Results for 'A. O'Donovan'

991 found
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  1.  15
    Human Rights and Legal History: Essays in Honour of Brian Simpson.A. W. Brian Simpson, Katherine O'Donovan & Gerry R. Rubin - 2000 - Oxford University Press on Demand.
    This book brings together essays on themes of human rights and legal history, reflecting the long and distinguished career of Brian Simpson as an academic writer and a human rights activist. The collection opens with a biography of Simpson's academic life, noting his major contribution to legal thought, and closes with an account of his career in the United States.
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  2.  30
    Implicit measurement of positive and negative future thinking as a predictor of depressive symptoms and hopelessness.Liv Kosnes, Robert Whelan, Aoife O’Donovan & Louise A. McHugh - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (3):898-912.
    Research using explicit measures has linked decreased positive future thinking, but not increased negative future thinking, with clinical depression. However, individuals may be unable or unwilling to express thoughts about the future, and can be unaware of implicit beliefs that can influence their behavior. Implicit measures of cognition may shed light on the role of future thinking in depression. To our knowledge, the current study presents the first implicit measure of positive and negative future thinking. A sample of 71 volunteers (...)
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  3. A reformation ethics: Proclamation and jurisdiction as determinants of moral agency and action.Joan Lockwood O'donovan - 2006 - Philosophia Reformata 71 (1):58-78.
     
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  4.  47
    Historical Prolegomena To a Theological Review of 'Human Rights'.Joan Lockwood O'Donovan - 1996 - Studies in Christian Ethics 9 (2):52-65.
  5.  32
    Does deliberative democracy need deliberative democrats? Revisiting Habermas’ defence of discourse ethics.Nick O'Donovan - 2013 - Contemporary Political Theory 12 (2):123-144.
    Many political theorists today appeal to, or assume the existence of, a political culture in which the public values of Western liberal democracies are embedded – a political culture that is necessary to render their ideas plausible and their proposals feasible. This article contrasts this approach with the more ambitious arguments advanced by Jürgen Habermas in his original account of discourse ethics – a moral theory to which, he supposed, all human beings were demonstrably and ineluctably bound by the communicative (...)
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  6.  6
    Resurrection and moral order: an outline for evangelical ethics.Oliver O'Donovan - 1986 - Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans.
    In this revision of a seminal work, O'Donovan describes the shape of a Christian moral theology which has wide implications for creation, history, knowledge, freedom, and authority--his purpose being to outline a system of theological ethics and to describe the nature of the moral response within redeemed creation: acts of surrender, obedience, and love.
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  7. Providing ethics advice in a pandemic, in theory and in practice: A taxonomy of ethics advice.James Wilson, Jack Hume, Cian O'Donovan & Melanie Smallman - 2024 - Bioethics 38 (3):213-222.
    The pandemic significantly raised the stakes for the translation of bioethics insights into policy. The novelty, range and sheer quantity of the ethical problems that needed to be addressed urgently within public policy were unprecedented and required high‐bandwidth two‐way transfer of insights between academic bioethics and policy. Countries such as the United Kingdom, which do not have a National Ethics Committee, faced particular challenges in how to facilitate this. This paper takes as a case study the brief career of the (...)
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  8.  21
    Pushing the boundaries: Uterine transplantation and the limits of reproductive autonomy.Laura O’Donovan - 2018 - Bioethics 32 (8):489-498.
    Over the course of recent years, various scientific advances in the realm of reproduction have changed the reproductive landscape, enhancing women’s procreative rights and the choices available to them. Uterus transplants (UTx) are the latest of such medical innovations aimed at restoring fertility in women suffering from absolute uterine factor infertility, providing them with the possibility not only of conceiving a genetically related child but also of gestating their own pregnancies. This paper critically examines the primacy of reproductive liberty in (...)
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  9. Why Race and Gender Still Matter: An Intersectional Approach.Namita Goswami, Maeve M. O'Donovan & Lisa Yount (eds.) - 2014 - London: Pickering & Chatto.
    Intersectionality, the attempt to bring theories on race, gender, disability and sexuality together, has existed for decades as a theoretical framework. The essays in this volume explore how intersectionality can be applied to modern philosophy, as well as looking at other disciplines.
