The Meaning of the War - Life and Matter in Conflict: With a Chapter from Bergson and his Philosophy by J. Alexander Gunn
English


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About The Book

The Meaning of the War - Life and Matter in Conflict is a 1915 work within which Henri Bergson explores Germanys policy of might is right as practised by Bismarck the Prussian empire and Germany in its long and bloody history of aggression against its neighbours. Contents include: Life Of Bergson Introduction Life And Matter At War and The Force Which Wastes And That Which Does Not Waste. Henri-Louis Bergson (1859-1941) was a French-Jewish philosopher. He had a significant influence on the tradition of continental philosophy during the first half of the twentieth century until World War II and is famous for his idea that immediate experience and intuition are more important than abstract rationalism and science for understanding the nature of reality. In 1927 Bergson received The Nobel Prize in Literature. Other notable works by this author include: The Philosophy of Poetry: The Genius of Lucretius (1884) Time and Free Will: An Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness (1889) and Matter and Memory (1896). This classic work is being republished now in a new edition complete with a Chapter From Bergson And His Philosophy by J. Alexander Gunn.
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