Results for ' receptivity and god'

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  1.  64
    Freedom, receptivity, and God.James L. Marsh - 1975 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 6 (4):219 - 233.
    The practical question about God's relation to human freedom isthe issue between Nietzsche and Sartre, on the one hand, and Marcel,on the other. God is compatible with human freedom, for Marcel,because He is conceived as an absolute “Thou,” not an objectivecause, and because human freedom is essentially disposability, openand receptive to the other. God is relevant to human freedom becauseHe is more intimate to me than I am to myself, because He can re-veal to me possibilities about myself and the (...)
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  2.  5
    Freedom, Receptivity and God.James L. Marsh - 1976 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 50:82-89.
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  3.  6
    God, Evil, Freedom. Reception and Interpretation of Dostoevsky in Luigi Pareyson and his Heirs.Alessandro Carrieri - 2021 - Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 23 (1):59-71.
    The essay aims to focus on reception and interpretation of Dostoevsky in the thought of Luigi Pareyson and his heirs, who have developed a deep and original theoretical reading of Dostoevsky's work, able to bring out not only its ethical stance, but most of the essential aspects of his thought, and to investigate its current relevance. The reflection of Pareyson – who promoted the introduction of Dostoevsky's thought into the academic circles of Turin, being convinced that philosophy cannot avoid confronting (...)
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  4.  12
    Post-Hellenistic Philosophy on God and the WorldCalcidius on Plato’s Timaeus: Greek Philosophy, Latin Reception, and Christian ContextsPseudo-Aristotle: De mundo. [REVIEW]Andrea Falcon - 2022 - Rhizomata 10 (1):163-171.
  5.  4
    Resistance and Receptivity.David M. Holley - 2010 - In Meaning and Mystery. Oxford, UK: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 69–89.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Truth and Receptivity Receptivity and God Overwhelming Evidence Sufficient Evidence Pascal and the Search for God Brainwashing Yourself? The Practice of Atheism Resisting Belief Notes.
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  6.  7
    Is the Identification of Experimental Error Contextually Dependent? The Case of Kaufmann's Experiment.its Varied Reception - 1995 - In Jed Z. Buchwald (ed.), Scientific practice: theories and stories of doing physics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
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  7.  50
    Memory, narrativity, self and the challenge to think God: the reception within theology of the recent work of Paul Ricoeur.Maureen Junker-Kenny & Peter P. Kenny (eds.) - 2004 - Münster: LIT.
    This book explores the usefulness of major categories of Paul Ricoeur's work, such as "memory, " "narrativity, " and his conception of self, within different ...
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  8. The Revelation of God and/as Human Reception in the New Testament.Dan 0 Via - 1997
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  9.  29
    British Aestheticism and Ancient Greece: Hellenism, Reception, Gods in Exile. By Silvio Evangelista.Marja Härmänmaa - 2013 - The European Legacy 18 (1):100-101.
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  10.  8
    Perceiving Sound Objects in the Musique Concrète.Rolf Inge Godøy - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    In the late 1940s and early 1950s, there emerged a radically new kind of music based on recorded environmental sounds instead of sounds of traditional Western musical instruments. Centered in Paris around the composer, music theorist, engineer, and writer Pierre Schaeffer, this became known as musique concrète because of its use of concrete recorded sound fragments, manifesting a departure from the abstract concepts and representations of Western music notation. Furthermore, the term sound object was used to denote our perceptual images (...)
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  11.  2
    The Reception of St Augustine's City of God in Anglo-Norman Canterbury.Kristine Haney - 2011 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 74 (1):59-85.
  12.  15
    Loneliness and Lament: A Journey to Receptivity.Patricia J. Huntington - 2009 - Indiana University Press.
    Patricia Joy Huntington reflects that loneliness does not only consist of the heartfelt absences of a friend, partner, spouse, or child, but rather stems from a radical breach in one's life journey. In this conceptually rigorous and warmly poetic book, Huntington develops a unique philosophy of receptivity and an original portrait of redemptive suffering. By fully exploring notions of pain, she also examines how the relation between the heart's musical attunement and meaning-filled life passages can lead one to a (...)
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  13.  21
    McCall and counter/actuals, Richard Otte.God Exists, Robert K. Meyer & Materialism Rorty - 1987 - Philosophical Quarterly 37 (147).
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  14. I primi bollandisti alla scoperta delle biblioteche romane (1660-1661).Robert Godding - 2010 - Gregorianum 91 (3):583-595.
    The paper reconstructs the trip to Rome of the first Bollandist Fathers, providing numerous historical, documentary and cultural details, while offering a generous cross-section of the academic life of the period.
