Results for 'Jonathan R. Seiling'

989 found
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  1.  9
    Being in the World: A Quotable Maritain Reader.Mario O. D'Souza & Jonathan R. Seiling (eds.) - 2014 - Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.
    The work of the lay Catholic philosopher Jacques Maritain continues to provoke and inspire readers to engage in a Thomistic approach to many of the questions facing the world today. Maritain’s wide-ranging thought touched on many fields, including aesthetics, anthropology, educational theory, moral philosophy, and ethics, as well as Thomism and its relationship to other philosophical stances._ In _Being in the World: A Quotable Maritain Reader_, Mario O. D’Souza, C.S.B., has selected seven hundred and fifty of the most salient quotations (...)
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  2.  18
    Introduction.Jonathan R. Topham - 2009 - Isis 100 (2):310-318.
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  3.  13
    From discipline to control in nursing practice: A poststructuralist reflection.Jonathan R. S. McIntyre, Candace Burton & Dave Holmes - 2020 - Nursing Philosophy 21 (4):e12317.
    The everyday expressions of nursing practices are driven by their entanglement in complex flows of social, cultural, political and economic interests. Early expressions of trained nursing practice in the United States and Europe reflect claims of moral, spiritual and clinical exceptionalism. They were both imposed upon—and internalized by—nursing pioneers. These claims were associated with an endogenous narrative of discipline and its physical manifestation in early nursing schools and hospitals, which functioned as “total institutions.” By contrast, the external forces—diffuse yet pervasive—impacting (...)
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  4.  32
    MEG Evidence for Incremental Sentence Composition in the Anterior Temporal Lobe.Jonathan R. Brennan & Liina Pylkkänen - 2017 - Cognitive Science 41 (S6):1515-1531.
    Research investigating the brain basis of language comprehension has associated the left anterior temporal lobe with sentence-level combinatorics. Using magnetoencephalography, we test the parsing strategy implemented in this brain region. The number of incremental parse steps from a predictive left-corner parsing strategy that is supported by psycholinguistic research is compared with those from a less-predictive strategy. We test for a correlation between parse steps and source-localized MEG activity recorded while participants read a story. Left-corner parse steps correlated with activity in (...)
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  5.  63
    Biology in the service of natural theology: Paley, Darwin, and the Bridgewater Treatises.Jonathan R. Topham - 2010 - In Denis Alexander & Ronald L. Numbers (eds.), Biology and Ideology From Descartes to Dawkins. London: University of Chicago Press.
    In his Natural Theology, the eighteenth-century Anglican theologian William Paley compares a watch with objects in nature, arguing that “every manifestation of design, which existed in the watch, exists in the works of nature…” Charles Darwin read Paley's Natural Theology as a young man and offered natural selection as an alternative, naturalistic explanation of Paley's explanandum: the appearance of design in nature. Many of Paley's successors diverged from him in their approach to the living world. This chapter examines some of (...)
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  6.  14
    A View from the Industrial Age.Jonathan R. Topham - 2004 - Isis 95 (3):431-442.
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  7.  31
    The Language of Legitimacy and Decline: Grammar and the Recovery of Vedānta in Bhaṭṭoji Dīkṣita’s Tattvakaustubha.Jonathan R. Peterson - 2020 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 48 (1):23-47.
    The scope and audacity of Bhaṭṭoji Dīkṣita’s contributions to Sanskrit grammar has made him one of early-modern India’s most influential, if not controversial, intellectuals. Yet for as consequential as Bhaṭṭoji’s has been for histories of early-modern scholasticism, his extensive corpus of non-grammatical writings has attracted relatively little scholarly attention. This paper examines Bhaṭṭoji’s work on Vedānta, the Tattvakaustubha, in order to gage how issues of language became an increasingly important site of inter-religious critique among early-modern Vedāntins. In the Tattvakaustubha, Bhaṭṭoji (...)
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  8.  56
    Scientific publishing and the reading of science in nineteenth-century Britain: a historiographical survey and guide to sources.Jonathan R. Topham - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):559-612.
  9.  19
    ‘Newly Amended and Much Enlarged’: Claims of Novelty and Enlargement on the Title Pages of Reprints in the Early Modern English Book Trade.Jonathan R. Olson - 2016 - History of European Ideas 42 (5):618-628.
