Results for 'Andrew St Laurent'

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  1.  17
    In Response to “Revisiting Blumberg's 'The Practice of Law As A Confidence Game'” by Professor Gilbert Geis.Andrew St Laurent - 2012 - Criminal Justice Ethics 31 (1):39-41.
    (2012). In Response to “Revisiting Blumberg's ‘The Practice of Law As A Confidence Game’” by Professor Gilbert Geis. Criminal Justice Ethics: Vol. 31, No. 1, pp. 39-41. doi: 10.1080/0731129X.2012.657508.
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  2.  15
    Une théologie naturelle est-elle encore possible?Guillaume St-Laurent - 2024 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 80 (1):93.
    Malgré l’important renouveau que connaît la théologie naturelle depuis environ un demi-siècle dans le champ de la philosophie de la religion, Charles Taylor soutient que celle-ci appartient à une époque désormais révolue. Cette étude propose de restituer de manière aussi fidèle et précise que possible les raisons de ce verdict. Une telle analyse vise à combler une lacune importante dans la littérature secondaire. Cette lacune tient, d’une part, au fait que Taylor lui-même ne développe jamais ces raisons de façon systématique (...)
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  3.  26
    La critique herméneutique de l’épistémologie chez Charles Taylor.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2014 - Philosophiques 41 (1):79-103.
    Guillaume St-Laurent | : Le projet philosophique central de Charles Taylor se présente comme une critique de l’« image épistémologique » (epistemological picture) de la raison, critique qui se déploie au nom d’une compréhension de la rationalité humaine plus sensible à sa finitude transcendantale et historique. L’objectif du présent essai consiste à présenter une brève analyse comparative de cette image épistémologique (ou post-cartésienne) ainsi que de la perspective herméneutique que lui oppose notre auteur. En ce sens, nous comparerons tour (...)
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  4.  8
    L’herméneutique métaphysique entre metaphysica generalis et metaphysica specialis.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2014 - Philosophiques 41 (2):371-378.
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  5.  8
    Peut-on vivre l’Absolu? Étude critique sur le phénoménisme ontologique de P.S. Blouin.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2021 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 77 (3):451-472.
  6.  7
    Peut-on vivre l’Absolu?Guillaume St-Laurent - 2021 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 77 (3):451-472.
  7.  31
    Sur la possibilité d’un doute hyperbolique en phénoménologie : Essai sur l’anti-cartésianisme de Claude Romano.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2015 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 71 (2):285-303.
    Guillaume St-Laurent | : Dans ses récentes méditations philosophiques, Claude Romano soutient non seulement que la phénoménologie ne devrait plus être cartésienne, mais qu’elle ne peut plus l’être, car un doute universel serait lui-même foncièrement absurde du point de vue phénoménologique. L’objectif du présent essai est de contester qu’une telle réfutation phénoménologique du cartésianisme soit possible. En ce sens, nous soutiendrons que les arguments anti-sceptiques de Romano s’avèrent insuffisants parce que le doute hyperbolique est une possibilité de pensée qui, (...)
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  8.  2
    De la réflexivité radicale à la métacritique.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2023 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 119 (4):611-647.
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  9.  19
    Jean Wahl’s unassailable heritage.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2020 - Continental Philosophy Review 53 (1):103-111.
    Despite his unassailable heritage, the passionate thinker to whom Levinas dedicated Totalité et infini has today nearly been forgotten outside France. This forgetting is the shared premise of two books published in recent years. The first is William C. Hackett and Jeffrey Hanson’s edition and translation of Wahl’s Existence humaine et transcendance : Human Existence and Transcendence, and the second is a volume of selections from Wahl’s philosophical writings edited by Alan D. Schrift and Ian Alexander Moore: Jean Wahl: Transcendence (...)
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  10.  11
    Le dilemme de la raison et le problème de la «facticité».Guillaume St-Laurent - 2016 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 114 (2):245-272.
