Results for ' paradise'

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  1. Grotiana, 7.Paradise Lost - 1985 - Grotiana 6:1.
     
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  2.  36
    Paradise and Growing in Virtue.Kevin Timpe & Timothy Pawl - 2017 - In T. Ryan Byerly & Eric Silverman (eds.), Paradise Understood: New Philosophical Essays about Heaven. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 97-109.
    The present volume is devoted to philosophical reflection on the nature of paradise. Our contribution to this larger project is an extension of previous work that we’ve done on the nature of human agency and virtue in heaven. Here, we’d like to focus on three things. First, we will discuss in greater detail what it is we mean by “growth in virtue.” Second, we will answer a number of objections to that understanding of growth in virtue. Third, we will (...)
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  3.  9
    Paradise Lost and the Forms of Government.W. Walker - 2001 - History of Political Thought 22 (2):270-299.
    In his epic poem, Paradise Lost, Milton does not, as many critics have recently claimed, repudiate monarchy and recommend republics; he rather asserts that the legitimacy of any particular form of government in any particular situation depends upon what he refers to as the ‘merit’ or ‘worth’ of the rulers and the ruled. On a strict definition of republicanism as a position grounded in the repudiation of monarchy and the recommendation of republics, this poem would thus fail to qualify (...)
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  4. Epistemic Paradise Lost: Saving What We Can with Stable Support.Anna-Maria A. Eder - 2021 - In Nick Hughes (ed.), Epistemic Dilemmas. Oxford University Press.
    I focus on the No-Paradise Dilemma, which results from some initially plausible epistemic ideals, coupled with an assumption concerning our evidence. Our evidence indicates that we are not in an epistemic paradise, in which we do not experience cognitive failures. I opt for a resolution of the dilemma that is based on an evidentialist position that can be motivated independently of the dilemma. According to this position, it is rational for an agent to believe a proposition on the (...)
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  5. Paradise Regained: A Non-Reductive Realist Account of the Sensible Qualities.Brian Cutter - 2018 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 96 (1):38-52.
    This paper defends a non-reductive realist view of the sensible qualities—roughly, the view that the sensible qualities are really instantiated by the external objects of perception, and not reducible to response-independent physical properties or response-dependent relational properties. I begin by clarifying and motivating the non-reductive realist view. I then consider some familiar difficulties for the view. Addressing these difficulties leads to the development and defence of a general theory, inspired by Russellian Monist theories of consciousness, of how the sensible qualities (...)
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  6.  34
    On Paradise in Jewish Mysticism.Idel Moshe - 2011 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 10 (30):3-38.
    800x600 Normal 0 21 false false false RO X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 The dominant approaches to Kabbalah in modern scholarship are basically historical and philological. This is the manner in which the founder of modern scholarship in the field, Gershom Scholem, described his school. Though he also embraced more phenomenological analyses, this approach is less represented in the first stages of Kabbalah scholarship, though it becomes more evident in the last decades. In the writings of Schlomo G. Shoham, an existential approach (...)
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  7.  19
    Paradise Understood: New Philosophical Essays About Heaven.T. Ryan Byerly & Eric J. Silverman (eds.) - 2017 - Oxford University Press.
    Paradise Understood: New Philosophical Essays about Heaven systematically investigates heaven, or paradise, as conceived within theistic religious traditions such as Rabbinic Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. It considers a variety of topics concerning what life in paradise would, could, or will be like for human persons. The collection offers novel approaches to questions about heaven of perennial philosophical interest, and breaks new ground by expanding the range of questions about heaven that philosophers have considered. The contributors wrestle with (...)
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  8.  5
    Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions. By Christian Lange.Peter G. Riddell - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 138 (4).
    Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions. By Christian Lange. New York: Cambridge UniverSity Press, 2016. Pp. xvii + 365. $84.99, £54.99 ; $29.99, £18.99 ; $24.