  10. The Just War Revisited.Oliver O'Donovan - 2003 - Cambridge University Press.
    Leading political theologian Oliver O'Donovan here takes a fresh look at some traditional moral arguments about war. Modern Christians differ widely on this issue. A few hold that absolute pacifism is the only viable Christian position, others subscribe in various ways to concepts of 'just war' developed out of a Western tradition that arose from the legacies of Augustine and Aquinas, while others still adopt more pragmatically realist postures. Professor O'Donovan re-examines questions of contemporary urgency including the use (...)
     
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  11. Book Review : The New Republic: a Commentary on Bk. 1 of More's Utopia showing its relation to Plato's Republic, by Colin Starnes. Waterloo, Wilfred Laurier University Press, 1990. xiv + 122 pp. CAN $24.95. [REVIEW]Joan Lockwood O'Donovan - 1991 - Studies in Christian Ethics 4 (2):87-91.
  12.  25
    The Effect of Environmental Activism on the Long-run Market Value of a Company: A Case Study.Robert Lewis, Gary O’Donovan & Roger Willett - 2017 - Journal of Business Ethics 140 (3):455-476.
    This paper investigates the impact of activism on a large, powerful corporation in Tasmania. Gunns Ltd was a large woodchip processor in Tasmania that fought a long-running battle with environmental activists regarding Gunns’ logging and processing activities. The study focuses on events in 2004–2005, when Gunns applied to build a pulp mill in rural northern Tasmania and began a legal case against activists. The research question is whether there is clear statistical evidence that these events were important, as is widely (...)
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  13.  5
    Healthcare Professionals Experience of Psychological Safety, Voice, and Silence.Róisín O'Donovan, Aoife De Brún & Eilish McAuliffe - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Healthcare professionals who feel psychologically safe believe it is safe to take interpersonal risks such as voicing concerns, asking questions and giving feedback. Psychological safety is a complex phenomenon which is influenced by organizational, team and individual level factors. However, it has primarily been assessed as a team-level phenomenon. This study focused on understanding healthcare professionals' individual experiences of psychological safety. We aim to gain a fuller understanding of the influence team leaders, interpersonal relationships and individual characteristics have on individuals' (...)
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  14.  26
    Why Do Medical Professional Regulators Dismiss Most Complaints From Members of the Public? Regulatory Illiteracy, Epistemic Injustice, and Symbolic Power.Orla O’Donovan & Deirdre Madden - 2018 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 15 (3):469-478.
    Drawing on an analysis of complaint files that we conducted for the Irish Medical Council, this paper offers three possible explanations for the gap between the ubiquity of official commitments to taking patients’ complaints seriously and medical professional regulators’ dismissal—as not warranting an inquiry—of the vast majority of complaints submitted by members of the public. One explanation points to the “regulatory illiteracy” of many complainants, where the remit and threshold of seriousness of regulators is poorly understood by the general public. (...)
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  15.  5
    Wax Moulages and the Pastpresence Work of the Dead.Órla O’Donovan - 2021 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 46 (2):231-253.
    In this article, I use a nineteenth-century anatomical collection of wax moulages, currently off-staged in the storage facilities in the university where I work, to think about the matter of human remains. Rather than seeing the gross pathology moulages as inert teaching resources, I propose they are agential assemblages, entangled in which are human remains, and that they can be included amongst the dead. I consider their capacity to perform pastpresence work, a particular kind of work of the dead that (...)
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  16.  44
    Content and Comportment: On Embodiment and the Epistemic Availability of the World.Michael O'Donovan-Anderson - 1997 - Lanham: Rowman &Amp; Littlefield.
    "Content and Comportment argues persuasively that the answer to some long-standing questions in epistemology and metaphysics lies in taking up the neglected question of the role of our bodily activity in establishing connections between representational states—knowledge and belief in particular—and their objects in the world. It takes up these ideas from both current mainstream analytic philosophy—Frege, Dummett, Davidson, Evans—and from mainstream continental work—Heidegger and his commentators and critics—and bings them together successfully in a way that should surprise only those who (...)
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  17.  20
    The Incorporated Self: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Embodiment.Michael O'Donovan-Anderson - 1996 - Rowman & Littlefield.
