Results for 'Randall E. Auxier'

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  1.  9
    The philosophy of Hilary Putnam.Randall E. Auxier, Douglas R. Anderson & Lewis Edwin Hahn (eds.) - 2015 - Chicago, Illinois: Open Court.
    This volume consists of an intellectual autobiography by world-renowned philosopher Hilary Putnam, 26 critical or descriptive essays, 26 replies by Arthur C. Danto, and a bibliography listing all of Putnam's published writings.
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  2. Cuts like a knife.Randall E. Auxier - 2020 - In Richard Greene & Rachel Robison-Greene (eds.), His Dark Materials and philosophy: Paradox lost. Chicago: Open Court.
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  3. Mrs. Coulter : The Overwoman?Randall E. Auxier - 2020 - In Richard Greene & Rachel Robison-Greene (eds.), His Dark Materials and philosophy: Paradox lost. Chicago: Open Court.
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  4.  4
    The philosophy of Umberto Eco.Sara Beardsworth & Randall E. Auxier (eds.) - 2017 - Chicago: Open Court.
    The Philosophy of Umberto Eco stands out in the Library of Living Philosophers series as the volume on the most interdisciplinary scholar hitherto and probably the most widely translated. The Italian philosopher's name and works are well known in the humanities, both his philosophical and literary works being translated into fifteen or more languages. Eco is a founder of modern semiotics and widely known for his work in the philosophy of language and aesthetics. He is also a leading figure in (...)
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  5.  2
    Time, will, and purpose: living ideas from the philosophy of Josiah Royce.Randall E. Auxier - 2013 - Chicago, Ill.: Open Court.
    Josiah Royce (1855?-1916) has had a major influence on American intellectual life, both popular movements and cutting-edge thought, but his name often went unmentioned while his ideas marched forward. The leading American proponent of absolute idealism, Royce has come back into fashion in recent years. With several important new books appearing, the formation of a Josiah Royce Society, and the re-organization of the Royce papers at Harvard, the time is ripe for Time, Will, and Purpose. Randall Auxier delves (...)
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  6.  19
    Personalism Revisited: Its Proponents and Critics.Randall E. Auxier - 2005 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 19 (1):81-87.
  7.  6
    The philosophy of Arthur C. Danto.Randall E. Auxier & Lewis Edwin Hahn (eds.) - 2013 - Chicago, Illinois: Open Court.
    Arthur Danto is the Johnsonian Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Columbia University and the most influential philosopher of art in the last half century. As an art critic for The Nation for 25 years and frequent contributor to other widely read outlets such as the New York Review of Books, Danto also has become one of the most respected public intellectuals of his generation. He is the author of some two dozen important books, along with hundreds of articles and reviews (...)
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  8.  11
    Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know.Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.) - 2019 - Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing.
    Philosophers analyze the last of the great rock stars.
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  9.  20
    Cassirer: The Coming of a New Humanism.Randall E. Auxier - 2018 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 2 (3):7-26.
    The various efforts to put the idea of humanity on a secure ethical, political, and social base have not succeeded. The various post-humanist and transhumanist programs are inadequate. Our deep-seated suspicion of our deepest selves and motives is understandable in light of the barbarity of the twentieth century, but humanism is not to blame. The thought of Ernst Cassirer holds a framework for a new humanism, once it is rid of certain colonialist, triumphalist, and Eurocentric ideas that distorted Cassirer’s understanding (...)
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  10.  23
    Eco, Peirce, and the Pragmatic Theory of Signs.Randall E. Auxier - 2018 - European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 10 (1).
    This paper aims to consider Peirce and Eco’s approach to signs and semiotics in order to assess their relation to Peirce’s mature pragmatism. Both thinkers attempted to set out a truly general theory of signs, and ran into difficulties on similar points. I show that the responses of Peirce and Eco to the difficulties that arose in seeking a truly general theory of signs were quite different. And yet, the differences are not so deep as to prevent us from thinking (...)
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  11.  11
    Kant, Moral Imagination, and the Pathologies of Reason.Randall E. Auxiere & Laura J. Mueller - 2023 - Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 17 (4):5-27.
    We argue that the relationship between Kant’s theory of imagination and his moral philosophy has not been well understood. Missing is an adequate connection between his idea of sensus communis and the power of imagination to exceed the senses. This connection is close and important, and it has serious implications for how we are to apply and further theorize moral relations among human beings. Especially important in this regard is the ability among humans, in their social setting, to imagine other (...)
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  12. Foucault, Dewey, and the history of the present.Randall E. Auxier - 2002 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 16 (2):75-102.
  13.  6
    Concentric Circles.Randall E. Auxier - 1991 - Southwest Philosophy Review 7 (1):151-172.
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  14. Change of Heart.Randall E. Auxier - 2019 - In Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.), Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing.