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  9. Reading Paradise Regained Ethically.Robert B. Pierce - 2006 - Philosophy and Literature 30 (1):208-222.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reading Paradise Regained EthicallyRobert B. PierceMuch modern criticism follows a long tradition by attending to the presumed effect of literature on our personal and political lives. Feminists, cultural materialists, new historicists, and postcolonialists frequently remind us that texts are "not innocent," and such analysts seek to make explicit the values and judgments that literary texts encourage in their readers. Whether in the vein of unmasking or of celebrating, (...)
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  10.  3
    Paradise Mislaid: How We Lost Heaven - and How We Can Regain It.Jeffrey Burton Russell - 2006 - Oup Usa.
    In this book Jeffrey Burton Russell explores the many and complex reasons for the gradual erosion of the idea of heaven in the modern era. Although the seeds of skepticism were planted in the Enlightenment, he shows, the real decline dates to the nineteenth century. This is a fascinating tale that sheds light not only on the history of Christian thought, but on the process of secularization in the West; Russell shows us the grubby soul of our materialistic and uncritically (...)
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  11.  24
    Edenic Paradise And Paradisal Eden Moshe Idel's Reading Of The Talmudic Legend Of The Four Sages Who Entered The Pardes.Felicia Waldman - 2007 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 6 (18):79-87.
    Of the stories describing the adventures full of deep significances of the various rabbis from the glorious Talmudic era, the most famous but also the most exploited is undoubtedly that of the “four sages who entered the Pardes”. If in the Talmudic-Midrashic literature it was used to point out the dangers and achievements that were related to speculations, rather than experiences, and in the mystical literature it was used to point out the dangers that could befall the mystic on his (...)
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  12. Edenic paradise and paradisal eden. Moshe Idel's reading of the Talmudic Legend of the Four Sages Who Entered the Pardes.Felicia Waldman - 2008 - In Moshe Idel, Sandu Frunză & Mihaela Frunză (eds.), Essays in honor of Moshe Idel. Cluj-Napoca: Provo Press.
     
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  13.  11
    American Paradise: Hidden Ironies, Contradictions, Illusions, and Delusions, Paradoxes, Dilemmas, and Absurdities in American Life.Jon Huer - 2010 - Upa.
    The way we live, work, and die-alone and with other Americans-have so many hidden layers that we might as well say that there are two Americas: one we think we know and the other virtually unknown to us. Huer discusses this alien part of America in American Paradise.
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  14.  35
    Paradise Well Lost.Charles W. Harvey - 1994 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 1 (1):9-14.
    Paradise Well Lost” offers a description and criticism of communitarian claims that in contemporary liberal society the self is in sad shape, that liberal society is out of harmony with the needs of the self, and that such a society makes the good life nearly impossible to achieve. It is argued that communitarian thought is driven by a false and deluded nostalgia for a self-world unity that never was andnever can be, that human consciousness prohibits the neatly unified communialization (...)
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  15.  12
    Paradise Well Lost.Charles W. Harvey - 1994 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 1 (1):9-14.
    Paradise Well Lost” offers a description and criticism of communitarian claims that in contemporary liberal society the self is in sad shape, that liberal society is out of harmony with the needs of the self, and that such a society makes the good life nearly impossible to achieve. It is argued that communitarian thought is driven by a false and deluded nostalgia for a self-world unity that never was andnever can be, that human consciousness prohibits the neatly unified communialization (...)
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  16.  3
    Paradise wild: reimagining American nature.David Oates - 2003 - Corvallis: Oregon State University Press.