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  15. Motormimetic features in musical experience.Rolf Inge God²Y. - 2018 - In Patrizia Veroli & Gianfranco Vinay (eds.), Music-dance: sound and motion in contemporary discourse. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  16.  9
    Sound-action awareness in music.Rolf Inge Godøy - 2011 - In David Clarke & Eric F. Clarke (eds.), Music and Consciousness: Philosophical, Psychological, and Cultural Perspectives. Oxford University Press. pp. 231.
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  17.  30
    Why I Believe.Why I. Believe In God - 1986 - In John Perry, Michael Bratman & John Martin Fischer (eds.), Introduction to philosophy: classical and contemporary readings. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  18.  1
    Ādi Bauddha darśanaya: mūladharma vigrahayak.Sumanapāla Galmaṅgoḍa - 1994 - Kaḍavata: Abhaya Śilpikayō saha Prakāśakayō.
    Buddhist philosophy and doctrines; an analytical study.
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  19.  13
    With God on their Side: Gender–Religiosity Intersectionality and Women’s Workforce Integration.Varda Wasserman & Michal Frenkel - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (5):818-843.
    On the basis of a case study of the integration of Haredi Jewish women into the Israeli high-tech industry, we explore how gender–religiosity intersectionality affects ultra-conservative women’s participation in the labor market and their ability to negotiate with employers for corporate work–family practices that address their idiosyncratic requirements. We highlight the importance of pious women’s affiliation to their highly organized religious communities while taking a process-centered approach to intersectionality and focusing on the matrix of domination formed by the Israeli state, (...)
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  20.  54
    Force and Objectivity: On Impact, Form, and Receptivity to Nature in Science and Art.Eli Lichtenstein - 2019 - Dissertation, University of Michigan
    I argue that scientific and poetic modes of objectivity are perspectival duals: 'views' from and onto basic natural forces, respectively. I ground this analysis in a general account of objectivity, not in terms of either 'universal' or 'inter-subjective' validity, but as receptivity to basic features of reality. Contra traditionalists, bare truth, factual knowledge, and universally valid representation are not inherently valuable. But modern critics who focus primarily on the self-expressive aspect of science are also wrong to claim that our (...)
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  21.  18
    The Reception of Spinoza and Mendelssohn in the Russian Enlightenment and the Russian-Jewish Haskalah.Igor Kaufman - 2022 - Dialogue and Universalism 32 (1):81-102.
    My general objective in this paper is to provide the outlines of the reception of Baruch Spinoza and Moses Mendelssohn in the Russian Enlightenment of the late 18th century as well as in the Russian-Jewish Haskalah. In part of the paper I consider Gavrila Derzhavin’s mention of Mendelssohn in his “Opinion,” the translation of Mendelssohn’s Phaedon in Nikolay Novikov’s Masonic-inspired journal Utrennyi Svet, and the readings of Spinoza’s view on God and then-shared interpretation of his views as an “atheism” in (...)
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  22.  12
    Christ and Revelatory Community in Bonhoeffer’s Reception of Hegel.David S. Robinson - 2018 - Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
    Back cover: How is God revealed through the life of a human community? Dietrich Bonhoeffer's theological ethics begins from the claim to 'Christ existing as community', which David Robinson presents as one of several critical and politically astute variations on G.W.F. Hegel's philosophy of religion.
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  23.  74
    Gadamer and the Reception of Aristotle's Intellectual Virtues.Enrico Berti - 2000 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 56 (3/4):345-360.
    In his recent edition, with translation and commentary, of Aristotle, Eth. Nic. VI, Hans-Georg Gadamer reproposes his interpretation of Aristotle's practical philosophy as a model for his own hermeneutics, confirming in this way his tendency to identify practical philosophy with the intellectual virtue of phronesis. Furthermore, although he recognizes the primacy attributed by Aristotle to the theoretical life, Gadamer tends to undervalue it and to consider phronesis and sophia at the same level. In particular he believes that the theoretical life (...)
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  24.  9
    The Severity of God: Religion and Philosophy Reconceived.Paul K. Moser - 2013 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book explores the role of divine severity in the character and wisdom of God, and the flux and difficulties of human life in relation to divine salvation. Much has been written on problems of evil, but the matter of divine severity has received relatively little attention. Paul K. Moser discusses the function of philosophy, evidence and miracles in approaching God. He argues that if God's aim is to extend without coercion His lasting life to humans, then commitment to that (...)
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  25.  14
    A forerunner of Darwin in the service of nihilists: the translation and reception of Vestiges in Russia.Alexander V. Khramov - 2024 - British Journal for the History of Science 57 (1):65-79.
    Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation by Robert Chambers, a Scottish publisher and popular writer, was one of the most influential evolutionary works in the pre-Darwinian age. This article examines the circumstances in which this treatise was published in Russia in 1863 and went through a second printing in 1868. Vestiges was translated into Russian by Alexander Palkhovsky (1831–1907), a former medical student, ideologically close to the nihilist movement, and was initially printed by the radical publisher Anatoly Cherenin, later (...)
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  26.  20
    The Problem of Perception and the Experience of God Toward a Theological Empiricism.Sameer Yadav - 2015 - Philadelphia: Fortress Press.
    A fundamental problem in Christian theology has been that of determining whether God can be an object of experience and how we should account for God's empirical availability to us. Can experiences of God serve to inform and justify our theological beliefs and practices? The central claim in this work is that there is a radical mistake in many contemporary accounts that require grounding a theological story of Gods availability to us in experience in a prior general philosophical theory of (...)
  27.  10
    No Evidence for an Auditory Attentional Blink for Voices Regardless of Musical Expertise.Merve Akça, Bruno Laeng & Rolf Inge Godøy - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Background. Attending to goal-relevant information can leave us metaphorically ‘blind’ or ‘deaf’ to the next relevant information while searching among distracters. This temporal cost lasting for about a half a second on the human selective attention has been long explored using the attentional blink paradigm. Although there is evidence that certain visual stimuli relating to one’s area of expertise can be less susceptible to attentional blink effects, it remains unexplored whether the dynamics of temporal selective attention vary with expertise and (...)
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  28.  14
    Mental Effort When Playing, Listening, and Imagining Music in One Pianist’s Eyes and Brain.Tor Endestad, Rolf Inge Godøy, Markus Handal Sneve, Thomas Hagen, Agata Bochynska & Bruno Laeng - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
  29.  12
    God and being: Heidegger's relation to theology.Jeff Owen Prudhomme - 1997 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press.
    The author interprets the relation to Heidegger's ontology to theology in terms of a correlation. He develops his inquiry from several different perspectives: a brief overview of Heidegger's thought; an overview of the traditional connections of God and being, between ontology and theology, and of the necessity of the connection; an overview of the theological reception of Heidegger's work; and finally a discussion of the current situation in theology.
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  30.  21
    When inspiration strikes, don't bottle it up! Write to me at: Philosophy Now 43a Jerningham Road• London• SE14 5NQ, UK or email rick. lewis@ philosophynow. org Keep them short and keep them coming! [REVIEW]God Correspondents, Debate Will Continue & No Doubt - forthcoming - Philosophy Now.
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  31.  10
    Gods, philosophers, and scientists: religion and science in the West.Scott Hendrix - 2019 - Mechanicsburg, PA: Oxford Southern, an imprint of Sunbury Press.
    According to Pew Research studies, most Americans think religion always conflicts with science. The popular writings of scientists such as Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Lawrence Krauss reinforce this idea, as do books by writers such as Christopher Hitchens and Daniel Dennet. Furthermore, the two versions of the enormously popular television show Cosmos, hosted by Carl Sagan in 1980 and Neil deGrasse Tyson in 2014, present a history of science in which religion has always acted as a barrier to scientific (...)
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  32.  23
    Logic and epistemology in Theravāda =.Hâgoḍa Khemānanda - 1993 - Ratmalana: Dharma Paryeshanalaya.
  33.  7
    Presupposing God: theological epistemology in Immanuel Kant's transcendental idealism and Karl Barth's theology.Robert A. Hand - 2022 - Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications.
    It is widely recognized that Immanuel Kant was one of Karl Barth's most important intellectual influences, but how and to what extent this is the case remains an open question. In Presupposing God, Robert Hand demonstrates a deep consistency between Kant's and Barth's theological epistemologies, with this issue in mind. After arguing for a number of positive emphases in Kant's critical philosophy and religious epistemology in conversation with modern Kant scholarship, Presupposing God demonstrates how these emphases were obscured in Kant's (...)
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  34.  9
    The Art and Discipline of Formative Reading: Revisiting Holy Scripture with Humble Receptivity.Susan Muto - 2012 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 5 (1):100-116.
    This article will show that lectio divina or the formative reading of Holy Scripture goes beyond exegetical-critical methods and fosters in the heart of every reader a more personal-reflective approach. This approach serves as a directive source guiding our faith and formation journey. Formative readers by definition desire to grow in spiritual self-knowledge and to allow the communications they receive to touch and transform their lives, if God so wills. Two requirements for formative reading will be explained herein: its meditative (...)