    L’objectif du présent essai est de soutenir que l’horizon de la philosophie moderne est circonscrit par un dilemme inéluctable, qui gouverne toutes les instances de la raison critique depuis les Méditations métaphysiques de René Descartes. Ce dilemme est le suivant: ou bien nous assumons l’exercice du doute radical de manière à le surmonter dans une ontologie du «sujet transcendantal», et nous sommes alors confrontés à des apories insurmontables, ou bien nous outrepassons la possibilité du doute radical en adoptant pour point (...)
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  11.  12
    La solution implicite de Charles Taylor au problème de l’« historicisme transcendental ».Guillaume St-Laurent - 2017 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 21 (2):179-207.
    Notre objectif est de montrer que la théorie de l’argumentation philosophique développée par Charles Taylor apporte une solution élégante, quoiqu’implicite, au problème de l’« historicisme transcendantal » dans la tradition herméneutique contemporaine (Heidegger, Gadamer, Ricoeur). Ce problème consiste à se demander comment il peut être possible à la fois (1) de désavouer l’existence de vérités « absolues » ou « anhistoriques » et (2) de reconnaître au discours philosophique sur l’« historicité » (Geschichtlichkeit) de la pensée tous ses droits, puisque (...)
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  12.  23
    Marc-Antoine Vallée, Gadamer et Ricœur. La conception herméneutique du langage , 242 pp.Guillaume St-Laurent - 2014 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 5 (2):128-131.
  13.  26
    Why Do They Keep Coming to Get Their Hearts?B. A. St Andrews, Paul Boor, Michael Zack, Norbert Hirschhorn, Jack Coulehan & Robert Carroll - 2001 - Journal of Medical Humanities 22 (4):299-310.
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  14.  41
    Reuniting philosophy and science to advance cancer research.Thomas Pradeu, Bertrand Daignan-Fornier, Andrew Ewald, Pierre-Luc Germain, Samir Okasha, Anya Plutynski, Sébastien Benzekry, Marta Bertolaso, Mina Bissell, Joel S. Brown, Benjamin Chin-Yee, Ian Chin-Yee, Hans Clevers, Laurent Cognet, Marie Darrason, Emmanuel Farge, Jean Feunteun, Jérôme Galon, Elodie Giroux, Sara Green, Fridolin Gross, Fanny Jaulin, Rob Knight, Ezio Laconi, Nicolas Larmonier, Carlo Maley, Alberto Mantovani, Violaine Moreau, Pierre Nassoy, Elena Rondeau, David Santamaria, Catherine M. Sawai, Andrei Seluanov, Gregory D. Sepich-Poore, Vanja Sisirak, Eric Solary, Sarah Yvonnet & Lucie Laplane - 2023 - Biological Reviews 98 (5):1668-1686.
    Cancers rely on multiple, heterogeneous processes at different scales, pertaining to many biomedical fields. Therefore, understanding cancer is necessarily an interdisciplinary task that requires placing specialised experimental and clinical research into a broader conceptual, theoretical, and methodological framework. Without such a framework, oncology will collect piecemeal results, with scant dialogue between the different scientific communities studying cancer. We argue that one important way forward in service of a more successful dialogue is through greater integration of applied sciences (experimental and clinical) (...)
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  15.  12
    Interests and Strengths in Autism, Useful but Misunderstood: A Pragmatic Case-Study.Valérie Courchesne, Véronique Langlois, Pascale Gregoire, Ariane St-Denis, Lucie Bouvet, Alexia Ostrolenk & Laurent Mottron - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Background: Studies on autistic strengths are often focused on what they reveal about autistic intelligence and, in some cases, exceptional and atypical reasoning abilities. An emerging research trend has demonstrated how interests and strengths often evident in autism can be harnessed in interventions to promote the well-being, adaptive, academic and professional success of autistic people. However, abilities in certain domains may be accompanied by major limitations in others, as well as psychiatric and behavioral issues, which may challenge their inclusion in (...)
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  16.  16
    Making sense of dying and death.Andrew Fagan (ed.) - 2004 - New York, NY: Rodopi.