    The Incorporated Self demonstrates that although embodiment has long been a central concern of the theoretical humanities, its potential to alter epistemology and open up new areas of dualistic inquiry has not been pursued far enough. This anthology collects the the works of scholars from a broad range of disciplines, each examining the nature of the body and the necessity of embodiment to the human experience -- for our self awareness, our sense of identity, and the workings of the mind.
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  18. Comparative genetic architectures of schizophrenia in East Asian and European populations.Max Lam, Chia-Yen Chen, Zhiqiang Li, Alicia R. Martin, Julien Bryois, Xixian Ma, Helena Gaspar, Masashi Ikeda, Beben Benyamin, Brielin C. Brown, Ruize Liu, Wei Zhou, Lili Guan, Yoichiro Kamatani, Sung-Wan Kim, Michiaki Kubo, Agung Kusumawardhani, Chih-Min Liu, Hong Ma, Sathish Periyasamy, Atsushi Takahashi, Zhida Xu, Hao Yu, Feng Zhu, Wei J. Chen, Stephen Faraone, Stephen J. Glatt, Lin He, Steven E. Hyman, Hai-Gwo Hwu, Steven A. McCarroll, Benjamin M. Neale, Pamela Sklar, Dieter B. Wildenauer, Xin Yu, Dai Zhang, Bryan J. Mowry, Jimmy Lee, Peter Holmans, Shuhua Xu, Patrick F. Sullivan, Stephan Ripke, Michael C. O’Donovan, Mark J. Daly, Shengying Qin, Pak Sham, Nakao Iwata, Kyung S. Hong, Sibylle G. Schwab, Weihua Yue, Ming Tsuang, Jianjun Liu, Xiancang Ma, René S. Kahn, Yongyong Shi & Hailiang Huang - 2019 - Nature Genetics 51 (12):1670-1678.
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  19. The language of rights and conceptual history.Oliver O'Donovan - 2009 - Journal of Religious Ethics 37 (2):193-207.
    The historical problem about the origins of the language of rights derives its importance from the conceptual problem: of "two fundamentally different ways of thinking about justice," which is basic? Is justice unitary or plural? This in turn opens up a problem about the moral status of human nature. A narrative of the origins of "rights" is an account of how and when a plural concept of justice comes to the fore, and will be based on the occurrence of definite (...)
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  20.  23
    Representation.Oliver O’Donovan - 2016 - Studies in Christian Ethics 29 (2):135-145.
    Representation is an essential element of political authority, together with power and judgment, the latest to be acknowledged in the Christian West, coming to recognition in the Middle Ages with the expectation of a plurality of national identities. Its initial points of reference were theological, to Israel and to the dual office of Christ as priest and king, but in modern developments it has been understood especially in terms of legal forms. Government represents an existing political identity, bound up with (...)
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  21.  8
    Rights, Law and Political Community: A theological and historical perspective.Joan O'Donovan - 2003 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 20 (1):30-38.
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  22. Auchmuty, Rosemary, 263 Biggs, Hazel, 171 Burton, Mandy, 247 Chaplin, Sue, 199.Man Chung Chiu, Davina Cooper, A. Diduck, Katherine Doolin, Peter Goodrich, Daphna Hacker, Catherine Hobby, K. Keywood, Katherine O’Donovan & Erika Rackley - 2001 - Feminist Legal Studies 9 (275).
     
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  23.  5
    Entering into rest.Oliver O'Donovan - 2017 - Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
    Oliver O'Donovan's Ethics as Theology project began withSelf, World, and Time, an "induction" into Christian ethics as ordered reflection on moral thinking within the life of faith. Volume 2, Finding and Seeking, shifted the focus to the movement of moral thought from a first consciousness of agency to the time that determines the moment of decision. In this third and final volume of his magnum opus, O'Donovan turns his attention to the forward horizon with which moral thinking must (...)
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  24.  12
    Timely Reformation Scholarship and Theology versus the Grand Historical Narratives: A Review Essay.Joan Lockwood O’Donovan - 2018 - Studies in Christian Ethics 31 (4):463-470.