    ABSTRACTNovelty held a special attraction for book buyers in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but new texts carried more risk for the publisher than titles already proven to be good sellers. Canny bookseller-publishers therefore adopted a publishing strategy that would benefit from the commercial safety of proven sellers while simultaneously exploiting the cachet of the ‘new’. They could maximise the sales potential of a book by reprinting an already market-tested text but repackaging it with new and improved ingredients, often provided (...)
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  10. Legal defeasibility in context and the emergence of substantial indefeasibility.Jonathan R. Nash - 2012 - In Jordi Ferrer Beltrán & Giovanni Battista Ratti (eds.), The Logic of Legal Requirements: Essays on Defeasibility. Oxford University Press.
     
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  11.  3
    Can (and Should) Educational Research Be Value-Neutral?Jonathan R. Dolle - 2008 - Philosophy of Education 64:318-326.
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  12.  21
    Perceptual advantage for category-relevant perceptual dimensions: the case of shape and motion.Jonathan R. Folstein, Thomas J. Palmeri & Isabel Gauthier - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  13.  22
    Pluralizing the Non-dual: Multilingual Perspectives on Advaita Vedānta, 1560–1847.Jonathan R. Peterson - 2020 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 48 (1):1-7.
    With a textual record spanning dozens of languages—to say nothing of its oral histories—Advaita Vedānta’s multilingual archive presents obvious and daunting challenges for scholars of South Asian intellectual and religious histories. The papers in this issue build on recent multilingual and contextual approaches to South Asian intellectual history by reading a rich corpus of Advaita Vedānta material in Persian, Marathi, Tamil, Sanskrit and Braj Bhasha. In bringing these sources and their authors into conversation with one another, this issue acknowledges Advaita (...)
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  14.  15
    Pluralizing the Non-dual: Multilingual Perspectives on Advaita Vedānta, 1560–1847.Jonathan R. Peterson - 2020 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 48 (1):1-7.
    With a textual record spanning dozens of languages—to say nothing of its oral histories—Advaita Vedānta’s multilingual archive presents obvious and daunting challenges for scholars of South Asian intellectual and religious histories. The papers in this issue build on recent multilingual and contextual approaches to South Asian intellectual history by reading a rich corpus of Advaita Vedānta material in Persian, Marathi, Tamil, Sanskrit and Braj Bhasha. In bringing these sources and their authors into conversation with one another, this issue acknowledges Advaita (...)
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  15.  25
    Cave navem.Jonathan R. W. Prag - 2006 - Classical Quarterly 56 (02):538-.
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  16.  15
    The Cognitive Neuroscience of Stable and Flexible Semantic Typicality.Jonathan R. Folstein & Michael A. Dieciuc - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  17. Not Thinking about Science and Religion.Jonathan R. Topham - 2002 - Minerva 40 (2):203-209.
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  18.  27
    The Essentially Contested Concept of Globalization.Jonathan R. Strand, Tina F. Mueller & Jessica A. Mcarthur - 2005 - Politics and Ethics Review 1 (1):45-59.
  19.  22
    Empirical Significance, Predictive Power, and Explication.Surovell Jonathan/R. - forthcoming - Synthese.
    Criteria of empirical significance are supposed to state conditions under which reference to an unobservable object or property is “empirically meaningful.” The intended kind of empirical meaningfulness should be necessary for admissibility into the selective contexts of scientific inquiry. I defend Justus’s recent argument that the reasons generally given for rejecting the project of defining a significance criterion are unpersuasive. However, as I show, this project remains wedded to an overly narrow conception of its subject matter. Even the most cutting (...)
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  20.  10
    The problem of opportunity.Jonathan R. Goodman - 2023 - Biology and Philosophy 38 (6):1-25.
    Cultural group selection theorists propose that humans evolved prosocial preferences. These claims revolve largely around the centrality of punishment in cultural groups, which helped to eliminate free riders. The purpose of this paper is to explore whether distinguishing between free-riding as an action, and free riders as entities, undermines or supports this view. I develop three individual-based models of the Prisoner’s Dilemma. The first model shows that strong reciprocity removes overt freeriders from a population, and maintains a high rate of (...)