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  15.  5
    A Logical–Contextual History of Philosophy.Randall E. Auxier - 2011 - Southwest Philosophy Review 27 (1):21-29.
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  16.  5
    Nature, Value, and Duty.Randall E. Auxier - 2010 - Southwest Philosophy Review 26 (1):233-240.
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  17. Don't Come Around Here, Mary Jane.Randall E. Auxier - 2019 - In Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.), Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing.
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  18.  6
    God as Catholic and Personal.Randall E. Auxier - 2000 - International Philosophical Quarterly 40 (2):235-252.
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  19.  7
    God, Process, and Persons.Randall E. Auxier - 1998 - Process Studies 27 (3):175-199.
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  20. Keep a Little Soul.Randall E. Auxier & Megan Volpert - 2019 - In Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.), Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing.
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  21.  6
    Metaphysical Grafitti: Deep Cuts in the Philosophy of Rock.Randall E. Auxier - 2017 - Chicsgo: Open Court.
    A long essay, in a collection of essays, about the relationship between rock music and philosophy. Philosophers include Plato, Kant, Vico, Whitehead, Sartre, Cassirer, Langer, Machiavelli, and so forth. Musicians include the Rollings Stones, David Bowie, The Who, Bruce Springsteen, The Grateful Dead, Neil Young, Paul Simon, Jackson Browne, Jimmy Buffett, Led Zeppelin and Rush.
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  22. The Boys of Summer.Randall E. Auxier - 2019 - In Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.), Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing.
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  23.  6
    The Return of the Initiate.Randall E. Auxier - 1991 - The Owl of Minerva 22 (2):191-208.
    The question of the import and role of Christian allusions in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit has received much historical attention, and this continues into the present. Often juxtaposed in this interpretive issue are two questions: Does Hegel think that “the ontological project was first a Greek event from which Christianity would have developed an outer graft”? Or is it more accurate to say that, “for Hegel at least, no ontology is possible before the Gospel or outside it”? In the latter (...)
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  24.  5
    Examining the Role and Function of Socrates' Narrative Audience in Plato's Euthydemus.Randall E. Auxier - 2008 - Southwest Philosophy Review 24 (1):163-172.
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  25.  6
    Hanks on Habermas and Democratic Communication.Randall E. Auxier - 1992 - Southwest Philosophy Review 8 (2):97-100.
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  26.  4
    Should Analytic Epistemology Be Replaced By Ameliorative Psychology?Randall E. Auxier - 2007 - Southwest Philosophy Review 23 (1):163-171.
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  27.  11
    The Death of Darwinism and the Limits of Evolution.Randall E. Auxier - 2006 - Philo 9 (2):193-220.
    George Holmes Howison’s 1895 essay entitled “The Limits of Evolution,” argued that there are four things evolutionary theory does not explain. In examining whether 11 decades have made a difference in these four, I argue that the arrogance of scientists over the past century in refusing to distinguish between full explanations and explanatory hypotheses is in some ways responsible for the fundamentalist backlash against evolutionary science. A scientific community that is honest and forthcoming about its limitations is to be sought. (...)
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  28. The Philosophy of Jaakko Hintikka.Randall E. Auxier & Lewis E. Hahn - 2006 - Lasalle, IL, USA: Open Court.
    Library of Living Philosophers collection of essays on all aspects of of Hintikka's thought, with his autobiography and replies.
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  29. The Philosophy of Hilary Putnam.Randall E. Auxier, Lewis E. Hahn & Douglas R. Anderson - 2016 - Chicago, IL, USA: Open Court.
    Library of Living Philosophers volume on Hilary Putnam with critical essays, Putnam's autobiography and his replies.
     
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  30. The Philosophy of Seyyed Hossein Nasr.Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Randall E. Auxier & Lucian W. Stone (eds.) - 2001 - Open Court.
     
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  31.  10
    The Life of the Image.Randall E. Auxier - 2020 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (1):1-6.
    Preview: Bergson noted that the cinematographic image does not really move. It is, then as now, a series of still photographs. The real motion in such images is produced by machinery, which imparts a kinesis, an energy of movement, to the succession of fixed images. Our perception then endows such images with their “life,” insofar as they can be said to possess life. It is an illusion, it is “virtual” both as space and time. The real duration, as generated by (...)
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  32.  16
    The Sherpa and the Sage: Neville on the Determinate and the Possible.Randall E. Auxier - 2015 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 36 (1):37-50.
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  33.  29
    Influence as Confluence.Randall E. Auxier - 1999 - Process Studies 28 (3):301-338.
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  34. 1. Front Matter Front Matter (pp. i-iii).Randall E. Auxier, Shane J. Ralston, Randy L. Friedman, Michael Futch, Tadd Ruetenik, István Aranyosi & Marilyn Fischer - 2012 - The Pluralist 7 (1).