    In Paradise Wild, David Oates addresses this and many other provocative questions as he explores the persistent myth of Eden from several different angles. As a lifelong mountaineer and reader of nature literature, as a scholar, as a descendant of naturalist William Bartram, and as a gay ex-Baptist who took to the mountains to test his masculinity, Oates has thought deeply about how nature and culture interact in our lives and about the contemporary debate over wilderness and environment. (...) Wild brings all these elements together in a lively, genre-hopping book that will move readers emotionally and intellectually, at the same time that it contributes to the ongoing debate in scholarly and environmental circles over the meaning of "nature" and "wilderness." Paradise Wild tells stories, explores major scholarship and literature of nature, and analyzes how the misapplied myth of Eden has mired Americans in a hopeless "Paradise Lost" mentality that belies the true, ever-present wildness in our lives. Oates argues that mourning for a lost paradise is a dead end that cannot help us combat the real damage we're doing to ourselves and the rest of the world. He proposes a healthy re-mythologizing of the Eden story as a way of celebrating "wildness" -- the Eden in each moment and in each cell, that cannot be lost. His book is about welcoming that wildness into the midst of daily life. This bold and original work will appeal to general readers as well as to scholars and students with an interest in environmental literature and philosophy, nature writing, cultural studies, and queer studies. (shrink)
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  17.  17
    Paradise Understood: New Philosophical Essays about Heaven.T. Ryan Byerly & Eric J. Silverman (eds.) - 2017 - Oxford University Press.
    A collection of seventeen philosophical essays that systematically investigate heaven, or paradise, as conceived within theistic religious traditions.
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  18.  53
    Paradise, the Golden Age the Millennium and Utopia: A Note on the Differentation of Forms of the Ideal Society.Luc Racine - 1983 - Diogenes 31 (122):119-138.
    What is the difference between the earthly paradise, the Golden Age and the ideal city? This question is most important for whoever is interested in the various ways human societies have had for imagining an ideal state of perfection or social harmony. If we are not to confuse such different systems of representation as mythical thought, millenarianism and Utopia, it is absolutely necessary that we do not reduce the descriptions of an earthly paradise and a Golden Age to (...)
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  19.  21
    From Paradise Lost to Paradise Conceptually Postponed: What Makes Scenarios of the Futures Being Staged.Svitlana Balinchenko - 2022 - Философия И Космология 28:51-62.
    In the article, the scenario-moulding is evaluated through the linguistic and conceptual accessibility of the future and the moral challenges of doing and allowing harm to the future participants of the practical discourses rooted in the present-centered scenarios. The viability of the scenarios is suggested to be defined by the alienation from the present and past imaginative contexts, as well as by overcoming the projections of humanity exclusiveness through inversible forecasting with the shift from human power to vulnerability as the (...)
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  20.  44
    Paradise bound: A perennial tradition or an unseen process of cosmological hybridization?Gregg Lahood - 2008 - Anthropology of Consciousness 19 (2):155-189.
    A genealogical excavation of the pre transpersonal movement uncovers a hitherto unrecognized process of hybridity and syncretism occurring in the 1960s U.S. counter culture. The presence of hybridity in the movement's prehistory has serious repercussions for current maps in transpersonalism (and religious enactments in general). It is argued here that current transpersonal theories have built themselves on an unexamined foundation of magic, sorcery, and cosmological hybridization. Ken Wilber's neoperennialist cosmos will be construed as an assimilationist strain of hybridity. Jorge Ferrer's (...)
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  21.  8
    Paradise Earned: The Bacchic-Orphic Gold Lamellae of Crete (review).Radcliffe G. Edmonds Iii - 2012 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 105 (2):280-281.
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  22.  12
    Paradise Earned: The Bacchic-Orphic Gold Lamellae of Crete.Radcliffe G. Edmonds - 2012 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 105 (2):280-281.
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  23.  22
    Lost paradises and the ethics of research and publication.Francisco M. Salzano & A. Magdalena Hurtado (eds.) - 2004 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In 2000, the world of anthropology was rocked by a high-profile debate over the fieldwork performed by two prominent anthropologists, Napoleon Chagnon and James V. Neel, among the Yanamamo tribe of South America. The controversy was fueled by the publication of Patrick Tierney's incendiary Darkness in El Dorado which accused Chagnon of not only misinterpreting but actually inciting some of the violence he perceived among these "fierce people". Tierney also pointed the finger at Neel as the unwitting agent of a (...)
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  24. Bright Paradise: Victorian Scientific Travellers. By Peter Raby.A. Schwarz - 2000 - The European Legacy 5 (3):481-481.
