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LEADER: 02820cam a22003371 4500
001 000610748-6
005 20050404143041.0
008 730116s1963 oku 00000 eng
010 $a 63009955 /L/r82
020 $a0806112786 (pbk.)
035 0 $aocm00371050
040 $aDLC$cDLC
041 1 $aengspa
050 0 $aB1001$b.Z423
082 $a199.8
100 1 $aZea, Leopoldo,$d1912-
240 10 $aDos etapas del pensamiento en Hispanoamérica.$lEnglish
245 14 $aThe Latin-American mind /$cTranslated from the Spanish by James H. Abbott and Lowell Dunham.
250 $a1st ed.
260 0 $aNorman :$bUniversity of Oklahoma Press,$c1963.
300 $a308 p.$c24 cm.
500 $aTranslation of Dos etapas del pensamiento en Hispanoamérica.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 $aIntroduction -- Hispanic America and its historical conscience -- Romanticism in Hispanic America -- Positivism in Hispanic America -- Part 1. Mental emancipation -- Political emancipation and mental emancipation -- The Middle Ages and modernity in American culture -- The Spanish heritage in Hispanic America -- The urgency of political emancipation -- The new generation and its program -- North America as a model -- Toward a Hispanic-American solution -- Apprenticeship in foreign sources -- Toward the philosophy of a new order -- Part The new order -- Positivism as a liberal philosophy -- The orthodox and the heterodox -- Toward a political science -- Deception and destruction -- Positivism and nationality -- Positivism and social regeneration -- Positivism as education for freedom -- Positivism and the Argentine bourgeoisie -- Positivism and socialism -- Positivism and the new Hispanic ethics -- Positivism and the political emancipation of Cuba -- Spencer versus Hegel -- The Latin race and positivism.
520 $aThe present book seeks to present a comprehensive picture of one on the most important stages in Hispanic-American thought, a stage during which there were ardent discussions of the problems presented by the incorporation of Hispanic America into the new social, political, and educational currents, once political independence had been won from Spain. This period was regarded as the incorporation of Hispanic America into civilization. There followed a discussion of the problems arising from the formation of a new order that was to be a worthy substitute for the repudiated colonial order.
650 0 $aPhilosophy, Latin American.
650 0 $aPositivism.
650 0 $aPhilosophy, Spanish American.
776 08 $iOnline version:$aZea, Leopoldo, 1912-$sDos etapas del pensamiento en Hispanoamérica. English.$tLatin-American mind.$b[1st ed.]$dNorman, University of Oklahoma Press [1963]$w(OCoLC)632077775
988 $a20020608
906 $0DLC