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  1. Colours and Their Symbolism in Jewish Tradition and Mysticism.Gersbom Scholem & Johanna Pick Margulies - 1980 - Diogenes 28 (109):64-76.
    With this area of the second triad contrasts above all the last sefirah, in which all these colours, as well as the various nuances of white-red, red-white, and a mixture of both, flash all together or one after the other, as they did already in Azriel and often in the Zohar. Since she represents the divine power closest to the created world—in part even immanent in it, she is the richest in symbolism, and in colour symbolism as well. Here the (...)
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  2.  55
    Limits and Tasks of Literary Hermeneutics.Hans Robert Jauss & Johanna Pick Margulies - 1980 - Diogenes 28 (109):92-119.
    The foundation of methodical development of literary hermeneutics represents an altogether new proposition. There existed for centuries an old tradition of philological hermeneutics. It can glory in its venerable origins: the interpretation of ecclesiastical canonical writing, an art which ever since the period of Humanism has been erecting for itself a proud monument of re-edited and corrected texts and commentaries of ancient authors. It can also show just as impressive a result of historical interpretation of the texts of the world's (...)
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  3.  96
    Biology, Power and Responsibility.Joël de Rosnay & Johanna Pick Margulies - 1980 - Diogenes 28 (109):77-91.
    Science is at present passing through a credibility crisis*. One could almost say a moral crisis. As a matter of fact we are standing at a turning point in the relationship between science and society, a turning point marked by the change from a social evolution characterized by high productivity and growth, into an evolution which might lead humanity to a new balance between individuality and collectivity.At the beginning of the 20th century and during its second half the scientific world (...)
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  4.  99
    The Subject Genesis, the Imaginary and the Poetical Language.Johanna Pick Margulies & Gabriele Schwab - 1981 - Diogenes 29 (115):55-80.
    “I am, but I do not own myself”—this famous formula of Plessner conceives man as an excentric subject, i.e. a being who can never dominate and dispose of himself as a whole. If we add to Plessner's dictum Bloch's answer to it: “I am. But I do not own myself. Therefore we are still becoming” then we are already suggesting the anthropological space of the imaginary; because the ability to imagine something that is not, plays an essential role in this (...)
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