Results for 'Russian Orthodox thought of the golden age'

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  1.  35
    The Golden Age of Russian Literature. [REVIEW]Frank Fadner - 1940 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 15 (3):525-527.
  2.  2
    Rosyjska prawosławna krytyka modernizmu. Ad complementum książki A. Walickiego O Rosji inaczej.Hanna Kowalska‑Stus - 2021 - Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria:265-279.
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  3.  39
    Personality, person, subject in Russian legal philosophy at the turn of the twentieth century.Elena Pribytkova - 2009 - Studies in East European Thought 61 (2-3):209-220.
    The problem of the legal person is a central issue in legal philosophy and the theory of law. In this article I examine the semantic meaning of the concept of the person in Russian philosophy at the turn of the twentieth century, considered to be the "Golden Age" of Russian legal thought. This provides an overview of the conception of the personality in the context of different legal approaches (theory of natural law, legal positivism, the psychological (...)
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  4.  53
    Paradise, the Golden Age the Millennium and Utopia: A Note on the Differentation of Forms of the Ideal Society.Luc Racine - 1983 - Diogenes 31 (122):119-138.
    What is the difference between the earthly paradise, the Golden Age and the ideal city? This question is most important for whoever is interested in the various ways human societies have had for imagining an ideal state of perfection or social harmony. If we are not to confuse such different systems of representation as mythical thought, millenarianism and Utopia, it is absolutely necessary that we do not reduce the descriptions of an earthly paradise and a Golden Age (...)
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  5.  25
    The Golden Age of Indian Buddhist Philosophy.Jan Westerhoff - 2018 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Jan Westerhoff unfolds the story of one of the richest episodes in the history of Indian thought, the development of Buddhist philosophy during the first millennium CE. He aims to offer the reader a systematic grasp of key Buddhist concepts such as non-self, suffering, reincarnation, karma, and nirvana.
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  6.  26
    The Golden Age That Never Was.Lee J. Strang - 2010 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 7 (2):489-522.
  7.  15
    Modernity and its critique in 20th century Russian orthodox thought.Kristina Stöckl - 2007 - Studies in East European Thought 58 (4):243-269.
    Orthodox Christianity has often been understood as not pertaining to Modernity due to its different historical and theological trajectory. This essay disputes such a view with regard to 20th century Orthodox thought, which it examines from the point of view of a sociology of Modernity in order to identify where Orthodox thinkers of the Russian Diaspora and in Russia today position themselves in relation to modern society and philosophy. Two essentially modern positions within Orthodoxy are (...)
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  8. Cicero and the golden age tradition.Sean McConnell - 2021 - In Pierre Destrée, Jan Opsomer & Geert Roskam (eds.), Utopias in Ancient Thought. de Gruyter. pp. 213–230.
    This paper examines Cicero’s engagement with the golden age tradition of utopian thinking, which is prominent not only in Greek literature but also in Plato and the Peripatetic and Stoic philosophical traditions. It makes the case that in De re publica and later philosophical works such as the Tusculan Disputations Cicero draws on philosophical accounts of the golden age—most significantly that of the Peripatetic Dicaearchus of Messana (c.350–c.285 BC)—in his analysis of the Roman res publica and the nature (...)
     
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  9.  10
    The social thought of the Orthodox Church reflected in the documents of the Holy Pan-Orthodox Council of Crete.Iuliu-Marius Morariu - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):1-4.
    An important moment in the history of the Orthodox Church is despite the withdrawal of local churches like the Bulgarian, Russian, Georgian and Alexandrian ones and the fear of Serbian Church to take part in it, the Pan-Orthodox Council of Crete remains an important meeting that influenced the history of Orthodoxy and shifted its conception to the world. The relevance of some of the topics discussed there explains why it can be found inside the important theological journals (...)
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  10.  99
    Modernity and its critique in 20th century Russian orthodox thought.Kristina Stöckl - 2006 - Studies in East European Thought 58 (4):243 - 269.
