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<DIV>On Mon, 06 Aug 2001 10:05:01 -0700 Kenneth MacKendrick <<A
href="mailto:kenneth.mackendrick@utoronto.ca">kenneth.mackendrick@utoronto.ca</A>>
writes:<BR>> Charles Taylor and Terry Pinkard were both mentioned, both are
<BR>> excellent.<BR>> <BR>> If you want dirt, read Pinkard; if you want
philosophy, read Taylor. <BR>> <BR>> Although non-biographical, Marcuse's
Reason and Revolution is <BR>> excellent as <BR>> well.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>I guess if one is going to go that route<I>,</I>then in addition to Herbert
Marcuse's </DIV>
<DIV><I><A href="thismessage:/marcuse/works/reason/marcuse1.htm">Reason and
Revolution</A></I>, one might also want to take a look at </DIV>
<DIV>Sidney Hook's <EM>From Hegel To Marx, </EM>and Kojeve's <I><A
href="thismessage:/subject/philosophy/works/fr/kojeve.htm">Introduction to the
Reading of Hegel</A>.</I></DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Jim F.</DIV>
<DIV><BR>> <BR>> ken<BR>> <BR>> </DIV>
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