PerspectiveGeorge C. H. Sun President, Thomé H. Fang Institute, Inc., Mobile, AlabamaAmong the philosophical community in both the East and the West, no word of introduction is needed for our beloved Master, who was the recipient of numerous distinctions and honors, with titles that included "Man of the Year in Philosophy" and "Award of Lifetime Achievement." The very name "Lewis E. Hahn" itself already stands now for genuineness, dedication, and fulfillment.A great work is a dialogue with eternity; a great person is such a work. In less than thirty years he succeeded in developing Carbondale from what had been a small college town in the Midwest into the Mecca of American philosophy. His most important achievements were the Dewey Center and the Pepper Archives that he helped install at SIUC These, among other such institutions, will remain a unique contribution, a glory of American philosophy, and a monument in the history of human thought.For posterity Lewis E. Hahn will remain an object of wonder and amazement. How is it possible for one human being to have accomplished so much, so well, and in so short a span of time—less than one century—in breadth, depth, and diversity? Some one hundred years ago, by bridging the gap between the New World and the Old, William James was hailed as the great genius of international friendship among philosophical thinkers, but we now find a greater genius in Lewis E. Hahn, who succeeded in bringing together the peoples of East and West from at least four continents: Europe, Australia, America (both North and Latin America), and Asia. To my knowledge, few of his predecessors and contemporaries have been half so widely read and liberal-minded as he was, in view of the range and scope of the Library of Living Philosophers that he helped continue after the passing of its founder, Dr. Paul A. Schilpp.What type of man was Hahn, our younger generation will wonder? Only a pluralist approach can help us understand the true character of such a legendary pluralist-contextualist. In short, he was "a full personality." As I recall, while working on my dissertation with him in the 1970s, we had a brief discussion on Confucius, the sage of ancient China. "A full personality!" was his laconic assessment. Suddenly I realized, to quote the Analects: "The Master is talking about himself!" For, as the Buddhists put it, only a Buddha can understand a Buddha. Or, as William James put it, only one who has philosophy can appreciate philosophy. Many friends [End Page 1] of my generation admire him so much; Te Chen of Hong Kong calls him "a great Confucian in America." Those who regret the loss of many precious Confucian virtues in China today have now rediscovered them in the person of Lewis E. Hahn! If Nietzsche called Kant "a great Chinese in Königsberg," it is simply because he had not encountered our own Master.A paradigm of academic leadership, Dr. Hahn is simply irreplaceable—this is a tribute I personally heard in Carbondale in the late 1960s. It is not an exaggeration to say that he was a superb administrator, and he could have been the best Secretary of the State we ever had, for he possessed more in the way of philosophical wisdom than all his predecessors put together! As a great teacher, he was no less "serene, good, learned, wise, and ardent" than... (shrink)
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  9.  52
    Economists' statement on network neutrality policy.William J. Baumol,Robert E. Litan,Martin E. Cave,Peter Cramton,Robert W. Hahn,Thomas W. Hazlett,Paul L. Joskow,Alfred E. Kahn,John W. Mayo,Patrick A. Messerlin,Bruce M. Owen,Robert S. Pindyck,Vernon L. Smith,Scott Wallsten,Leonard Waverman,Lawrence J. White &Scott Savage -manuscript
  10.  56
    A note on Plato's divided line.Robert Hahn -1983 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 21 (2):235-237.
  11.  20
    ΣΥΝΑΓΩΓΗ and the Problem of to ΠΕΡΑΣ in Philebus 25CB-E5.Robert Hahn -1979 -Philosophy Research Archives 5:623-646.
    The passage which occurs in Plato's Philebus 25C8-E2 examines the relation between three of four classes of Being which are introduced at 23C. Problems with the text and explication of the passage are considered. Ibis paper attempts to illuminate two central issues of the later dialogues on which the interpretation of this passage rests, the significance of πέρς or the limiting class of Being, and the overall operation of συναγωγή or collection, characterizing the method of diairesis, the foundation of the (...) later dialectic.This paper argues for the need to emend the text to read συμμισγομένων (or even συγγιγνομένων) since this is the significance required by the context; to take the referrent of έϗείνη to be πέρατος γέννα; and to understand άπείρου γέννα and πέρατος γέννα as the referrents of τούτων άμκροτέων. (shrink)
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  12.  31
    Architectural Technologies and the Origins of Greek Philosophy.Robert Hahn -2020 -Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 29:1-29.
    In this essay on ancient architectural technologies, I propose to challenge the largely conventional idea of the transcendent origins of philosophy, that philosophy dawned only when the mind turned inside, away from the world grasped by the body and senses. By focusing on one premier episode in the history of western thinking – the emergence of Greek philosophical thought in the cosmic architecture of Anaximander of Miletus – I am arguing that the abstract, speculative, rationalising thinking characteristic of philosophy, is (...) indeed rooted in practical activities, and emerges by means of them rather than in repudiation of them. The spirit of rational inquiry emerged from several factors but the contributing role of monumental architecture and building technologies has been vastly under-appreciated. In the process of figuring out how to build on an enormous scale that the eastern Greeks had never before tried, the architects discovered and revealed nature’s order in their thaumata, the very experience with which Aristotle claims that philosophy begins. Ancient architecture and building technologies were on display for decades with monumental temple building. In front of Anaximander and his community, a new vision of nature spawned that, surprisingly, humans could grasp and command. The building of these thaumata, these objects of wonder, offered proof of the human capacity to control nature, and opened a new vision of our human rational capacity to understand the world and our place in it. (shrink)
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  13.  62
    Explaining the cosmos: The Ionian traditIon of scientific philosophy (review).Robert Hahn -2008 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 46 (3):pp. 475-476.