    Health, illness and disease are topics well-suited to interdisciplinary inquiry. This book brings together scholars from around the world who share an interest in and a commitment to bridging the traditional boundaries of inquiry. We hope that this book begins new conversations that will situate health in broader socio-cultural contexts and establish connections between health, illness and disease and other socio-political issues. This book is the outcome of the first global conference on Making Sense of: Health, Illness and Disease, held (...)
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  17.  11
    Inexhaustibility: St. John of the Cross and Barthes’s Author Function.Andrew Burnside - forthcoming - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy.
    St. John of the Cross was aware of the fact that his mysticism resisted prosaic, discursive representation; however, most contemporary scholars have overlooked this radical component of his work. First, I trace the major philosophical influences on John’s work: Medieval Neoplatonism and Scholasticism. Second, by drawing on the Barthesian-Foucauldian concept of the author function, I demonstrate that the Mystical Doctor saw his poetry as free-standing, inexhaustible by even his own efforts to systematize key aspects of his poetry—an insurmountable task, which (...)
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  18.  7
    Diderot and the art of thinking freely.Andrew S. Curran - 2019 - New York: Other Press.
    A vivacious biography of the prophetic and sympathetic philosopher who along with Voltaire and Rousseau built the foundations of the modern world, and travelled as far as Russia to enlighten the Tsarina Catherine the Great. Denis Diderot is often associated with the decades-long battle to bring the world's first comprehensive Encyclopédie into existence. But his most compelling and personal writing took place in the shadows. Thrown into prison for his atheism in 1749, Diderot decided to reserve his most daring books (...)
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  19.  34
    Technosystem: The Social Life of Reason.Andrew Feenberg - 2017 - Harvard University Press.
    We live in a world of technical systems, designed in accordance with technical disciplines and operated by a personnel trained in those disciplines. This is a unique form of social organization without historical precedent. It overshadows traditional democratic institutions and largely determines our way of life. Technosystem: The Social Life of Reason reconstructs the idea of democracy for this brave new world. The author draws on the tradition of radical social criticism represented by Herbert Marcuse and the Frankfurt School as (...)
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  20. Technologies of Democracy: Experiments and Demonstrations.Brice Laurent - 2011 - Science and Engineering Ethics 17 (4):649-666.
    Technologies of democracy are instruments based on material apparatus, social practices and expert knowledge that organize the participation of various publics in the definition and treatment of public problems. Using three examples related to the engagement of publics in nanotechnology in France (a citizen conference, a series of public meetings, and an industrial design process), the paper argues that Science and Technology Studies provide useful tools and methods for the analysis of technologies of democracy. Operations of experiments and public demonstrations (...)
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  21.  26
    Oikonomia, Incarnation and Immediacy: The Figure of the Jew in St John of Damascus.Andrew Benjamin - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 25 (3):407-422.
    This paper investigates the role of oikonomia in the writings of St John of Damascus and how that role is integral to the construction of the figure of the Jew.
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  22.  56
    Critical theory of technology and STS.Andrew Feenberg - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 138 (1):3-12.
    The Critical Theory of the early Frankfurt School promised, in Adorno’s words, a ‘rational critique of reason’. Science and Technology Studies can play a role in the renewal of this approach. STS is based on a critique of the very same technocratic and scientistic assumptions against which Critical Theory argues. Its critique of positivism and determinism has political implications. But at its origins STS took what Wiebe Bijker called the ‘detour into the academy’ in order to institutionalize itself as a (...)
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  23.  18
    Manual Labor in the life and Thought of St. Basil the Great.Andrew Dinan - 2009 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 12 (4):133-157.
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  24.  5
    Camp: notes on fashion.Andrew Bolton - 2019 - New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. Edited by Karen van Godtsenhoven, Amanda Garfinkel, Fabio Cleto, Johnny Dufort & Susan Sontag.