    This article reviews Michael Laffin’s fresh presentation of Luther’s political theology, which draws on contemporary Lutheran theological scholarship and interpretation to counter the assaults on Luther’s thought by such representative modernity critics as Milbank and Herdt.
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  25.  34
    The Future of Theological Ethics.Oliver O’Donovan - 2012 - Studies in Christian Ethics 25 (2):186-198.
    Ethics is distinguished as a field of study within the realm of organised knowledge which interprets moral experience. Christian ethics assumes this interpretation into the hermeneutic framework of Christian theology in relation to a hope for the renewal and recovery of human agency. Its theme is moral thinking in general, which it understands within the framework of faith. It is dependent on philosophical ethics, but presumes and aims at more. The concepts handled by theological ethics include analytic categories coined to (...)
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  26.  8
    Human Rights and Legal History: Essays in Honour of Brian Simpson.Katherine O'Donovan & Gerry R. Rubin (eds.) - 2000 - Oxford University Press UK.
    A collection of essays with themes in human rights and legal history, spanning several centuries, containing a tribute to one of the most remarkable jurists of our time. Linked by an historical and contextual approach, these essays add to knowledge of legal history and human rights and provide a reference point for future research.
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  27.  13
    Augustine’s Treatment of the Great Psalm.Oliver O’Donovan - 2022 - Augustinian Studies 53 (2):131-152.
    An ancient Hebrew poem of uncertain background and fastidiously subtle formal technique is made the subject of a commentary by a fifth-century Latin bishop with no Hebrew, working with a poor Latin translation, who, moreover, dismisses the formal complexities of the composition as irrelevant to interpretation. Claiming to detect hidden depths beneath the Great Psalm’s limpid surface, Augustine uses it as an opportunity to revisit some of the favorite themes of his own later writing. Has he read the text with (...)
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  28.  5
    Augustine’s Treatment of the Great Psalm.Oliver O’Donovan - 2022 - Augustinian Studies 53 (2):131-152.
    An ancient Hebrew poem of uncertain background and fastidiously subtle formal technique is made the subject of a commentary by a fifth-century Latin bishop with no Hebrew, working with a poor Latin translation, who, moreover, dismisses the formal complexities of the composition as irrelevant to interpretation. Claiming to detect hidden depths beneath the Great Psalm’s limpid surface, Augustine uses it as an opportunity to revisit some of the favorite themes of his own later writing. Has he read the text with (...)
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  29.  29
    In All Seasons.Leo J. O'Donovan - 2012 - Philosophy and Theology 24 (2):313-330.
    Throughout his life Karl Rahner wrote on saints in the church, both official (canonized) and unofficial. This essay first considers his major essays from the conciliar period, focusing on the question why and how we can existentially venerate the saints and drawing on his theology of God as Holy Mystery, Christ as redeeming Mediator between humanity and God, and the unity of the love of God and of the neighbor. A second section recalls earlier writings such as “The Church of (...)
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  30.  20
    In All Seasons.Leo J. O'Donovan - 2012 - Philosophy and Theology 24 (2):313-330.
    Throughout his life Karl Rahner wrote on saints in the church, both official (canonized) and unofficial. This essay first considers his major essays from the conciliar period, focusing on the question why and how we can existentially venerate the saints and drawing on his theology of God as Holy Mystery, Christ as redeeming Mediator between humanity and God, and the unity of the love of God and of the neighbor. A second section recalls earlier writings such as “The Church of (...)
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  31.  52
    Prayer and Morality in the Sermon on the Mount.Oliver O'Donovan - 2009 - Studies in Christian Ethics 22 (1):21-33.
    The Lord's Prayer is at the centre of the Sermon on the Mount in a section on restraint in religious performance. The flanking sections treat of the opposition of lower and higher law, and of simplicity of agency, themes reflected in the central section in the opposition of public and secret. The Lord's Prayer inducts the worshipper into the elementary relations of the universe: the Father, the source of intelligible governance of the universe; the community of human beings created to (...)
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  32.  25
    Pride’s Progress.Oliver O’Donovan - 2015 - Studies in Christian Ethics 28 (1):59-69.