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  35.  18
    Ibn ʻArabī and Kubrawīs: the reception of the school of Ibn ʻArabī by Kubrawī mystics.Seyyed Shahabeddin Mesbahi - 2019 - Louisville, Kentucky: Fons Vitae.
    This work examines the influence of the school of Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi on the well-known Kubrawi masters. This path-breaking book is a study of major Kubrawi works and the manner in which the Kubrawis approached Ibn 'Arabi's ideas. By delving into the most important cornerstones of Ibn 'Arabi's worldview, such as wahdat al-wujud (unity of existence), al-insan al-kamil (Perfect Human Being) and asma wa sifat (God's Names and Attributes), this work provides a comparative study of their reception in the thought (...)
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  36.  32
    Utfordringar i å vere eit forskande kroppssubjekt.Torhild Godø Sæther - 2015 - Studier i Pædagogisk Filosofi 4 (2):94-102.
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty claims that we as body-subjects have an immediate sensational understanding of the world. A body that perceives and experience the world before any thought and word can render it. The words we use describing sensations are interpretations of sense-experiences, and will never render the total bodily understanding of the world. This article gives a brief insight of what an understanding of Merleau-Ponty’s body-subject implies for the researcher in body-phenomenological studies of toddlers.
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  37.  92
    Feeding Tiger, Finding God: Science, Religion, and" the Better Story" in Life of Pi.Gregory Stephens - 2010 - Intertexts 14 (1):41-59.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feeding Tiger, Finding GodScience, Religion, and "the Better Story" in Life of PiGregory Stephens (bio)Yann Martel's Life of Pi is an allegorical castaway story about a sixteen-year-old Indian polytheist who survives 227 days on a lifeboat with a Bengal tiger. Martel frames this postmodern variant on the Noah's ark tale as "a story that will make you believe in God" (viii). But these words are neither Martel's, nor those (...)
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  38.  12
    Nietzsche's Gods: Critical and Constructive Perspectives.Russell Re Manning & Carlotta Santini (eds.) - 2022 - Berlin: De Gruyter.
    The place of God in Nietzsche’s thought remains central and controversial. Nietzsche’s proclamation of 'the death of God' is one of the most famous slogans in modern philosophy, seeming to encapsulate the nineteenth-century loss of religious faith in the affirmation that God has "turned out to be our oldest lie" and yet the nature of Nietzsche’s own ‘theology’ is far from clear. This volume engages with Nietzsche’s arguments about God, theology, and religion. The volume extends the discussion to an engagement (...)
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  39.  37
    British Aestheticism - Evangelista British Aestheticism and Ancient Greece. Hellenism, Reception, Gods in Exile. Pp. xii + 203, ills. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. Cased, £50. ISBN: 978-0-230-54711-7. [REVIEW]Constanze Güthenke - 2010 - The Classical Review 60 (2):597-599.
  40. Pieter Smulders and Dei Verbum: 5. A critical reception of the schema De revelatione of the Mixed Commission (1963).Jared Wicks - 2005 - Gregorianum 86 (1):92-134.
    This article, the fifth in our series on the genesis of Dei Verbum, presents the critical comments of P. Smulders on the work of the Mixed Commission on Revelation . During the final days of Vatican II's First Period, Smulders obtained a copy of the new prooemium on revelation itself presented to the Mixed Commission by Abp. G. Garrone, and in this Smulders saw the citation of the prologue of 1 John as a basic text on revelation, which he had (...)
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  41.  25
    The Arabic, Hebrew and Latin Reception of Avicenna's "Metaphysics".Dag Nikolaus Hasse & Amos Bertolacci (eds.) - 2011 - De Gruyter.
    Avicenna's Metaphysics (in Arabic: Ilâhiyyât) is the most important and influential metaphysical treatise of classical and medieval times after Aristotle. This volume presents studies on its direct and indirect influence in Arabic, Hebrew, and Latin culture from the time of its composition in the early eleventh century until the sixteenth century. Among the philosophical topics which receive particular attention are the distinction between essence and existence, the theory of universals, the concept of God as the necessary being and the theory (...)
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  42.  15
    Nietzsche's Gods: Critical and Constructive Perspectives.Russell Re Manning, Carlotta Santini & Isabelle Wienand (eds.) - 2019 - Berlin: De Gruyter.
    The place (or absence) of God in Nietzsche's thought remains central and controversial. Nietzsche's proclamation of 'the death of God' is one of the most famous (and parodied) slogans in modern philosophy, seeming to encapsulate the nineteenth-century loss of religious faith in the affirmation that God has "turned out to be our oldest lie" and yet the nature of Nietzsche's own 'theology' is far from clear. This volume engages with Nietzsche's arguments about God, theology, and religion. The volume extends the (...)