    Orthodox Christianity has often been understood as not pertaining to Modernity due to its different historical and theological trajectory. This essay disputes such a view with regard to 20th century Orthodox thought, which it examines from the point of view of a sociology of Modernity in order to identify where Orthodox thinkers of the Russian Diaspora and in Russia today position themselves in relation to modern society and philosophy. Two essentially modern positions within Orthodoxy are (...)
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  11.  5
    The Golden Age That Never Was.John M. Breen & Lee J. Strang - 2010 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 7 (2):489-522.
  12.  17
    Theories of the Sublime in the Dutch Golden Age: Franciscus Junius, Joost van den Vondel and Petrus Wittewrongel.Stijn Bussels - 2016 - History of European Ideas 42 (7):882-892.
    SUMMARYThis article explores how writers from the Dutch Golden Age thought about human contact with that which is elevated far above everyday life. The Dutch Republic offers an interesting context because of the strikingly early use there by seventeenth-century humanists of the Greek concept ὕψος, from Longinus, to discuss how writers, artists and their audiences were able to surpass human limitations thanks to an intense imagination which transported them to supreme heights. Dutch poets also used the Latin sublimis (...)
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  13.  9
    Russian Orthodox Theological Anthropology of the Twentieth Century.Fr Vladimir Shmaliy - 2009 - Faith and Philosophy 26 (5):628-646.
    Russian Orthodoxy during the twentieth century presented a rich and varied body of thought about the nature of humanity and the human condition. This article surveys the major thinkers within this tradition, beginning with its background in the Slavophile movement and culminating in the work of more recent Orthodox thinkers such as Sergei Bulgakov, Georges Florovsky, Vladimir Lossky, and Alexander Schmemann.
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  14.  12
    Ivan Bunin and George Fedotov: A Discourse on the 1917 Revolution in Philosophical and Literary Thought of the Silver Age.Julia V. Klepikova - 2020 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 63 (6):82-95.
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  15.  59
    Galileo in the Russian orthodox context: History, philosophy, theology, and science.Teresa Obolevitch - 2015 - Zygon 50 (4):788-808.
    The trial of Galileo remains a representative example of the alleged incompatibility between science and religion as well as a suggestive case study of the relationship between them from the Western historical and methodological perspective. However, the Eastern Christian view has not been explored to a significant extent. In this article, the author considers relevant aspects of the reception of the teaching of Copernicus and Galileo in Russian culture, especially in the works of scientists. Whereas in prerevolutionary Russia Galileo (...)
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  16.  22
    «Snovidets Mnemoziny»: dreaming of Mnemosyne: Evgeny Boratynsky’s poetry in Vyacheslav Ivanov’s aesthetics.Yulia Yu Anokhina - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 72 (3-4):279-290.
    The article is devoted to the Russian Symbolist poet Vyacheslav Ivanov’s perception of Evgeny Boratynsky’s poetry. The specific focus is on Ivanov’s interest concerning the way Boratynsky’s lyrics relate to his philosophy of art. The article examines various types of lyrics in which Ivanov echoes Boratynsky’s poetry. One of these is a revival of the genre of “friendly epistles,” a genre that was popular in Russian poetry of the Golden Age. In poems of this type, Ivanov uses (...)
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  17.  45
    Spinoza, Liberalism, and the Question of Jewish Identity (review).Steven M. Nadler - 1998 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 36 (2):321-322.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Spinoza, Liberalism, and the Question of Jewish Identity by Steven B. SmithSteven NadlerSteven B. Smith. Spinoza, Liberalism, and the Question of Jewish Identity. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997. Pp. xvii + 270. Cloth, $30.00.Steven B. Smith’s aim in this elegant, well-written book is to restore Spinoza to his important and rightful place in the history of political and religious thought. At the heart of the book (...)
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  18. A golden-age, from the reign of kronos to the realm of freedom.Vincent Geoghegan - 1991 - History of Political Thought 12 (2):189-207.
  19.  26
    Golden age and justice in sixteenth-century florentine political thought and imagery: Observations on three pictures by Jacopo Zucchi.Thomas Puttfarken - 1980 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 43 (1):130-149.
