Proper noun
Wolin (plural Wolins)
A surname.
As Sheldon Wolin puts it, "Tocqueville was aware of the harshness and bigotry of the early colonists". Source: Internet
Jerry Z. Muller, ed. Conservatism: an anthology of social and political thought from David Hume to the present (Princeton University Press, 1997); Sheldon Wolin, 'Hume and Conservatism', American Political Science Review 48 (1954), pp. 999–1016. Source: Internet
The level of Gadamer's involvement with the Nazis has been disputed in the works of Richard Wolin and Teresa Orozco.sfn Orozco alleges, with reference to Gadamer's published works, that Gadamer had supported the Nazis more than scholars had supposed. Source: Internet
Karl Löwith, "My last meeting with Heidegger in Rome", in R. Wolin, The Heidegger Controversy (MIT Press, 1993). Source: Internet
Richard Wolin, Preface to the MIT press edition: Note on a missing text. Source: Internet
Richard Wolin, the author of several books on Heidegger and a close reader of the Faye book, said he is not convinced Heidegger’s thought is as thoroughly tainted by Nazism as Mr. Faye argues. Source: Internet