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  25.  6
    Paradise in Antiquity: Jewish and Christian Views.Markus Bockmuehl & Guy G. Stroumsa (eds.) - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    The social and intellectual vitality of Judaism and Christianity in antiquity was in large part a function of their ability to articulate a viably transcendent hope for the human condition. Narratives of Paradise - based on the concrete symbol of the Garden of Delights - came to play a central role for Jews, Christians, and eventually Muslims too. The essays in this volume highlight the multiple hermeneutical perspectives on biblical Paradise from Second Temple Judaism and Christian origins to (...)
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  26.  20
    Egalitarian Paradise or Factory Drudgery? Organizing Knowledge Production in High Energy Physics (HEP) Laboratories.Slobodan Perović - 2018 - Social Epistemology 32 (4):241-261.
    The organization of cutting-edge HEP laboratories has evolved in the intersection of academia, state agencies, and industry. Exponentially ever-larger and more complex knowledge-intensive operations, the laboratories have often faced the challenges of, and required organizational solutions similar to, those identified by a cluster of diverse theories falling under the larger heading of organization theory. The cluster has either shaped or accounted for the organization of industry and state administration. The theories also apply to HEP laboratories, as they have gradually and (...)
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  27.  11
    Queering Paradise: Toni Morrison’s anti-capitalist production.Heather Tapley - 2013 - Feminist Theory 14 (1):21-37.
    I map a queer reading of Toni Morrison’s novel Paradise at the intersection of sexuality, gender, race and class. Both poststructuralist and materialist in its approach, the analysis reads the identity formations reflected in the 8-Rock men and the Convent women as discursive fictions of stable subjectivity that, despite their apparent differences, actually constitute each other in capitalist networks of power.
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  28.  44
    Remembering paradise: nativism and nostalgia in eighteenth-century Japan.Peter Nosco - 1990 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    This work studies three major eighteenth-century nativist scholars in Japan: Kada no Azumamaro, Kamo no Mabuchi, and the celebrated Motoori Norinaga.
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  29. Paradise Transplanted: Migration and the Making of California Gardens.[author unknown] - 2014
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  30.  42
    Paradise of submission: a medieval treatise on Ismaili thought.Nasir al-Din al-Tusi - 2005 - New York: I.B. Tauris in association with Institute of Ismaili Studies. Edited by S. J. Badakhchani, Christian Jambet & Naṣīr al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad Ṭūsī.
    In this work the Persian and English texts are edited and published together for the first time. This is Tusi’s major Ismaili work and the most important primary source on Ismaili doctrines during the Alamut period.
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  31.  1
    Paradise as the Whole Earth.Joseph E. Duncan - 1969 - Journal of the History of Ideas 30 (2):171.
  32.  6
    Paradise Restored: The Social Ethics of Francis of Assisi: A Commentary on His "Salutation of the Virtues".Jan Hoeberichts - 2003 - Franciscan Press, Quincy University.
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  33.  12
    'Paradise Lost'--General Name, Proper Name, or What?I. Hunt - 1958 - Analysis 19 (1):6-7.
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  34.  62
    'Paradise Lost': General Name, Proper Name, or What?Ivor Hunt - 1958 - Analysis 19 (1):6 - 7.
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  35. Paradise postponed: The predicaments of tourism.Jeremy MacClancy - 2002 - In Exotic no more: anthropology on the front lines. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 418--429.
     
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  36. 'Paradise lost', genesis and'job': A reconstruction of authorial choices.Harold P. Maltz - forthcoming - Theoria.
     
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  37.  33
    Paradise Lost” and the Genesis Tradition. By J. M. Evans. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1968. Pp. xiv, 314. $8.00.W. J. Barnes - 1969 - Dialogue 8 (3):534-537.
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  38.  22
    Of Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World Order. By Robert Kagan.Amitrajeet A. Batabyal - 2003 - Agriculture and Human Values 20 (4):385-386.