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  21. Nietzsche’s Musical Conception of Time.Jonathan R. Cohen - 2008 - In Manuel Dries (ed.), Nietzsche on Time and History. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 291.
  22.  30
    Traversing Forgiveness.Jonathan R. Heaps - 2017 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 91 (1):53-72.
    In the epilogue to Memory, History, Forgetting, Paul Ricoeur introduces an overlooked “vertical” axis into the problem of forgiveness. This verticality runs from the “depth” of fault to the “height” of forgiveness. For Ricoeur, forgiveness only appears an impossible “exchange” if one excludes this verticality from the question. Instead, he calls forgiveness “difficult” because it traverses from height to depth. This article argues that Ricoeur’s notion of the horizontal and the vertical in Memory, History, Forgetting is best understood as an (...)
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  23.  18
    Traversing Forgiveness.Jonathan R. Heaps - 2017 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 91 (1):53-72.
    In the epilogue to Memory, History, Forgetting, Paul Ricoeur introduces an overlooked “vertical” axis into the problem of forgiveness. This verticality runs from the “depth” of fault to the “height” of forgiveness. For Ricoeur, forgiveness only appears an impossible “exchange” if one excludes this verticality from the question. Instead, he calls forgiveness “difficult” because it traverses from height to depth. This article argues that Ricoeur’s notion of the horizontal and the vertical in Memory, History, Forgetting is best understood as an (...)
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  24.  12
    Always on Call: Thoughts from a Neophyte Physician.Jonathan R. Scarff & David W. Musick - 2012 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 23 (2):175-176.
    This commentary describes a new physician who encountered a patient in crisis in a nonmedical environment. It discusses professional obligations, ethical principles, errors committed, and reasoning behind such errors. Unusual circumstances, uncertainty about how to properly identify oneself as a physician, self-doubt, and discomfort with practicing outside one’s scope of training are recognized as reasons behind these errors. Medical students should be reminded of their ethical obligation to offer emergency care within their limitations, instructed how to identify themselves, and guided (...)
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  25.  32
    When Physicians Intervene in Their Relatives' Health Care.Jonathan R. Scarff & Steven Lippmann - 2012 - HEC Forum 24 (2):127-137.
    Physicians often struggle with ethical issues surrounding intervention in their relatives’ health care. Many editorials, letters, and surveys have been written on this topic, but there is no systematic review of its prevalence. An Ovid Medline search was conducted for articles in English, written between January 1950 and December 2010, using the key words family member, relatives, treatment, prescribing, physician, and ethics. The search identified 41 articles (editorials, letters, and surveys). Surveys were reviewed to explore demographics of these treating physicians (...)
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  26.  49
    Government as investor: Tax policy and the state.Jonathan R. Macey - 2006 - Social Philosophy and Policy 23 (2):255-286.
    This article analogizes the state, in its role as tax collector, to that of an investor, or to be more precise, that of a residual claimant on the earnings of all of the people and firms subject to the taxing power of the state. The relationship between modern democracy and its citizens would be strengthened if this analogy were more widely acknowledged because it recognizes citizen-taxpayers as contracting partners with the state. Unlike other libertarian conceptions of the state's taxing authority, (...)
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  27.  7
    The death of corporate reputation: how integrity has been destroyed on Wall Street.Jonathan R. Macey - 2013 - Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: FT Press.
    The way things are supposed to be : reputational theory and its demise -- Thriving the new way : with little or no reputation : the Goldman Sachs story -- The way things used to be : when reputation was critical to survival -- Individual reputation unhinged from the firm : hardly anybody goes down with the ship -- Proof in the pudding : Michael Milken, Junk Bonds, and the decline of Drexel and -- Nobody else -- The new, post-reputation (...)
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  28.  36
    Rex Aut Lex.Jonathan R. Cohen - 1996 - Apeiron 29 (2):145 - 161.
    Compares the differing answers as to whether human rulers or the law should be supreme in the works of Plato and Aristotle.
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  29.  4
    Conversation, Stability, and Education: Newman, Duquesne, and the Catholic Intellectual Tradtion.Jonathan R. Crist - 2017 - Listening 52 (2):103-109.
