The tasks of philosophy do not fluctuate, in any way, from one period to another. It is basically the origin of all sciences. When there is less concern to obtain wisdom, philosophy, therefore, would aid a lot to crack this issue by what it has to teach. This theory raises the questions: what are the principles that philosophy is supposed to teach? Why it ought to be considered? And to what extant it is related to liberated learned man?
Actually, the value that philosophy does, or should teach, is the interconnection between its partial relation to thoughts and its partial relation to feelings. Philosophy should broaden the rational imagination, and free the mentality from the chauvinisms of what are ordinary people. These people are those who identify only material needs, and those who depend only on food, to feed their stomach. Besides, the value of philosophy teaches that feeding the mind is just as significant as the body. It is exclusively the goods of the mind that the value of philosophy is to be originated, and only those who are not indifferent to these goods can profit from the philosophical ideas.
Moreover, philosophy, which is the origin of all sciences, aims mainly to knowledge. It gives a way out door to separate our selves from the here and the now, from the moment and the space. Also, through the study of philosophy, it increases our awareness of comprehension, removes the stubbornness, and it keeps alive our sense of speculation by showing recognizable things in an unusual aspect. In addition, there is a widespread philosophical propensity towards the view which tells us that Man is the measure of all things, that space, the moment, and the world of universals are properties of the mind. If there is anything not created by mind, it is unknown and of no accounts for us.
Up to this point, everything that depends upon a habit, self-interest, or desire, distorts the object, and therefore impairs the union which the intellect seeks. The intellectual will look at things from a perfection point of view. Out of moment and position and without hopes and fears, peacefully, for the sake of pure knowledge. Furthermore, free intellects will signify much more the abstract and universal knowledge, as such information, must be upon an limited and personal point of view and a body whose sense-organs distort as much as they reveal.
In conclusion, Philosophy is meant to be studied, not for the sake of finding response, but for the sake of subjects themselves. These subjects expand our idea of what is probable, supplement our intellectual imagination and reduce the inflexible assurance which locks the intelligence next to hearsay.
Abdelmalik Essaadi University
Abdelkrim Amrani
English Study
S5
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
The tasks of philosophy
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Veolia Morocco arm opens capital to institutions
RABAT, Dec 11 (Reuters) - The Moroccan arm of French utility group Veolia Environnement (VIE.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) opened its capital to two financial institutions on Tuesday, saying the move would underpin its development in the north African kingdom.
Fipar, a unit of Moroccan state investment vehicle Caisse de Depot et de Gestion, acquired 9 percent of Veolia Environnement Maroc, while AIG Infrastructure Fund took 10 percent, officials said at a signing ceremony in the Moroccan capital Rabat.
"Through this stake acquisition ... Veolia Environnement wishes to have by its side top-tier national and international institutional partners able to accompany its development," Veolia said in a statement distributed at the ceremony.
The deal was worth 494 million dirhams ($63.83 million), based on the nominal value of Veolia Environnement Maroc's 26.49 million shares.
The utility, which owns water and power concessions in the northern Moroccan towns of Tangier, Tetouan, Rabat and Sale, said its annual consolidated turnover was 4.4 billion dirhams and net profit was 85 million dirhams.
AIG Infrastructure Fund is managed by Emerging Capital partners, a private equity group which oversees investments across Africa. (Reporting by Tom Pfeiffer, editing by Richard Chang)
from this website :
http://www.reuters.com/article/mergersNews/idUSN1153027520071211
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Sunday, December 9, 2007
Women Call for More Sports Facilities
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Star DiCaprio lauded in Morocco
Scorsese called the 33-year-old "a very good friend and wonderful actor" as he presented him with a Golden Star award.
"I never fail to be amazed by his clear and complete commitment to his work," said the Oscar-winning film-maker.
The actor, who has worked with Scorsese on three films to date, returned the compliment by calling him "a legend".
The pair are set to reunite next year for their fourth movie together, thriller Shutter Island.
Contribution
Moroccan director Mostafa Darkaoui was also awarded a Golden Star in recognition of his contribution to cinema in his homeland.
More than 100 films will be shown at this year's festival, which opened with a screening of period drama Elizabeth: The Golden Age.
Its director, India's Shekhar Kapur, sits on a jury headed by the Czech-born filmmaker Milos Forman.
The festival, which honoured Scorsese himself in 2005, runs until 15 December.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/entertainment/7134276.stm
Published: 2007/12/08 12:57:42 GMT
© BBC MMVII
from BBC
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Saturday, December 1, 2007
In Depth: The Kurdish Way
the original site is http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc120107FZ.html
We have copied this interview from there
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Moroccan hopes dashed of hosting 2012 World Expo
The suspense is over: Tangier will not be hosting the 2012 World Expo. The final decision, which put an end to Morocco's hopes, was announced at 9pm on Monday (November 26th) in Paris. After months of campaigning to win the bid, Morocco lost out to a strong rival – South Korea. When the 140 member states of the International Exhibitions Bureau held a secret ballot at the organisation’s 42nd General Assembly, Yeosu won 77 votes, beating Tangier’s 63. The third bidder, Poland, had been eliminated in the first round after receiving only 13 votes.
The Moroccan delegation said Morocco had sought the World Expo not only for itself but also for the whole of Africa, the Mediterranean region and the Arab and Muslim world. Member Abdellatif Benazzi said the country mounted an exemplary campaign. "Morocco presented a vision of a future where individuals are at the heart of the development process. We believed in our values," he said.
Moroccan Communications Minister Khalid Nasiri expressed his bitter disappointment, saying that Morocco made a very credible effort and did all it could in the face of strong competition. "I feel my country has suffered an injustice. Morocco put in an outstanding bid; all those who watched the three presentations objectively believed Morocco’s was by far the most original and had the most spirit," he said.
Morocco still has every reason to be proud, Nasiri noted. "Plans to develop the northern region and the rest of the country will continue, with or without the Tangier Expo. These plans will support our nation and our principles. Whatever the outcome may have been, Morocco has come away from this with its head held high. Our cities will continue to develop," he declared.
Although Tangier residents seem equally confident that development of their region will continue, they were disappointed to learn their home city will not host the World Expo. Medical student Hakima Hachimi said the city’s inhabitants really believed in Tangier’s chances and never doubted that victory would be theirs.
"Morocco’s bid was a cultural one. It would have been the first African and Arab country to host a World Expo. The theme 'World highways, cultural crossroads: for a more united world' was closely linked to Morocco’s identity as a nation of sharing, tolerance and cohabitation of cultures and civilisations. It’s a real shame," Hachimi lamented.
Teacher Salim Moha was more optimistic: "Sure, the Expo would have boosted the country’s economy further, but the north will continue to develop – as you can see from projects such as the Tanger-Méditerranée port."
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