    Although an elusive concept, "camp" can be found in most forms of artistic expression, revealing itself through an aesthetic of deliberate stylization. Fashion is one of the most overt and enduring conduits of the camp aesthetic. As a site for the playful dynamics between high art and popular culture, fashion both embraces and expresses such camp modes of enactment as irony, humor, parody, pastiche, artifice, theatricality, and exaggeration. Drawing from Susan Sontag's seminal essay "Notes on 'camp,'" the book explores how (...)
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  25.  49
    A Methodologically Pragmatist Approach to Development Ethics.Asunción Lera St Clair - 2007 - Journal of Global Ethics 3 (2):143-164.
    This paper suggests that lessons from the field of environmental ethics and sociological perspectives on knowledge are important tools for rethinking what type of ethical analysis is needed for building up further the field of development ethics and, more generally, for addressing some of the most fundamental ethical problems related to global poverty and development. The paper argues for a methodologically pragmatist approach to development ethics that focuses on the interplay between facts, values, concepts and practices. It views development ethics (...)
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  26.  38
    Science and Religion in the Thirteenth Century Revisited: the Making of St Francis the Proto-Ecologist: Part 2: Nature not Creature.Andrew Cunningham - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 32 (1):69-98.
  27.  8
    Science and religion in the thirteenth century revisited: the making of St Francis the proto-ecologist.Andrew Cunningham - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):613-643.
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  28.  21
    Theodicy and What Could Be Otherwise: A Response to Christopher Southgate.Andrew Davison - 2022 - Zygon 57 (4):1135-1140.
    In June 2022, Christopher Southgate delivered the Boyle Lecture for that year at St Mary-le-Bow, in the City of London, on the theme of evolutionary theodicy. This article contains the text of the short talk and vote of thanks delivered in response that evening.
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  29. A Contemporary Assessment Of St. Augustine's On The Good Of Widowhood.Floy Andrews Doull - 2001 - Animus 6:32-49.
     
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  30.  54
    What May I Hope?Andrew Chignell - 2013 - Routledge.
    The concept of hope plays a fascinating yet overlooked role in Kant's thought. Whilst his emphasis on reason and enlightened thought may be seen to leave little room for hope, it is a question that sits at the heart of his writings on religion and political philosophy. What May I Hope? introduces and assesses Kant's answers to this compelling question and also places hope in a contemporary philosophical context. Andrew Chignell begins by introducing accounts of hope before Kant, including (...)
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  31. Eustathios of thessaloniki and st nikephoros of antioch: Hagiography for a political end.Andrew Stone - 2007 - Byzantion 77:416-431.
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  32. Rahner's Philosophy: A lonerganian critique.Andrew Beards - 2006 - Gregorianum 87 (2):262-283.
    In this article I have highlighted what I take to be some salient deficiencies in Rahner's basic philosophical position, and I have argued that Lonergan does provide arguments which can be validated on the basis of the data of self-consciousness. Rahner's metaphysics of knowing often appears as a catena of simple assertions derived, it is claimed, from St Thomas' philosophy. There are occasional attempts to justify positions taken against the possible objections of contemporary philosophy but these attempts are sporadic at (...)
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  33.  4
    How (not) to find God in all things: Derrida, Levinas, and st. Ignatius of loyola on learning how to pray for the impossible.Michael F. Andrews - 2005 - In Bruce Ellis Benson & Norman Wirzba (eds.), The phenomenology of prayer. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 195-208.
  34.  9
    The philosophy and psychology of Pietro Pomponazzi.Andrew Halliday Douglas - 1910 - Cambridge [Eng.]: University Press. Edited by Charles Douglas & R. P. Hardie.
    An essay on Pietro Pomponazzi, the philosopher and founder of the Aristotelian-Averroistic School. His great work De immortalitate animi, gave rise to a storm of controversy between the orthodox Thomists of the Catholic Church, the Averroists headed by Agostino Nifo, and the so-called Alexandrist School. The treatise was burned at Venice, and Pomponazzi himself ran serious risk of death at the hands of the Catholics. Two pamphlets followed, the Apologia and the Defensorium, wherein he explained his paradoxical position as Catholic (...)