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  43.  18
    A Reasonable Belief: Why God and Faith Make Sense by William Greenway.Victor Anderson - 2017 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 37 (2):194-195.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:A Reasonable Belief: Why God and Faith Make Sense by William GreenwayVictor AndersonA Reasonable Belief: Why God and Faith Make Sense William Greenway LOUISVILLE, KY: WESTMINSTER JOHN KNOX PRESS, 2015. 170 PP. $30.00This book offers an apology for the reasonableness of Christian belief in the God of love and the gift of God in Jesus, agape, against its secular detractors from early modern philosophy to the late twentieth (...)
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  44.  66
    The Holy and the God-Loved: The Dilemma in Plato’s Euthyphro.Dorothea Frede - 2022 - The Monist 105 (3):293-308.
    Is the holy holy because the gods love it or do the gods love it because it is holy? On the basis of this dilemma Plato works out the manifold and complex relationship between God and Morality in his dialogue Euthyphro. This dialogue not only plays a central role within Plato’s work on the question of the relationship between ethics and religion, but it also represents the starting point of the entire further Western debate about God and Morality. This article (...)
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  45.  8
    Listening to God and the Founding of the Law: Notes on Exodus 32.19–20.Andrew Benjamin - 2021 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 52 (4):281-297.
    The aim of this paper is to contribute to the development of a political theology that take both God and law as central. Rather than operate abstractly, the paper works closely on passages from Exodus and Genesis that are themselves linked directly to what is at stake in “listening to God”. The transformation of the immediacy of listening to the necessarily mediated response to the law is the move that the passages from the Torah entail. Within that setting, listening breaks (...)
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  46.  6
    Listening to God and the Founding of the Law: Notes on Exodus 32.19–20.Andrew Benjamin - 2021 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 52 (4):281-297.
    ABSTRACT The aim of this paper is to contribute to the development of a political theology that take both God and law as central. Rather than operate abstractly, the paper works closely on passages from Exodus and Genesis that are themselves linked directly to what is at stake in “listening to God”. The transformation of the immediacy of listening to the necessarily mediated response to the law is the move that the passages from the Torah entail. Within that setting, listening (...)
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  47.  13
    Characterizing Movement Fluency in Musical Performance: Toward a Generic Measure for Technology Enhanced Learning.Victor Gonzalez-Sanchez, Sofia Dahl, Johannes Lunde Hatfield & Rolf Inge Godøy - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Virtuosity in music performance is often associated with fast, precise, and efficient sound-producing movements. The generation of such highly skilled movements involves complex joint and muscle control by the central nervous system, and depends on the ability to anticipate, segment, and coarticulate motor elements, all within the biomechanical constraints of the human body. When successful, such motor skill should lead to what we characterize as fluency in musical performance. Detecting typical features of fluency could be very useful for technology-enhanced learning (...)
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  48.  38
    The reception of western philosophy in the Lithuanian philosophy of religion.Mindaugas Briedis - 2009 - Studies in East European Thought 61 (1):15-30.
    The article examines the reception of Western philosophy in Lithuanian philosophy of religion. The purpose is to show how the discourse of philosophy of religion came about in Lithuania. This branch of philosophy has been not only culturally and socially important in Lithuania, it has been significant as well for the formation and maintenance of national identity. By the same token, it also was the most developed and controversial theoretically. The first part of the article lays out the genesis of (...)
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  49. Jewish-Christian relations and the sacramentality of God's word.Teresa Pirola - 2020 - The Australasian Catholic Record 97 (4):411.
    This article explores the idea that, just as the Jewish-Christian dialogue today benefits from the historical consciousness of critical biblical scholarship, so might the dialogue further benefit by a stronger engagement with the corporeal consciousness that permeates both Christian and Jewish traditions in relation to Sacred Scripture. That is, the well-attested 'turn toward history' is also a 'turn toward the body'. Attention to the corporeality of God's word enables a deeper reception of Scripture as 'body' and therefore, I argue, enables (...)
     
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  50. Love of God and Love of Self in Thirteenth-Century Ethics.Thomas M. Osborne Jr - 2005 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press.
    This book treats the thirteenth-century debate concerning the natural love of God over self with an eye to how the thinkers of this period saw the connection between one's own good and the aims of virtuous action. It shows that the main difference in this debate reflects a fundamental contrast between Thomas Aquinas and John Duns Scotus over the importance of natural inclination in Ethics and the priority of the common good. It indicates how medieval thinkers attempted to reconcile eudaimonism (...)
     
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