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  30.  14
    Patient reported quality of life in young adults with sarcoma receiving care at a sarcoma center.Jonathan R. Day, Benjamin Miller, Bradley T. Loeffler, Sarah L. Mott, Munir Tanas, Melissa Curry, Jonathan Davick, Mohammed Milhem & Varun Monga - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    BackgroundSarcomas are a diverse group of neoplasms that vary greatly in clinical presentation and responsiveness to treatment. Given the differences in the sites of involvement, rarity, and treatment modality, a multidisciplinary approach is required. Previous literature suggests patients with sarcoma suffer from poorer quality of life especially physical and functional wellbeing. Adolescent and young adult patients are an underrepresented population in cancer research and have differing factors influencing QoL.MethodsRetrospective analysis of Young Adult patients enrolled in the Sarcoma Tissue Repository at (...)
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  31.  27
    The philosophical and satirical context of the "Suenos" of Quevedo.Jonathan R. Ellis - unknown
    Quevedo brings together a number of philosophical traditions in the Suenos. One chapter of the thesis examines Quevedo's use of Epicurean dream theory as well as the larger ramifications of the dream setting for the satires. Another chapter analyzes the exact nature of Quevedo's sceptical views and their classical sources with emphasis on the content of El mundo por de dentro. Included is a discussion of the moral philosophy presented in the Suenos, deriving primarily from Stoic sources. In each case, (...)
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  32.  16
    Scientific publishing and the reading of science in nineteenth-century Britain: A historiographical survey and guide to sources.Jonathan R. Topham - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):559-612.
  33.  45
    Philosophy is Education is Politics.Jonathan R. Cohen - 2002 - Ancient Philosophy 22 (1):1-20.
    In the central section of the _Protagoras_, the discussion between Socrates and Protagoras has broken down in a seemingly irresolvable dispute about methodology - Protagoras wants to make long speeches, while Socrates wants to proceed by means of the short questions and answers characteristic of the elenchus. The onlookers offer solutions in an attempt to restart the discussion. This section appears to be a mere dramatic interlude, but I argue that in fact it constitutes a parable establishing links between philosophy, (...)
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  34. Nietzsche’s Second Turning.Jonathan R. Cohen - 2014 - Pli 25:35-54.
    Locates, discusses, and explains the transition between Nietzsche's middle and late periods represented by the first four books of _The Gay Science_.
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  35.  8
    Nietzsche as Philosopher.Cohen Jonathan R. - 2010 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 1 (40):81-82.
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  36. The importance of Urie Bronfenbrenner's bioecological theory for early childhood education.R. H. Tudge Jonathan, A. Mercon-Vargas Elisa & Ayse Pair Yue Liang - 2017 - In Lynn E. Cohen & Sandra Waite-Stupiansky (eds.), Theories of early childhood education: developmental, behaviorist, and critical. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  37.  30
    Technicians of print and the making of natural knowledge.Jonathan R. Topham - 2004 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 35 (2):391-400.
    When this invaluable account of ‘one of the most successful of all publishers and printers of nineteenth- and twentieth-century science’ was first issued in 1984, it began with a survey of the underdeveloped literature on the history of scientific periodicals, and more generally of science publishing. A decade and a half later, in this considerably expanded second edition— issued to celebrate the bicentenary of the launch of the Philosophical Magazine in 1798—the authors had only a couple of extra titles to (...)
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  38.  6
    Smoother pebbles: essays in the sociology of science.Jonathan R. Cole - 2024 - New York: Columbia University Press. Edited by Stephen Cole.
    From roughly 1965 to 1995, Columbia University's Department of Sociology was a leading center for social study of science, both nationally and internationally. It was often referred to as the Merton School or Columbia School, and four scholars paved its way : Robert K. Merton, Harriet Zuckerman, Stephen Cole, and Jonathan Cole. The goal of the Columbia School was to create and legitimate a new sociological specialty focusing on the scientific community and the growth of scientific knowledge and they (...)
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  39.  32
    Standardisation of Reduced Forms in English in an Academic Community of Practice.Jonathan R. White - 2014 - Pragmatics and Society 5 (1):105-127.