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  35.  25
    John Henry Newman’s Anagnorisis of 1839.Andrew Denton - 2011 - Newman Studies Journal 8 (2):42-51.
    In a well-known passage in his Apologia, Newman’s recognition of himself as a latter-day Monophysite marked a pivotal step towards his conversion. This recognition, however, was preceded by another painful anagnorisis: his realization, as a result of a stinging article by Nicholas Wiseman, that he was a latter-day Donatist. This essay examines how Wiseman’s article exposed Newman’s ecclesial ambivalence and highlights the role that St. Augustine’s writings played, not only in confirming Newman’s schismatic identity, but also in ultimately suggesting how (...)
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  36.  10
    Crossing Boundaries Social Science in the Policy Room.Andrew Webster - 2007 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 32 (4):458-478.
    This article discusses the relationship between a deconstructivist method in science and technology studies and the more recent moves towards a reconstructivist engagement with science and science policy making. Drawing on examples from the author's own research, the article identifies three forms of engagement and their relative utility and limitations. The article argues that these are typical of STS work that seeks direct engagement with science policy making and which could form the basis for a more "serviceable STS" that retains (...)
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  37.  24
    Beware of the handmaid scorned.Andrew Chrucky - manuscript
    St. Augustine's book, The City of God , suggests the fundamental problem for the philosophy of a liberal education. The basic problem is that there are two cities which beckon our allegiance: the secular city and the city of God. The role of philosophy is to examine critically the arguments of the contending parties and to adjudicate between them. A denominational college, by its nature, proclaims its allegiance to the city of God; so the place of philosophy as adjudicator becomes (...)
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  38.  18
    “For thou can’st read”: Cultural Silence and Education in Gray’s Elegy.Andrew McKendry - 2012 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 31:101.
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  39.  8
    Vi-2 Ordinis Sexti Tomus Secundus.Andrew J. Brown (ed.) - 1969 - Brill.
    Part Two of Ordo VI of the Amsterdam edition of Erasmi opera omnia presents his Greek text and his Latin translation of the Gospel according to St. John and the Acts of the Apostles.
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  40.  7
    Vi-3 Ordinis Sexti Tomus Tertius: Novum Testamentum Ab Erasmo Recognitum Iii - Epistolae Apostolicae.Andrew J. Brown (ed.) - 2004 - Brill.
    Part Three of Ordo VI of the Amsterdam edition of Erasmi opera omnia presents his Greek text and his Latin translation of St. Paul’s letters to the Romans, the Corinthians, the Galatians, the Ephesians, the Philippians, the Colossians and the Thessalonians.
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  41. Virtue Ethics: St Maximos the Confessor and Aquinas Compared.Andrew Louth - 2013 - Studies in Christian Ethics 26 (3):351-363.
    Traditionally Christian ethical reflection has taken the form of what is called nowadays ‘virtue ethics’. This article compares the approach to virtue ethics in the Byzantine thinker, Maximos the Confessor, and the Western thinker, Thomas Aquinas. They both share the heritage of Plato and Aristotle. Maximos develops a concern for the virtues that is practical and ascetic; although he recognizes and uses the traditional classical terminology, he prefers a new Christian terminology, based more directly on the Scriptures. In contrast, Aquinas (...)
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  42.  26
    Hylemorphic Animalism and the Incarnational Problem of Identity.Andrew Jaeger - 2017 - Journal of Analytic Theology 5:145-162.
    In this paper, I argue that adherents of Patrick Toner’s hylemorphic animalism who also assent to orthodox Christology and a thesis about the necessity of identity must reject a prima facie plausible theological possibility held by Ockham, entertained in one form by St. Thomas Aquinas, and recently held by Richard Cross, Thomas Flint,, and, and Timothy Pawl and concerning which individual concrete human natures an omnipotent God could assume.