  20.  14
    ‘The Golden Chain of Pious Rabbis’: the origin and development of Finnish Jewish Orthodoxy.Simo Muir & Riikka Tuori - 2019 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 30 (1):8-34.
    This article provides the first historiographical analysis of the origins of Jewish Orthodoxy in Helsinki and describes the development of the rabbinate from the establishment of the congregation in the late 1850s up to the early 1980s. The origins of the Finnish Jewish community lies in the nineteenth-century Russian army. The majority of Jewish soldiers in Helsinki originated from the realm of Lithuanian Jewish culture, that is, mainly non-Hasidic Jewish Orthodoxy that emerged in the late eighteenth century. Initially, the (...)
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  21.  13
    A Disastrous Matter: The Polish Question in the Russian Political Thought and Discourse of the Great Reform Age, 1856–1866.J.-Guy Lalande - 2020 - The European Legacy 26 (3-4):442-444.
    Poland ceased to exist in the last third of the eighteenth century, swallowed up by its three immediate neighbours—Austria, Prussia, and Russia. Following the Napoleonic Wars and the subsequent red...
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  22.  10
    Ecumene of the Logos: Theoretical Affinities Between Italian and Russian Ontologism.Marek Kita - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 73 (2):141-154.
    The topic of this article is the convergence of the fundamental theoretical intuitions of two independent currents of Christian philosophy at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Italian Catholic spiritualism and the internally diversified current of the Russian religious philosophical Renaissance proved to be convergent in their ontological realism based on the metaphysics of cognition. This consonance undermines the stereotype about the total difference between the Russian Orthodox and the Western Catholic mentality. The article tries (...)
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  23.  4
    The Original Age of Anxiety: Essays on Kierkegaard and His Contemporaries.Lasse Horne Kjældgaard - 2021 - Boston: BRILL.
    The book proposes a radically revised understanding of the epoch of the Danish Golden Age by investigating the historical and literary contexts of Søren Kierkegaard’s pioneering thoughts on anxiety.
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  24.  15
    Poul Martin Møller's "Thoughts on the possibility of proofs of human immortality" and other texts.Jon Stewart, Finn Gredal Jensen & Poul Martin Møller (eds.) - 2022 - Boston: Brill.
    A classicist, philosopher, and poet, Poul Martin Møller was an important figure in the Danish Golden Age. The traumatic event of the death of his wife led him to think more profoundly about the question of the immortality of the soul. In 1837 he published his most important philosophical treatise, "Thoughts on the Possibility of Proofs of Human Immortality," presented here in English for the first time. It was read and commented upon by the leading figures of the (...) Age, such as Søren Kierkegaard. It proved to be the last important work that Møller wrote before his death in March of 1838 at the age of 43. (shrink)
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  25.  9
    Philosophy of Music in the Mirror of the Contemporary Age. Article 2.Alexander S. Klujev - 2022 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 64 (7):137-150.
    The article examines the processes taking place in contemporary musical culture, and the emphasis is placed on the situation that has developed today in the musical life of Russia. It is noted that many contemporary composers in Russia are breaking with the domestic artistic traditions, focusing on the creative initiatives of composers living in the West. Among the Russian composers, the SoMa group composers are distinguished by a special intransigence to the principles of artistic creativity that tradionally developed in (...)
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  26.  4
    Russian Thought After Communism: The Recovery of a Philosophical Heritage.James Patrick Scanlan - 1994 - M.E. Sharpe.
    An examination of Russia's philosophical heritage. It extends from the Slavophiles to the philosophers of the Silver Age, from emigre religious thinkers to Losev and Bakhtin and assesses the meaning for Russian culture as a whole.
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  27.  7
    A Disastrous Matter: The Polish Question in the Russian Political Thought and Discourse of the Great Reform Age, 1856–1866: by Henryk Głębocki, translated by Teresa Baluk-Ułewiczowa, Krakow, Jagiellonian University Press, 2017, 331 pp., $50.00 (paper). [REVIEW]J.-Guy Lalande - 2021 - The European Legacy 26 (3-4):442-444.
