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OverviewA College-Level Textbook from Indigenous Foundations to Chicano Philosophy This textbook treats Mexican philosophy not as an appendix to European thought, but as a field with its own arguments, pressures, and conceptual power. It challenges the assumption that Latin American thought is merely derivative, presenting it instead as a dynamic tradition of resistance, synthesis, and rigor. The book shows how philosophical problems in Mexico took shape under colonial rupture, cultural mixture, and recurring struggles over authority. It tracks how concepts were built and contested in concrete historical settings, where ideas were not ornaments but instruments of critique, survival, and institutional design. Spanning more than five centuries, the volume provides a structured framework for students to analyze key stages of development: Indigenous Traditions: Nahua ontology and the aesthetic-ethical ideal of in xochitl, in cuicatl (""Flower and Song""), alongside Maya reflections on cyclical time and mathematical order. The Colonial Synthesis: The architecture of New Spanish Scholasticism, Jesuit humanism, and the intellectual defiance of Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz. The Critical Turn: The nineteenth-century struggle between Liberalism and Conservatism, and the rise of Positivism as a framework for education and modernization. Modern Critical Thought: The search for lo mexicano, Octavio Paz and the problem of identity, the Philosophy of Liberation, and contemporary horizons of Chicano philosophy and border thinking. Pedagogical Features and Scholarly Precision Written for students, instructors, and serious readers, this book offers a clear historical arc and a sharp conceptual spine. It is built on verified translations and direct engagement with primary texts, allowing readers to trace specific arguments about hierarchy, freedom, and human dignity. Mexican philosophy appears here as a distinct tradition of critical inquiry-one that asks, under changing forms of power, what it means to reason, to belong, and to live upright. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Andrew V KudinPublisher: Kudin & Sons Academic Press Imprint: Kudin & Sons Academic Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.912kg ISBN: 9781971325033ISBN 10: 1971325031 Pages: 532 Publication Date: 31 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationAndrew V. Kudin, PhD, is a philosophy professor and author with more than four decades of teaching and research experience. He holds two doctoral degrees-a PhD in Philosophy and a PhD in Law. This combination of rigorous scholarship and legal expertise allows him to bring analytical precision to his work. His research focuses on the history of world philosophy and religious studies, placing classical traditions within a global context.Dr. Kudin has traveled to over sixty countries, immersing himself in diverse intellectual worlds. This firsthand experience supports a comparative approach that respects the specific cultural settings in which ideas take shape. He is guided by a deep belief in the transformative power of knowledge, viewing education as the key to overcoming ignorance and as a guide toward a more meaningful life.He is the author of the six-volume series The Secret Codes of the Mind: Introduction to Philosophy. In Mexican Philosophy: History, Traditions, and Critical Thought, Andrew V. Kudin applies his extensive teaching experience to Mexico's philosophical tradition and presents it as a distinct field shaped by Indigenous foundations, colonial debate, nineteenth-century ideological conflict, and modern critical inquiry. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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