This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0002050705 Reproduction Date:
Czech philosophy, has often eschewed "pure" speculative philosophy,[1] emerging rather in the course of intellectual debates in the fields of education (e.g. Jan Amos Komenský), art (e.g. Karel Teige), literature (e.g. Milan Kundera), and especially politics (e.g. Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Karel Kosík, Ivan Sviták, Václav Havel).
Czech philosophers have also played a central role in the development of phenomenology, whose German-speaking founder Edmund Husserl was born in the Czech lands. Czechs Jan Patočka and Václav Bělohradský would later make important contributions to phenomenological thought.
Prague, Ústí nad Labem Region, Czech language, Moravian-Silesian Region, Holy Roman Empire
United Kingdom, Sudetenland, Czech Republic, Prague Spring, Czechoslovakia
Czech Republic, Central Bohemian Region, Prague, Karlovy Vary Region, Plzeň Region
Czech Republic, Regions of the Czech Republic, Government of the Czech Republic, Czech Social Democratic Party, Foreign relations of the Czech Republic
Czech Republic, Prague, South Korea, Seoul, Republic of Korea
Moravia, History of Europe, World War I, World War II, Czech Republic
Education, Epistemology, Metaphysics, Philosophy, Aesthetics
Law enforcement in the Czech Republic, Czech Republic, Romani people, History of Czechoslovakia, Regions of the Czech Republic
Czech Republic, Czech language, Great Moravia, Easter, Age of Enlightenment