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  43.  17
    St Gregory of Nazianzus and the Classical Tradition. The Poemata Arcana qua Hymns.Andrew Faulkner - 2010 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 154 (1).
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  44.  80
    On the Image of Painting.Andrew Benjamin - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (2):181-205.
    Painting can only be thought in relation to the image. And yet, with (and within) painting what continues to endure is the image of painting. While this is staged explicitly in, for example, paintings of St. Luke by artists of the Northern Renaissance—e.g., Rogier van der Weyden, Jan Gossaert, and Simon Marmion—the same concerns are also at work within both the practices as well as the contemporaneous writings that define central aspects of the Italian Renaissance. The aim of this paper (...)
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  45.  14
    Mere Social Trinitarianism, the Eternal Relations of Origin, and Models of God.Andrew Hollingsworth - 2023 - Journal of Analytic Theology 11:23-40.
    Social trinitarians are divided on whether the doctrine of the eternal relations of origin (DERO) should be maintained. In this paper, I focus on what social trinitarianism (ST) must affirm and cannot affirm by way of the divine attributes in order to maintain the DERO. First, I offer my own proposal for a mere ST before turning to the DERO, as the ST term currently suffers many uses and definitions. Second, I turn my attention to ST and the divine attributes. (...)
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  46.  11
    Misanthropy: the critique of humanity.Andrew Gibson - 2017 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    This book is the first major study of the theme of misanthropy, its history, arguments both for and against it, and its significance for us today. Misanthropy is not strictly a philosophy. It is an inconsistent thought, and so has often been mocked. But from Timon of Athens to Motörhead it has had a very long life, vast historical purchase and is seemingly indomitable and unignorable. Human beings have always nursed a profound distrust of who and what they are. This (...)
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  47.  27
    Concretizing Simondon and Constructivism: A Recursive Contribution to the Theory of Concretization.Andrew Lewis Feenberg - 2017 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 42 (1):62-85.
    This article argues that Gilbert Simondon’s philosophy of technology is useful for both science and technology studies and critical theory. The synthesis has political implications. It offers an argument for the rationality of democratic interventions by citizens into decisions concerning technology. The new framework opens a perspective on the radical transformation of technology required by ecological modernization and sustainability. In so doing, it suggests new applications of STS methods to politics as well as a reconstruction of the Frankfurt School’s “rational (...)
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  48.  5
    Is Dormammu Evil?Andrew T. Vink - 2018 - In Mark D. White (ed.), Doctor Strange and Philosophy. Chichester, UK: Wiley. pp. 217–227.
    Introduced in the comics in 1964, the “Dread Dormammu” is the ruler of the Dark Dimension and its magicks, with power comparable to the Vishanti, the mystical beings from whom Doctor Stephen Strange summons his own mystical energy. St. Augustine's journey was not too different from that of Stephen Strange: a man of secular culture who eventually is awakened to his higher calling from forces beyond the physical realm. One of Augustine's key insights into the realities of the human person (...)
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  49. The Political and Social Ideas of Saint Augustine.Herbert Andrew Deane - 1963 - Columbia University Press.
    A critical essay on St. Augustine's social and political thought. In describing Augustine, the author captures the essence of the man in these words: "Genius he had in full measure... he is the master of the phrase or the sentence that embodies a penetrating insight, a flash of lightning that illuminates the entire sky; he is the rhetorician, the epigrammist, the polemicist, but not the patient, logical systematic philosopher.".
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  50.  47
    Mr. Bradley and God.Andrew Vincent - 2000 - Bradley Studies 6 (1):104-124.
    What did God mean to F.H. Bradley? Bradley’s style and subtle philosophical approach makes it difficult to ascertain precisely what his settled thoughts were on this issue. He does say, for example, quite a lot as to what God is not. This essay will initially follow out this negative reading. This latter enterprise entails comparisons, first, with philosophy, or more appropriately the ‘metaphysical impulse’, second, with morality, and third, with history. Having followed out the more negative arguments, the essay turns (...)
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