Economic Benefits Of Algae Books
Political Ideologies An Introduction
Author: Andrew Heywood
School: National Open University of Nigeria
Department: Arts and Humanities
Course Code: PHL202
Topics: Political Ideologies, liberalism, conservatism, socialism, anarchism, nationalism, fascism, populism, ecologism, multiculturalism, fundamentalism, individualism, freedom, reason, justice, toleration, classical liberalism, modern liberalism, liberal democracy, tradition, human imperfection, organic society, hierarchy, authority, property, Libertarian conservatism, authoritarian conservatism, paternalistic conservatism, Christian democracy, community, cooperation, equality, class politics, common ownership, communism, social democracy, anti-statism, natural order, anti-clericalism, economic freedom, Collectivist anarchism, Individualist anarchism, Liberal nationalism, Conservative nationalism, Expansionist nationalism, Anti-colonial postcolonial, postcolonial nationalism, Anti-rationalism, leadership, elitism, Ultranationalism, Patriarchy, Traditional feminist theories, Systems thinking, Environmental ethics, Reformist ecology, Ecosocialism, Eco-anarchism, Ecofeminism, deep ecology, Liberal multiculturalism, Pluralist multiculturalism, Cosmopolitan multiculturalism, Anti-modernism, Militancy, essential truths, Islamism, Christian fundamentalism
Author: Nicholas Rescher
School: National Open University of Nigeria
Department: Arts and Humanities
Course Code: PHL203
Topics: Epistemology, modes of knowledge, fallibilism, truth estimation, preface paradox, Dialllus, Skepticism, certainty, certainty of logic, certainty of life, pragmatic inconsistency, skepticism, risk, rationality, cognitive risk, economic dimension, Epistemic Justification, Plausibility, Presumption, probability, Foundationalism, Coherentism, rational inquiry, cyclic systemization, Coherentist Criteriology, Cognitive Relativism, Contexualism, cognitive progress, scientific progress, Law of Logarithmic Returns, Natural Science Complexification, Imperfectability of Knowledge, pragmatic completeness, predictive completeness, temporal finality, ignorance, Insolubilia, Limits of Knowledge, erotetic incapacity, cognitive incapacity, identifying insolubillia, Cognitive Realism, existence, cognitive dynamics
Author: AZ Ibrahim
School: National Open University of Nigeria
Department: Arts and Humanities
Course Code: PHL204
Topics: Ethics, Divisions of Ethics, Ethics Methodology, Values of Ethics, Human Value, Nature of Human Conduct, human act, moral law, Justice, Conscience, ethics assumption, Plato’s Ethics, Aristotle’s Ethics, Epicurus’ Ethics, Diogenes’ Ethics, Zeno’s Ethics, Religious Ethics, Spinoza’s Ethics, Utilitarian’s Ethics, Kant’s Ethics, Etymology, Meta-Ethics, Realism, Intuitionism, Naturalism, Subjectivism, Relativism, Cognitivism, Non-Cognitivism, Universal prescriptivism, Normative Ethics, Consequentialism, Deontology, Virtue Theories, Applied Ethics, Egoism, Utilitarianism, ethics methodologies, Aesthetic Values, Religious Values, Socio-political Values, Economic Values, Ethical values, Moral Values, Instinct, intention, motive
Departments
Administration, Social and Management science
Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine
Arts and Humanities
Education
Engineering
General studies
Law
Medical, Pharmaceutical and Health science
Science and Technology