The Divine Relativity and Absoluteness: A Reply

Review of Metaphysics 4 (1):31 - 60 (1950)
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Abstract

There is a subtle complication, however. A critic may understand an idea momentarily and yet, when he comes to evaluate the view in comparison with his own, he may tend to forget even the understanding he previously exhibited, and to fall back upon some simplicist distortion thanks to which his preference of his own notion seems justified. Thus it is not infrequently possible to answer a critic out of his own exposition of the ideas he criticizes.

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