Meditation on a prisoner: towards understanding action and mind

Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press (1975)
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Abstract

In this brilliant analysis of mind-body problems Edward Pols adds new dimen­sions to the discussion of basic issues. The prisoner is Socrates, who, in a se­ries of actions involving moral decisions, finds himself under sentence of death, and who has now decided to undergo the sentence rather than accept the opportuni­ty to escape provided by powerful friends. Pols takes as his point of departure Socrates’ nai;ve statement of the contrast be­tween a scientific analysis of a moral action and the point of view taken by the agent himself, and his rejection of the adequacy of the scientific analysis.

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Together bound: A new look at God's discrete actions in history. [REVIEW]Frank G. Kirkpatrick - 1992 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 32 (3):129 - 147.

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