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Slovene philosophy includes philosophers who were either Slovenes or came from what is now Slovenia This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
In 1967, during an era of liberalization in Titoist Yugoslavia, Žižek enrolled at the University of Ljubljana and studied philosophy and sociology. [16] Žižek had already begun reading French structuralists prior to entering university, and in 1967 he published the first translation of a text by Jacques Derrida into Slovenian. [17]
Ljubljana school of psychoanalysis (Slovene: Ljubljanska psihoanalitska šola or Ljubljanska šola za psihoanalizo), also known as the Ljubljana Lacanian School [1] (Slovene: Ljubljanska lakanovska šola), is a popular name for a school of thought centred on the Society for Theoretical Psychoanalysis based in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Slovenian political philosophers (3 P) Pages in category "Slovenian philosophers" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
Katarina Majerhold is a Slovenian philosopher, writer and editor. She is particularly interested in philosophy of emotions, especially in philosophy of love and sexuality, happiness, philosophical counseling and ethics. In 2017 she published an article on the History of Love in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. [1]
Dean Komel (born 7 June 1960) is a Slovenian philosopher. He was born in the small village of Bilje in the Goriška region of Slovenia, then part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. After finishing the Nova Gorica Grammar School, he studied philosophy and comparative literature at the University of Ljubljana.
He was born in Ljubljana, Slovenia, then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.In 1961, he became professor at the University of Ljubljana. [1] For more than thirty years, he taught Marxist theory and history of philosophy at the Ljubljana University; many renowned Slovenian philosophers and sociologists were among his pupils, including Slavoj Žižek, Mladen Dolar, Rastko Močnik, Renata Salecl ...
Aleš Ušeničnik. Aleš Ušeničnik (3 July 1868 – 30 March 1952) [1] was a Slovene Roman Catholic priest, philosopher, sociologist and theologian.He was one of the main philosophers of neo-Thomism in Slovenia and in Yugoslavia.