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  1.  14
    Memory as Accompaniment.E. M. Rowell - 1946 - Philosophy 21 (80):258 - 262.
    Our memories are private and particular; when you and I share an experience our experience is yet in the very moment of sharing different for you and for me, and our two memories of an event in the past are still more disparate. For memories are shaped and constrained by the deep-lying organic stress of what we have lived through, of our actual living, in the interval between then and now. A memory follows the solitary track of our individual experience, (...)
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  2.  8
    Memory: A Cloud of Witness.E. M. Rowell - 1944 - Philosophy 19 (73):130 - 135.
    The experience of each one of us is individual, private and particular, and in its immediacy is incommunicable. Images of all sorts, sense factors, figments of the imagination, mental comments and judgments, all these impressions, some persistent, some fleeting, follow one another in endless passage through the consciousness.
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  3.  15
    The Size-Factor in Art.E. M. Rowell - 1932 - Philosophy 7 (27):320 - 326.
    In a paper on “Beauty and Greatness in Art” discussed at a recent meeting of the Aristotelian Society, Professor Alexander says: “In Art there are two standards; there is the strictly æsthetic standard, Is the work beautiful or not; has it attained beauty? and there is the question, Is it great or small?… This contrast of beauty and greatness is the old contrast of form and subject-matter.” Here is offered a problem of capital importance and of age-long interest, but alongside (...)
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  4. A Man and his Solitariness.E. M. Rowell - 1943 - Hibbert Journal 42:323.
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  5.  4
    Memory: A Cloud of Witness.E. M. Rowell - 1944 - Philosophy 19 (73):130-135.
    The experience of each one of us is individual, private and particular, and in its immediacy is incommunicable. Images of all sorts, sense factors, figments of the imagination, mental comments and judgments, all these impressions, some persistent, some fleeting, follow one another in endless passage through the consciousness.
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  6. Meditation on Berdyaev's "Three Times".E. M. Rowell - 1949 - Hibbert Journal 48:252.
  7. No Title available.E. M. Rowell - 1948 - Philosophy 23 (85):184-185.
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  8. Speech as a Habit.E. M. Rowell - 1930 - Hibbert Journal 29:159.
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  9. Some Intimations of the Soul's Destiny.E. M. Rowell - 1929 - Hibbert Journal 28:436.
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  10. Time and Time Again.E. M. Rowell - 1941 - Philosophy 16 (64):438-438.
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  11.  20
    Old Age. Its Compensations and Rewards. By A. L. Vischer. Translated by Bernard Miall. (London: Geo. Allen & Unwin, Ltd. 1947. Pp. 200. 12s. 6d. net.). [REVIEW]E. M. Rowell - 1948 - Philosophy 23 (85):184-.
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  12. PROFESSOR J. MACMURRAY, M. A., Idealism Against Religion. [REVIEW]E. M. Rowell - 1944 - Hibbert Journal 43:89.
     
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