    Poland ceased to exist in the last third of the eighteenth century, swallowed up by its three immediate neighbours—Austria, Prussia, and Russia. Following the Napoleonic Wars and the subsequent red...
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  28.  15
    Political Hesychasm? Vladimir Petrunin’s Neo-Byzantine Interpretation of the Social Doctrine of the Russian Orthodox Church.Kristina Stöckl - 2010 - Studies in East European Thought 62 (1):125-133.
  29.  10
    The Persistence of the Sacred in Modern Thought.Chris L. Firestone & Nathan Jacobs (eds.) - 2012 - Notre Dame University Press.
    In _The Persistence of the Sacred in Modern Thought,_ Chris L. Firestone, Nathan A. Jacobs, and thirteen other contributors examine the role of God in the thought of major European philosophers from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century. The philosophers considered are, by and large, not orthodox theists; they are highly influential freethinkers, emancipated by an age no longer tethered to the authority of church and state. While acknowledging this fact, the contributors are united in arguing that (...)
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  30.  13
    The myth of the moral brain: the limits of moral enhancement.Harris Wiseman - 2016 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
    An argument that moral functioning is immeasurably complex, mediated by biology but not determined by it. Throughout history, humanity has been seen as being in need of improvement, most pressingly in need of moral improvement. Today, in what has been called the beginnings of “the golden age of neuroscience,” laboratory findings claim to offer insights into how the brain “does” morality, even suggesting that it is possible to make people more moral by manipulating their biology. Can “moral bioenhancement”—using technological (...)
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  31.  53
    The Philosophical Age Almanac. Issue 36. The Northern Lights: Facets of the Enlightenment Culture.Tatʹjana V. Artemʹeva, Mikhail Igorevich Mikeshin & Vesa Oittinen (eds.) - 2010 - Helsinki: St. Petersburg Center for the History of Ideas.
    The Aleksanteri Institute of the University of Helsinki organized in 25–26 of September 2009 a special symposium Northern Lights — Facets of Enlightenment Culture with the aim to discuss form of Enlightenment thought in Sweden/Finland and Russia. The symposium, which was opened by Prof. Emeritus Matti Klinge, a renowned historian of 18th- and 19th-century Finland, had four participants from Russia, five from Finland and one from Germany; thus, it was yet a quite small event, but we hope that with (...)
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  32.  20
    The spiritual meaning of war in the philosophy of the Russian silver age.Alexander L. Dobrokhotov - 2014 - Studies in East European Thought 66 (1-2):69-76.
    The First World War forced the Russian intelligentsia to rethink its values—values that had been constructed in the nineteenth century. Distancing itself from pacifism and cultural relativism, it began to search for a moral meaning to the war that broke out in 1914—i.e. to defend the war as morally right and having a higher spiritual purpose. Russian philosophers were central to these debates, as they tried to interpret the war, and the relationship between war and peace, from a (...)
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  33.  7
    The romantic idea of the golden age in Friedrich Schlegel's Philosophy of history.Asko Nivala - 2017 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    Part I. The golden age and primitivism -- The savages -- Prometheus and Orpheus -- Atlantis -- Part II. The blossoming and decline of culture -- The age of blossoming in Athens -- Alexandria -- Part III. The problem of a national golden age -- The Roman model: golden age as a modern disease -- From classicism to romanticism -- Part IV. Kingdom of God -- German tradition of chiliasm -- From eschatology to kairology -- The gospel (...)
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  34.  11
    Philosophical thought in Russia in the second half of the twentieth century: a contemporary view from Russia and abroad.M. F. Bykova (ed.) - 2019 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Philosophical Thought in Russia in the Second Half of the 20th Century is the first book of its kind that offers a systematic overview of an often misrepresented period in Russia's philosophy. Focusing on philosophical ideas produced during the late 1950s – early 1990s, it reconstructs the development of genuine philosophical thought in the Soviet period and introduces those non-dogmatic Russian thinkers who saw in philosophy a means of reforming social and intellectual life. Covering such areas of (...)