     
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  35.  34
    Hartshorne and Brightman on God, process, and persons: the correspondence, 1922-1945.Randall E. Auxier & Mark Y. A. Davies (eds.) - 2001 - Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.
    In 1922 Charles Hartshorne, then an aspiring young philosopher, wrote to Edgar Sheffield Brightman, a preeminent philosopher of religion for twenty-three subsequent years and, remarkably, almost every letter was preserved. In their introductory essays, editors Randall Auxier and Mark Davies place the unusually rich and intensive correspondence in its intellectual context and address the relationship between personalism and process philosophy/theology in metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and social philosophy.
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  36.  48
    The Quantum of Explanation: Whitehead’s Radical Empiricism.Randall E. Auxier & Gary L. Herstein - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    _The Quantum of Explanation_ advances a bold new theory of how explanation ought to be understood in philosophical and cosmological inquiries. Using a complete interpretation of Alfred North Whitehead’s philosophical and mathematical writings and an interpretive structure that is essentially new, Auxier and Herstein argue that Whitehead has never been properly understood, nor has the depth and breadth of his contribution to the human search for knowledge been assimilated by his successors. This important book effectively applies Whitehead’s philosophy to (...)
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  37. 1 1 7 Gilles Deleuze.Randall E. Auxier - 2007 - In Diarmuid Costello & Jonathan Vickery (eds.), Art: Key Contemporary Thinkers. Berg. pp. 116.
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  38.  45
    An Editorial Statement.Randall E. Auxier - 2009 - The Pluralist 4 (1):v-v.
  39.  2
    An Editorial Statement.Randall E. Auxier - 2008 - The Pluralist 3 (1):v-vi.
  40.  51
    Anne Marie Bowery’s “Examining the Role and Function of Socrates’ Narrative Audience in Plato’s Euthydemus”.Randall E. Auxier - 2008 - Southwest Philosophy Review 24 (2):25-28.
  41.  32
    American Philosophic Naturalism in the Twentieth Century.Randall E. Auxier - 1996 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 34 (2):313-315.
    BOOK REVIEWS 3~3 reaction to them into account. The actual historical dialectic involving Moore, Mal- colm, and Wittgenstein is a good deal more complicated, and more interesting, than the story told here by Stroll. Moving on to Stroll's discussion of Wittgenstein, I should now acknowledge that, so far as I can judge, Stroll offers a largely reliable account of On Certainty. In particular, in the best chapter of the book, on "Wittgenstein's Foundationalism," he makes a convincing case for the view (...)
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  42.  23
    A Plurality of Persons in Relation: Bengtsson on Pluralism.Randall E. Auxier - 2008 - The Pluralist 3 (2):113 - 127.
  43.  39
    Concentric Circles.Randall E. Auxier - 1991 - Southwest Philosophy Review 7 (1):151-172.
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  44. Cuts like a knife.Randall E. Auxier - 2009 - In Richard Greene & Rachel Robison (eds.), The Golden Compass and Philosophy. Open Court.
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  45.  17
    Commentary on Nikolay Milkov’s “A Logical-Contextual History of Philosophy”.Randall E. Auxier - 2011 - Southwest Philosophy Review 27 (2):1-3.
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  46.  21
    Commentary on Richard Cole’s “Nature, Value and Duty”.Randall E. Auxier - 2010 - Southwest Philosophy Review 26 (2):77-79.
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  47.  45
    Divine Beauty: The Aesthetics of Charles Hartshorne (review).Randall E. Auxier - 2005 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 41 (1):203-207.
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  48.  15
    Editor’s Introduction.Randall E. Auxier - 1999 - The Personalist Forum 15 (2):204-204.
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  49.  10
    Eco on Interpreting the Sign: The Limits of Narrating that which Cannot Be Theorized.Randall E. Auxier - 2020 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (1):102-109.
    Eco says that which cannot be theorized must be narrated. What about that which cannot be narrated? What must we do about the limits of interpretation, especially as narration. This review essay takes a method from Giambattista Vico and applies it to the interpretation of Laurent Binet’s portrayal of Umberto Eco in his novel The Seventh Function of Language. Comparing the character of Eco with the thought of the historical Eco we find coincidences and other angles at incidence that reveal (...)
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  50.  80
    Editorial Statement.Randall E. Auxier - 2010 - The Pluralist 5 (1):1-5.
    Beginning with the present number of The Pluralist, we commence an association with the well known and widely respected Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy, founded in 1972. It is a pleasant circumstance that we can combine our twenty-five-year history of service to pluralistic and personalist philosophies with the admirable mission of the SAAP, which has always stood for openness and responsible philosophical growth with an eye to the lessons of the past and an orientation to a more ideal (...)
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