    Sin has infinite variety, but is also a unified phenomenon. As a way of displaying both these aspects, the vice-lists of the New Testament explore patterns by which sin unfolds in a sequence of diverse but connected forms. The eschatological vice-list of 2 Timothy 3 treats this as an unfolding of the sin of pride from an immanent form to a socially concrete one. Exploring this train of thought in further detail, we find room within the progress of pride for (...)
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  33.  3
    The Professional Politician and the Activist.Oliver O’Donovan - 2020 - Studies in Christian Ethics 33 (2):243-252.
    Luke Bretherton wishes to encourage informal political activity, and asserts a contrast between two complementary and alternative ways of doing politics, formal and informal. But the tendency in his descriptions is to replace formal with informal politics, which is then in danger of being left without responsibility to the structures of political society.
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  34.  8
    Two Sons of Ignatius.Leo J. O’Donovan - 1998 - Philosophy and Theology 11 (1):105-124.
    Reflection on the encounter with theologians as significant as Rahner and Balthasar can lead to a new appreciation for their personal and ecclesial influences. Each saw his work not as a final system but as a limited and relative contribution to the Church’s theology. While Rahner took a concretely dialectical approach to transcendence in history, Balthasar’s cultural theology has a dramatic center of gravity, most obviously in his great final trilogy. For all the difference between their respective horizons, however, both (...)
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  35.  18
    Two Sons of Ignatius.Leo J. O’Donovan - 1998 - Philosophy and Theology 11 (1):105-124.
    Reflection on the encounter with theologians as significant as Rahner and Balthasar can lead to a new appreciation for their personal and ecclesial influences. Each saw his work not as a final system but as a limited and relative contribution to the Church’s theology. While Rahner took a concretely dialectical approach to transcendence in history, Balthasar’s cultural theology has a dramatic center of gravity, most obviously in his great final trilogy. For all the difference between their respective horizons, however, both (...)
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  36. Wittgenstein and Rousseau on the context of justification.Michael O'Donovan-Anderson - 1996 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 22 (3):75-92.
    The historical aim of this paper is to reveal some striking similarities in Wittgenstein's treatment of epistemic justification and Rousseau's treatment of political justification. The theoretical aim is to open up the possibility of an understanding of justification which requires neither the discovery of some fundamental ground for judgment nor the alienation of the judge from the community or practice to be justified. Against the prevailing tradition in which justification occurs by reflectively rooting the practice in question in some unquestioned (...)
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  37.  60
    The Object of Theological Ethics.Oliver O'Donovan - 2007 - Studies in Christian Ethics 20 (2):203-214.
    The object of Theological Ethics as presented by Hans Ulrich is immediately the content of the experience of God; reflectively it is God himself turned towards us; doubly reflected on, it is the inversion of our understanding of the good or conversion. The concept of an object may be traced to the discussion of the sciences from Schleiermacher to Barth. Three questions are put to it: (i) Does it assimilate the study too much to descriptive reason, as opposed to practical (...)
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  38. Judge not" and "judge for yourselves".Oliver O'Donovan - 2017 - In Vivasvan Soni & Thomas Pfau (eds.), Judgment and Action: Fragments toward a History. Northwestern University Press.
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  39.  57
    Independence of Hot and Cold Executive Function Deficits in High-Functioning Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder.David L. Zimmerman, Tamara Ownsworth, Analise O'Donovan, Jacqueline Roberts & Matthew J. Gullo - 2016 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10:170424.
    Individuals with autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) display diverse deficits in social, cognitive and behavioral functioning. To date, there has been mixed findings on the profile of executive function deficits for high-functioning adults (IQ >70) with ASD. A conceptual distinction is commonly made between “cold” and “hot” executive functions. Cold executive functions refer to mechanistic higher-order cognitive operations (e.g., working memory), whereas hot executive functions entail cognitive abilities supported by emotional awareness and social perception (e.g., social cognition). This study aimed to (...)
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  40.  23
    Marriage: A sacred or profane love machine? [REVIEW]Katherine O'donovan - 1993 - Feminist Legal Studies 1 (1):75-90.
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  41.  69
    Cognitive Diversity in the Global Academy: Why the Voices of Persons with Cognitive Disabilities are Vital to Intellectual Diversity. [REVIEW]Maeve M. O’Donovan - 2010 - Journal of Academic Ethics 8 (3):171-185.