    The process of standardising reduced forms in English, such as clippings and informal forms, used in academic chat discourse is the focus of this article. Textchat data from an introductory MA linguistics course run by a university in Sweden involving non-native English-speaking students and their native English-speaking teachers is analysed to identify if any forms are standardised. Topic-specific forms are seen to be standardised as much as are high frequency forms, although few have been standardised. It is the students above (...)
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  40. Defending Academic Freedom and Free Inquiry.Jonathan R. Cole - 2009 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 76 (3):811-844.
    This paper focuses our attention on a few principles that guide great universities. I want to suggest that the United States has not distinguished itself particularly well in preventing episodes of repression and attempts to silence dissent at universities, nor has it produced an extraordinary number of courageous leaders over the past seventy-five years who have come forward to defend the principles of academic freedom. While the US has never reached the level of repression that Germany felt in the 1930s, (...)
     
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  41.  43
    In God's Garden: Creation and Cloning in Jewish Thought.Jonathan R. Cohen - 1999 - Hastings Center Report 29 (4):7-12.
    The possibility of cloning human beings challenges Western beliefs about creation and our relationship to God. If we understand God as the Creator and creation as a completed act, cloning will be a transgression. If, however, we understand God as the Power of Creation and creation as a transformative process, we may find a role for human participation, sharing that power as beings created in the image of God.
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  42.  33
    Nietzsche as Philosopher (review).Jonathan R. Cohen - 2010 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 40 (1):81-82.
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  43. In Nietzsche's Footsteps (2nd edition).Jonathan R. Cohen - 2018 - Montreal: 8th House.
    A philosophical travel memoir, discussing Nietzsche's life and philosophy while visiting his three favorite residences, Nice, Turin, and Sils-Maria.
     
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  44.  56
    Born to Affirm the Eternal Recurrence.Jonathan R. Cohen - 1996 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 3 (3):1-11.
    I argue that the Bruce Springsteen song “Born to Run” needs to be interpreted in light of---and thus gives evidence of a connection between---the philosophies of Friedrich Nietzsche and Martin Buber. Along the way I give an in-depth reading of the Nietzschean doctrines of Eternal Recurrence and Overman as they emerge from Also Sprach Zarathustra, as well as a brief overview of Buber’s I and Thou.
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  45. Paul Schollmeier, Other Selves: Aristotle on Personal and Political Friendship Reviewed by.Jonathan R. Cohen - 1995 - Philosophy in Review 15 (2):141-143.
     
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  46.  6
    From Free Spaces to Freed Places.Jonathan R. Barton - 1995 - In E. Barker (ed.), Lse on Freedom. Lse Books. pp. 275.
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  47.  5
    Marking Online Community Membership: The Pragmatics of Stance-taking.Jonathan R. White - 2019 - In Alessandro Capone, Marco Carapezza & Franco Lo Piparo (eds.), Further Advances in Pragmatics and Philosophy: Part 2 Theories and Applications. Springer Verlag. pp. 535-548.
    Data from academic seminars conducted through Skype textchat is analysed in this chapter, and the focus is on examples of how users mark community membership. Membership is marked explicitly by using pronominals and the metonymic use of the seminar group name. It is also marked implicitly by using reduced forms, which are stereotypical examples of a textchat speech style. I argue that these are markers of stance-taking, where community membership is recovered pragmatically as a weak implicature. Dis-alignment with the community (...)
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  48.  11
    After Baptism: Shaping the Christian Life.Jonathan R. Wilson - 2007 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (1):327-329.
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  49.  17
    Contextualized Faith: Douglas John Hall's North American Theology.Jonathan R. Wilson - 1999 - Modern Theology 15 (1):85-92.
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  50.  15
    From Theology of Culture to Theological Ethics: The Hartt-Hauerwas Connection.Jonathan R. Wilson - 1995 - Journal of Religious Ethics 23 (1):149 - 164.
    One neglected influence on Stanley Hauerwas is the work of Julian Hartt. In this essay, I trace three ways in which Hartt has influenced Hauerwas: in his understanding of the task of theology, in his conception of theological ethics, and in his use of narrative. I identify these elements in Hartt's theology and argue, in the light of these influences, for a particular interpretation of Hauerwas's work. I also note three areas of discontinuity between Hartt and Hauerwas for future exploration.
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