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  39. Paradise on Earth: Some Thoughts on European Images of Non-European Man.H. Baudet - 1965
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  40.  95
    Paradise regained.Simon Blackburn - 2005 - Supplement to the Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 79 (1):1-14.
    In this paper I consider some of the vicissitudes that the epistemology of the empirical world has suffered in the last half-century. I cast doubt on some of the ruling metaphors of the area, and on the flight from empiricism and foundationalism that they have assisted. But I also reject attempts to secure a better epistemology that themselves collaborate with the same fundamental mistakes, and in particular that of a spatial conception of the mind.
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  41. Paradise Lost and the Genesis Tradition.C. M. Evans - 1973 - Religious Studies 9 (1):119-120.
     
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  42.  25
    Paradise Lost: Ibn Dāniyāl's Response to Baybars' Campaign against Vice in CairoParadise Lost: Ibn Daniyal's Response to Baybars' Campaign against Vice in Cairo.Li Guo - 2001 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (2):219.
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  43.  9
    Paradise Restored: The Mechanical Arts from Antiquity through the Thirteenth Century. Elspeth Whitney.Bert Hall - 1992 - Isis 83 (2):312-313.
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  44.  34
    Mapping Paradise: A History of Heaven on Earth. By Alessandro Scafi.Alastair Hamilton - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (3):490-490.
  45.  11
    Paradise lost and the question of legitimacy.Wendy C. Hamblet - 2004 - Ratio 17 (1):45–59.
    This paper reconstructs the deficiencies of formal democracies to explain the internal injustices of the modern state, the self‐righteous swaggering foreign policy of Western powers, and the dangerously over‐simplified, polar logic characterizing the war rhetoric of the modern era. In a brief tour through the non‐liberal tradition of democratic thought, drawing connections between the tragic mythological origins of Western understandings of self and world, the paper attempts to demonstrate that a failure to find alternate, healthier means of value‐creation has caused (...)
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  46.  4
    Paradise Lost and the Question of Legitimacy.Wendy C. Hamblet - 2004 - Ratio 17 (1):45-59.
    This paper reconstructs the deficiencies of formal democracies to explain the internal injustices of the modern state, the self‐righteous swaggering foreign policy of Western powers, and the dangerously over‐simplified, polar logic characterizing the war rhetoric of the modern era. In a brief tour through the non‐liberal tradition of democratic thought, drawing connections between the tragic mythological origins of Western understandings of self and world, the paper attempts to demonstrate that a failure to find alternate, healthier means of value‐creation has caused (...)
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  47. The Paradise Lost? Mythological Aspects of Modern Sport.Raphaël Massarelli & Thierry Terret - 2011 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 5 (4):396 - 413.
    Sport, in modern times, finds its roots in the mythological sources of ancient Greece, where it was born as a sacred game to be performed in the honour of Zeus in Olympia or of other gods elsewhere during the Panhellenic games. Since the beginning of the twentieth century and until the 1970s sport was mythogenic (Barthes 1975). But is sport still mythogenic in the twenty-first century? Our analysis attempts to answer two questions: (i) what has been the influence of doping (...)
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  48.  3
    Paradise, Built in Hell: Decolonising Feminist Utopias in Top of the Lake (2013).Sophie Mayer - 2017 - Feminist Review 116 (1):102-117.
    Jane Campion and Gerard Lee's miniseries Top of the Lake (2013) marked New Zealand-born but Australian resident Campion's return to New Zealand for the first time since The Piano (1993). The show's central subject of child sexual abuse by state officials echoes the different yet resonating political situations in twenty-first century Australia and New Zealand, a state of emergency that allows for the emergence of what Rebecca Solnit (2009) calls a ‘disaster community’. Implicitly addressing critiques of her colonialist gaze in (...)
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  49. Paradise Lost, a Poem. From the Text of T. Newton.John Milton & Thomas Newton - 1758
     
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  50. Paradise Now: From Sexual Liberation to Aesthetic Revolution in the US during the 1960s.Tyrus Miller - 2012 - Filozofski Vestnik 33 (3).
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