    We can trace to archaic Greek times detailed accounts of the origins of the cosmos. Anaximander and Hesiod provide different kinds of narrative, but both assume that the cosmos as we find it now was not the way it was at the beginning, and seek to explain how things got this way. According to the conventional view provided by Aristotle in Metaphysics A, the Ionians proposed that everything is derived from a primordial substance and that, despite differences in the world (...) we now experience, all these things reduce ultimately to just one basic stuff, whether it be Thales' water, Anaximander's boundless, or Anaximenes' air . But Graham thinks Aristotle has it wrong and proposes a different story: the Ionians held that in the beginning there was a primordial substance, but it gave rise in turn to other, new substances, the original stuff perishing in the process . Graham's book sets out to challenge MM and to champion instead GST. He aims to show that GST is historically appropriate, philosophically coherent, and dialectically relevant. Ultimately, this is not just to urge a revision of Ionian beginnings but also to trace out the implications of GST in order to produce a new narrative of Presocratic philosophy, one that sees these Ionian beginnings as a clear precursor to. (shrink)
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  14.  16
    Kant's Newtonian Revolution in Philosophy.Robert Hahn -1988 - Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press.
    Hahn boldly corrects the misconceptions of Kant’s Copernican revolution in philosophy and explains the specific Newtonian model used by Kant to construct his own philosophy in the _Critique of Pure Reason. _ Relying on resources familiar to Kant—Newton’s _Opticks _and _Principia _and especially Christian von Wolff’s commentary on scientific method—Hahn argues that Kant viewed Copernicus as the proponent of a novel hypothesis while seeing Newton as the formulator of a rigorously deductive method. Intellectual revolutions, for Kant, are signaled by the (...) formulation of rigorous deductions. The revolution that Kant proposes to effect in the _Critique of Pure Reason _is based on Newton’s deductive method, not the hypothesis of Copernicus. Thus, the commonplace that Kant effects a Copernican revolution misrepresents Kant’s expressed views on the matter, it distorts Kant’s view of Copernicus, and it misleads us in our efforts to understand what the revolution in natural science meant to him, as the very model on which his metaphysics rests. (shrink)
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  15.  53
    Material causality, non—being, and Plato's "hypodoche": A re-view of the "timaeus" in terms of the divided line.Robert Hahn -1980 -Apeiron 14 (1):57.
  16.  124
    On Plato's Philebus 15B1-8.Robert Hahn -1978 -Phronesis 23 (2):158-172.
  17. Truth In The Context Of Heideger's Critique Of Plato And The Tradition.Robert Hahn -1979 -Southwest Philosophical Studies 4.
  18.  77
    Book Reviews Section 1.John E. Merryman,Sister Mary Olga Mckenna,George I. Brown,Robert O. Hahn,George Male,Donald P. Sanders,John W. Holland,John Buttrick,Erma F. Muckenhirn,Richard E. Schultz,Richard Elardo,Donald R. Warren,Alfred H. Moore,John Follman,Helen I. Snyder &Chester S. Williams -1972 -Educational Studies 3 (3):145-155.
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  19.  47
    Symbolic Logic.John E. Pfeiffer,Robert S. Hahn,O. F. Krause,Charles Bomgren,Alexander B. Morris &J. C. Brown -1951 -Journal of Symbolic Logic 16 (4):276-276.
  20. Jonathan Barnes, The Toils of Scepticism. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -1992 -Philosophy in Review 12 (1):6-8.
  21. Alteration and Identity in the Philosophy of Heraclitus. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -2009 -Skepsis: A Journal for Philosophy and Interdisciplinary Research 20.
     
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  22.  45
    Albert Presas i Puig. Praktische Geometrie und Kosmologie am Beispiel der Architektur. 339 pp., illus., bibl. Munich: Institut für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, 1998. DM 29.80. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -2003 -Isis 94 (2):341-342.
  23.  54
    Before Plato: Greek Philosophy VI. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -2004 -International Studies in Philosophy 36 (1):254-256.
  24.  49
    Review: Bencivenga, Kant's Copernican Revolution. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -1988 -Review of Metaphysics 42 (2):375-376.
    Ermanno Bencivenga offers us an interpretation of what he calls "Kant's Copernican Revolution" in philosophy. He proposes to illuminate the celebrated obscurity of the Critique by suggesting that it is neither the result of the complicated theory nor of the literary imperfections of the author. Rather, it is the result of the peculiar "revolution" which Kant sought to effect. On Bencivenga's account, Kant wrote the Critique when he was in the middle of a process of fighting against "old modes of (...) expression and old canons of understanding." Thus, the obscurity is a consequence of the new and not fully worked-out language which Kant employs to convey the meaning of this conceptual revolution. (shrink)
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  25. Philosophy and Politeia in Plato: the Philosopher-King and the Excellent Politeia. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -2009 -Skepsis: A Journal for Philosophy and Interdisciplinary Research 20.
  26. Rémi Brague, The Wisdom of the World: The Human Experience of the Universe in Western Thought Reviewed by. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -2004 -Philosophy in Review 24 (4):239-241.
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  27. Robin May Schott, Cognition and Eros: A Critique of the Kantian Paradigm Reviewed by. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -1990 -Philosophy in Review 10 (2):79-80.
     
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  28. Robert W. Hall, Plato. [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -1983 -Philosophy in Review 3:223-225.
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  29.  48
    W. H. Werkmeister, ed., "Facets of Plato's Philosophy". [REVIEW]Robert Hahn -1981 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 19 (2):242.
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