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  35.  72
    Kierkegaard in Golden Age Denmark.Bruce H. Kirmmse - 1990 - Indiana University Press.
    "... the most important contribution to Kierkegaard studies to be published in English in recent years.... Not only is it a fascinating, surprising, and perceptive study of Kierkegaard within his time and world, Kirmmse has produced a research resource, a reference work, that is simply without parallel or equal." —Michael Plekon "It is a rare work of philosophy that not only clarifies its subject but also places it within an intellectual and historical context. In his study of 19th-century Danish philosopher (...)
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  36.  14
    The Golden Age of Academe: Myth or Memory?Malcolm Tight - 2010 - British Journal of Educational Studies 58 (1):105-116.
    Was there ever a golden age of academe: a time when academics were able to pursue their own interests, had relatively light and undemanding teaching responsibilities, and enjoyed widespread respect from both the general public and policy makers? This article explores that question, primarily in the context of the United Kingdom, but with some reference to other systems as well. It attempts to separate the mythical elements of the golden age from the reported memories and analyses of both (...)
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  37.  7
    Schrödinger's Cat & the Golden Bough: Reflections on Science, Mythology, and Magic.Randy Bancroft - 2000 - Upa.
    Schrödinger's Cat & The Golden Bough addresses the relationship between science and mythology from the starting points of Frazer's The Golden Bough and Erwin Schrödinger's famous cat. From the Greek origins of modern scientific thought, Bancroft traces the intertwining and separation of mythology, magic, and science through the ages. Drawing on psychology, mythology, literature, and history of science, the author, a physicist who works with electromagnetic Field Theory, presents a fascinating and provocative cross-disciplinary study.
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  38. From the Golden Age To El Dorado: (Metamorphosis of a Myth).Fernando Ainsa - 1986 - Diogenes 34 (133):20-46.
    The geographical Utopias that present a New World, from classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages to the exploration and conquest of American territories by Spain, give a two-fold vision of the myth of gold. On the one hand, the legendary lands in which were found the wealth and power generated by the coveted metal—El Dorado, El Paititi, the City of the Caesars—establish the direction of a venture toward the unknown, and a geography of the imaginary marked the ubiquitous sign of (...)
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  39.  16
    Epistemological contributions to the study of science in the latter days of the USSR: rethinking orthodox Marxist principles.Valentin A. Bazhanov - 2015 - Studies in East European Thought 67 (1-2):111-121.
    During the last quarter of the twentieth century, Soviet Russian philosophy did away with ideology in the fields of Science; but until the mid-1980s, scientists could not escape intense ideological scrutiny. A great number of Soviet scientists did their best to avoid this ideological supervision, and pursued their research, remaining neutral toward Marxist ideology. Among these fields of research were so called “philosophical problems of natural sciences”. Some Soviet Russian philosophers put forward original conceptions of scientific development, the (...)
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  40.  71
    Political Hesychasm? Vladimir Petrunin’s Neo-Byzantine Interpretation of the Social Doctrine of the Russian Orthodox Church. [REVIEW]Kristina Stöckl - 2010 - Studies in East European Thought 62 (1):125 - 133.
  41.  21
    The Golden Age and the Reversal of the Myth of Good Government in Plato’s Statesman. A Lesson on the Use of Models.Fulvia de Luise - 2020 - Plato Journal 20:21-37.
    We would be wrong to state that Plato’s approach to the Golden Age in the Statesman occurs through nostalgia, even if he stresses the immense distance between our world and that blessed time. After evoking the shepherd-god as a ruler, Plato shows that the completely abandoned disposition of the ruled is only justifiable in presence of an unbridgeable chasm between the two, such as that between gods and men, or men and beasts. The real question in the Statesman is (...)
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  42. Truth : the cultural and religious entanglement of categories : a contribution to the reflections over Orthodox thought.Anna Kurkiewicz - 2015 - In Teresa Obolevitch & Paweł Rojek (eds.), Faith and reason in Russian thought. Kraków: Copernicus Center Press.