    In asking scholars to reflect on the structures and practices of academic knowledge that render alternative knowledge traditions irrelevant and invisible, as well as on the ways these must change for the academy to cease functioning as an instrument of westernization rather than as an authentically global and diverse intellectual commons, the editor of this special issue of the Journal of Academic Ethics is envisaging a world much needed and much resisted. A great deal of the conversation about diversity in (...)
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  42. Book Reviews : Kierkegaard: A Biography, by Alastair Hannay. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. 496 pp. £30. hb. ISBN 0521-65077-2. [REVIEW]Oliver O'Donovan - 2003 - Studies in Christian Ethics 16 (1):105-112.
  43.  88
    Book Reviews : A Global Ethic and Global Responsibilities: Two Declarations, edited by Hans Küng and Helmut Schmidt. London: SCM, 1998. 152 pp. pb. £9.95. ISBN 0-334-02740-3. [REVIEW]Oliver O'Donovan - 2000 - Studies in Christian Ethics 13 (1):122-128.
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  44.  4
    Infidels and Empires in a New World Order: Early Modern Spanish Contributions to International Legal Thought . [REVIEW]Oliver O’Donovan - 2020 - Studies in Christian Ethics 35 (2):397-401.
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  45.  17
    Edward LeRoy Long Jr. A Survey of Recent Christian Ethics. Pp. 215. (Oxford University Press 1983.) £13.50. [REVIEW]Oliver O'Donovan - 1984 - Religious Studies 20 (4):694-695.
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  46. Book Review : Christ, Justice and Peace: towards a theology of the state, by Eberhard Jungel, translated by D. Bruce Hamill and Alan J. Torrance. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1992. xxix + 93pp. 8.95. [REVIEW]Oliver O'Donovan - 1993 - Studies in Christian Ethics 6 (2):92-94.
  47.  51
    Philosophy in the Flesh. [REVIEW]Michael O'Donovan-Anderson - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (4):941-943.
    Philosophy in the Flesh is a small, important book wrapped inside a large self-important one. It begins by announcing three major “findings” of cognitive science: “The mind is inherently embodied. Thought is mostly unconscious.concepts are largely metaphorical,” which between them bring to an end “more than two millennia of a priori philosophical speculation”. To help mitigate this mortal blow to Western thought, Lakoff and Johnson helpfully propose, from empirical foundations, to build philosophy anew. The findings they detail are of extreme (...)
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  48.  26
    Socratic Puzzles. [REVIEW]Michael O’Donovan-Anderson - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 52 (4):966-967.
    This collection of essays, all previously published, offers selections from the life work of Robert Nozick. The essays range widely both temporally, from 1969 to 1995, and topically, from an analytic study of coercion to thoughts on Socrates’ profession of ignorance, to short “philosophical fictions.” The themes and approaches will be familiar to those who know anything of Nozick’s work. More than half the book is taken up by formal, analytic studies of topics of social, political, and moral significance. Questions (...)
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  49.  75
    Embodied Disbelief: Poststructural Feminist Atheism.Donovan O. Schaefer - 2014 - Hypatia 29 (2):371-387.
    “I quite rightly pass for an atheist,” Jacques Derrida announces in Circumfession. Grace Jantzen's suggestion that the poststructuralist critique of modernity can also be trained on atheism helps us make sense of this playfully cryptic statement: although Derrida sympathizes with the “idea” of atheism, he is wary of the modern brand of atheism, with its insistence on rationally arranging—straightening out—religion. In this paper, I will argue that poststructural feminism, with its focus on embodied epistemology, offers a way to re-explain Derrida's (...)
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  50.  23
    Mere Science: Mapping the Land Bridge Between Emotion, Politics, and Ethics.Donovan O. Schaefer - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):382-386.
    Lisa Sideris's Consecrating Science: Wonder, Knowledge, and the Natural World (2017) proposes that the call by some science advocates for a new moral framework based on scientific wonder is flawed. Sideris develops a typology of “wonder” with two separate affective axes: “true wonder” that is the prerogative of a sort of dwelling with the overwhelming mystery of life, and “curiosity” that presses to resolve puzzles and break through into a space of total clarity. The former, Sideris writes, is an ethical (...)
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