Continental philosophy  

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'''Continental philosophy''' is a term that originated among [[English-speaking]] philosophers to describe various [[philosophy|philosophical]] traditions strongly influenced by certain [[19th century philosophy|19th]] and [[20th century philosophy|20th]] century philosophers from mainland [[Europe]]. The term is typically used in contrast with [[analytic philosophy]]. The traditions comprising continental philosophy include [[German idealism]], [[phenomenology]], [[existentialism]] and its antecedents, [[hermeneutics]], [[structuralism]], [[post-structuralism]], [[French feminism]], and the [[critical theory]] of the [[Frankfurt School]] and some other branches of western [[Marxism]]. '''Continental philosophy''' is a term that originated among [[English-speaking]] philosophers to describe various [[philosophy|philosophical]] traditions strongly influenced by certain [[19th century philosophy|19th]] and [[20th century philosophy|20th]] century philosophers from mainland [[Europe]]. The term is typically used in contrast with [[analytic philosophy]]. The traditions comprising continental philosophy include [[German idealism]], [[phenomenology]], [[existentialism]] and its antecedents, [[hermeneutics]], [[structuralism]], [[post-structuralism]], [[French feminism]], and the [[critical theory]] of the [[Frankfurt School]] and some other branches of western [[Marxism]].
-==See also==+ 
 +== See also ==
 +*[[20th century philosophy]]
 +*[[Alain Badiou]]
* [[Analytic philosophy]] * [[Analytic philosophy]]
 +*''[[Being and Time]]''
 +*[[Critical theory]]
 +*[[Existentialism]]
 +*[[Europe]]
 +*[[Feminist theory]]
 +*[[French feminism]]
 +*[[French philosophy]]
 +*[[German philosophy]]
* [[Index of continental philosophy articles]] * [[Index of continental philosophy articles]]
-* [[Existential Thomism]]+*[[Jacques Derrida]]
 +*[[Literary criticism]]
 +*[[Literary theory]]
* [[Marxism]] * [[Marxism]]
-* [[Speculative realism]] 
* [[Non-philosophy]] * [[Non-philosophy]]
- +*[[Other]]
-== See also ==+
-*[[Twentieth-century French philosophy]]+
*[[Philosophy]] *[[Philosophy]]
*[[Postmodernism]] *[[Postmodernism]]
-*[[French philosophy]] 
-*[[Literary criticism]] 
-*[[Europe]] 
-*[[Literary theory]] 
-*[[Structuralism]] 
-*[[Existentialism]] 
*[[Post-structuralism]] *[[Post-structuralism]]
-*[[Critical theory]]+*[[Radical Philosophy]]
-*[[Jacques Derrida]]+*[[Relativism]]
 +* [[Speculative realism]]
 +*[[Structuralism]]
 +*[[Twentieth-century French philosophy]]
*[[Verso Books]] *[[Verso Books]]
-*[[Other]] 
-*[[French feminism]] 
-*[[Analytic philosophy]] 
*[[Western philosophy]] *[[Western philosophy]]
-*[[Feminist theory]] 
-*[[Relativism]] 
-*[[German philosophy]] 
-*''[[Being and Time]]'' 
-*[[20th century philosophy]] 
-*[[Radical Philosophy]] 
-*[[Alain Badiou]] 
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

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Continental philosophy is a term that originated among English-speaking philosophers to describe various philosophical traditions strongly influenced by certain 19th and 20th century philosophers from mainland Europe. The term is typically used in contrast with analytic philosophy. The traditions comprising continental philosophy include German idealism, phenomenology, existentialism and its antecedents, hermeneutics, structuralism, post-structuralism, French feminism, and the critical theory of the Frankfurt School and some other branches of western Marxism.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Continental philosophy" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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