History, Religion, and AntisemitismTauris, 1990 - 380 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 46 筆
第 252 頁
... irrational , and if so , how and how much ? To answer that ques- tion we must look at historical societies . After some preliminary consideration of the nature of irrationality , I shall therefore turn to the historical example I know ...
... irrational , and if so , how and how much ? To answer that ques- tion we must look at historical societies . After some preliminary consideration of the nature of irrationality , I shall therefore turn to the historical example I know ...
第 257 頁
... irrationality — but it is also what can make irrational- ity so lethal . However the SS perceived Jews , they knew that Jews had bodies of different ages and genders and could be killed . If irrationality is a psychological reaction of ...
... irrationality — but it is also what can make irrational- ity so lethal . However the SS perceived Jews , they knew that Jews had bodies of different ages and genders and could be killed . If irrationality is a psychological reaction of ...
第 266 頁
... irrational beliefs are propagated in a way that dissuades people from thinking about them rationally . The people who repeatedly and emphatically proclaim irrational beliefs typically present them as " facts " in the context of ...
... irrational beliefs are propagated in a way that dissuades people from thinking about them rationally . The people who repeatedly and emphatically proclaim irrational beliefs typically present them as " facts " in the context of ...
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
accept actions adherents anti-Judaism antisemitism argued Aryan assertions atheists attributed aware Catholicism century characteristics Christ Christian beliefs Christian religions church compensators conception conduct conflict consciousness cosmic culture definition of religion deicide denotative describe developed discussion distinction distinguish doubts empirical knowledge Eucharist example existence explanation expressed faith fantasies fundamental Geertz Germany historians human Ibid ideas identity individuals irrational irrationality Jesus Jewish Jews Judaic religion Judaism kind language Léon Poliakov ligion Marxist meaning medieval mental Nazis Nazism nineteenth nonrational beliefs nonrational thinking objective observable obvious over-beliefs Pauline Christianity Peter the Venerable pirical political prescribed prescriptions problem psychological racial antisemitism rational empirical knowledge rational empirical thinking rational thinking rationally and empirically reactions recognize reductionism reli religion and religiosity religious beliefs religious phenomena rewards ritual ritual murder Roman sacred salient scholars semiotic sense society supernatural surrogate religions symbols Talmud tension theories think rationally thought tional tions traditional religions understanding York