     
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  43.  18
    ‘The golden age is proclaimed’? the Carmen Saeculare and the renascence of the golden race.Duncan Barker - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (2):434-446.
    The idea of a returning golden age is widely understood and commonly presented both as a staple of Augustan propaganda and as a pervasive aspiration of Augustan society. TheCarmen Saeculare—an official commission for a public festival—is presented as a means by which the regime proclaimed to an enthusiastic populace the imminent renascence of the golden race. The aim of this article is to draw attention both to thefailureof theCarmen Saeculareexplicitly to proclaim the renascence of the race, and to (...)
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  44.  43
    Theology and Science in the Thought of Francis Bacon.Steven Matthews - 2008 - Ashgate.
    Breaking with a Puritan past -- A mother's concern -- Turmoil and diversity in the English Reformation -- The influences and the options available in English -- Reformation theology -- Intellectual trends : patristics and hebrew -- Millennialism and the belief in a providential age -- Bacon's break with the godly -- Bacon's turn toward the ancient faith -- The formative years -- Bacon and Andrewes -- The Meditationes sacrae and Bacon's turn away from calvinism -- Bacon's confession of faith (...)
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  45.  14
    Edward Teller: Giant of the Golden Age of Physics. Stanley A. Blumberg, Louis G. PanosThe Advisors: Oppenheimer, Teller, and the Superbomb. Herbert F. YorkAtom and Void: Essays on Science and Community. J. Robert Oppenheimer. [REVIEW]Charles Ziegler - 1991 - Isis 82 (3):589-590.
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  46.  6
    The Origins of Civilization in Greek and Roman Thought.Sue Blundell - 1986 - Routledge.
    It has been much disputed to what extent thinkers in Greek and Roman antiquity adhered to ideas of evolution and progress in human affairs. Did they lack any conception of process in time, or did they anticipate Darwinian and Lamarckian hypotheses? The Origins of Civilization in Greek and Roman Thought, first published in1986, comprehensively examines this issue. Beginning with creation myths – Mother Earth and Pandora, the anti-progressive ideas of the Golden Age, and the cyclical theories of Orphism (...)
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  47.  23
    The Golden Age of Drinking and the Fall into Addiction.Marty Roth - 2004 - Janus Head 7 (1):11-33.
    This article surveys the discursive turns of a conventional historical trope: the change in the valence of alcohol (and drugs) from happy to miserable. This change is commonly told as the story of a golden age of drinking and a fall into addiction (although there is a confused relationship in many of the stories between a condition called medical alcoholism and the social behavior of drunkenness). This fall is variously dated from the fifteenth to the late nineteenth centuries (both (...)
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  48. Russian Contribution to the International Kant Studies from the Late 19th Century until the Present Day: An Analysis of Publications in “Kant-Studien”.Alexey Salikov - 2016 - Con-Textos Kantianos 4:35-55.
    This article gives a general characteristic of the publications of the Russian philosophers in the oldest Kantian Journal “Kant-Studien”. The study embraces the entire period of the existence of this magazine, from the very beginning down to our days. In general, after compiling all materials related to Russia published in “Kant-Studien”, I became aware of get a picture of a significant presence of Russian philosophers in this periodical. This gives me a good reason to conclude that even if (...)
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  49.  23
    Terminological front: «ruskiy mir» («russian world/peace») in religious and confessional rhetoric (the science of religion perception of existential choice).Oksana Horkusha - 2023 - Filosofska Dumka (Philosophical Thought) 1:26-44.
    The task of this article is to clarify the appropriateness and adequacy of peace-making (confessional) rhetoric in the situation of the war of aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine, in particular, the meaningful correspondence of the concept of «peace» in its application or reading by the bearers of different worldview paradigms. The «russkii mir» cannot be translated either as «Russian peace» or as «Russian world». This is because the scope and content of these concepts are different. (...)
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  50.  9
    The flying man: philosophers of the golden age of Islam.Akbar S. Ahmed - 2021 - Lahore: Vanguard Books.
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