Results for 'S. J. Schultenover'

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  1.  3
    Jesuit Superior General Luis Martín García and His Memorias : “Showing Up”.S. J. Schultenover - 2021 - BRILL.
    In _Jesuit Superior General Luis Martín García and His Memorias_, David Schultenover presents an account and interpretation of Martín’s memoir covering most of his sixty years, including candid reflections on church-state events and his personal life.
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  2. Independence as Relational Freedom.Alan M. S. J. Coffee - 2018 - In Sandrine Berges & Alberto L. Siani (eds.), Women Philosophers on Autonomy: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives. New York: Routledge. pp. 94-112.
    In spite of its everyday connotations, the term independence as republicans understand it is not a celebration of individualism or self-reliance but embodies an acknowledgement of the importance of personal and social relationships in people’s lives. It reflects our connectedness rather than separateness and is in this regard a relational ideal. Properly understood, independence is a useful concept in addressing a fundamental problem in social philosophy that has preoccupied theorists of relational autonomy, namely how to reconcile the idea of individual (...)
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  3.  32
    The Wollstonecraftian Mind.Alan M. S. J. Coffee, Sandrine Berges & Eileen Hunt Botting (eds.) - 2019 - London: Routledge.
    There has been a rising interest in the study of Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797) in philosophy, political theory, literary studies and the history of political thought in recent decades. The Wollstonecraftian Mind seeks to provide a comprehensive survey of her work, not only placing it in its historical context but also exploring its contemporary significance. Comprising 38 chapters by a team of international contributors this handbook covers: the background to Wollstonecraft’s work Wollstonecraft’s major works the relationship between Wollstonecraft and other major (...)
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  4.  10
    The effect of Cu on precipitation in Al–Mg–Si alloys.C. D. Marioara, S. J. Andersen, T. N. Stene, H. Hasting, J. Walmsley, A. T. J. Van Helvoort & R. Holmestad - 2007 - Philosophical Magazine 87 (23):3385-3413.
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  5. Mary Wollstonecraft, Public Reason and the Virtuous Republic.Alan M. S. J. Coffee - 2016 - In Sandrine Berges & Alan Coffee (eds.), The Social and Political Philosophy of Mary Wollstonecraft. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 183-200.
    Although ‘virtue’ is a complex idea in Wollstonecraft’s work, one of its senses refers to the capacity and willingness to govern one’s own conduct rationally, and to employ this ability in deliberating about matters of public concern. Wollstonecraft understands virtue to be integral to the meaning of freedom rather than as merely instrumentally useful for its preservation. It follows, therefore, that a free republic must be a virtuous one. The first virtue of social institutions, we might say, is ‘virtue’ itself. (...)
     
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  6. What remains of German idealism?Joseph Carew & S. J. McGrath - 2016 - In S. J. McGrath & Joseph Carew (eds.), Rethinking German idealism. London: Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  7.  1
    Erster Teil: Die Herkunft des Llullismus beim Cusanus.Eusebio S. J. Colomer - 1961 - In Eusebio Colomer (ed.), Nikolaus von Kues Und Raimund Llull Aus Handschriften der Kueser Bibliothek. De Gruyter. pp. 5-46.
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  8.  3
    Frontmatter.Eusebio S. J. Colomer - 1961 - In Eusebio Colomer (ed.), Nikolaus von Kues Und Raimund Llull Aus Handschriften der Kueser Bibliothek. De Gruyter.
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  9.  2
    Inhalt.Eusebio S. J. Colomer - 1961 - In Eusebio Colomer (ed.), Nikolaus von Kues Und Raimund Llull Aus Handschriften der Kueser Bibliothek. De Gruyter.
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  10.  2
    Indizes.Eusebio S. J. Colomer - 1961 - In Eusebio Colomer (ed.), Nikolaus von Kues Und Raimund Llull Aus Handschriften der Kueser Bibliothek. De Gruyter. pp. 195-200.
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  11. Verbum: Word and Idea in Aquinas.S. J. Bernard J. Lonergan - 1967
     
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  12. Art as ‘Covert Metaphysics’.S. J. Cyril Barrett - 1964 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 13:141-153.
    ‘ANY state of mind in which anyone takes a great interest is very likely to be called “knowledge”, because no other word in psychology has such emotive virtue’, wrote Ogden and Richards apropos of those who claim that art affords us a kind of knowledge uniquely its own. While one may agree with the implications of this remark, and it is a salutary warning to anyone tempted to make extravagant claims for art, it does less than justice to the intentions (...)
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  13. ch. 8. Being truthful with (or lying to) others about oneself.Kevin Flannery & J. S. - 2013 - In Tobias Hoffmann, Jörn Müller & Matthias Perkams (eds.), Aquinas and the Nicomachean Ethics. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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  14.  13
    HIV testing among clients in high HIV prevalence venues: Disparities between older and younger adults.C. L. Ford, S. J. Lee, S. P. Wallace, T. Nakazono, P. A. Newman & W. E. Cunningham - unknown
    © 2014 Taylor Francis. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends routine human immunodeficiency virus testing of every client presenting for services in venues where HIV prevalence is high. Because older adults have particularly poor prognosis if they receive their diagnosis late in the course of HIV disease, any screening provided to younger adults in these venues should also be provided to older adults. We examined aging-related disparities in recent and ever HIV testing in a probability sample of at-risk (...)
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  15. The Political Reason of Edmund Burke.S. J. Francis P. Canavan - 1960
     
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  16. A History of Philosophy, Vol. IV: Descartes to Leibniz.S. J. Frederick Copleston - 1958
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  17. Dankbar und nachdenklich : ein Nachwort.S. J. Friedhelm Hengsbach - 2018 - In Bernhard Emunds & Friedhelm Hengsbach (eds.), Christliche Sozialethik--Orientierung welcher Praxis?: Friedhelm Hengsbach SJ zu Ehren. Baden-Baden: Nomos.
     
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  18.  12
    La Iglesia de América Latina y el Caribe de Hoy. Al origen Medellín.Víctor Martínez Morales S. J., José Luis Meza Rueda & Gabriel Alfonso Suárez Medina - 2019 - Franciscanum 61 (172):1-16.
    La Iglesia de América Latina y el Caribe recibe del Concilio Vaticano II una fuerza crítica y profética, que se evidencia en la Segunda Conferencia del Episcopado, reunida en Medellín, en 1968. A partir de la originalidad propia de nuestra amerindia, este Concilio se asume, integra y traduce para vivir su inspiración y derroteros fundamentales. La iglesia de la que somos testigos hoy, 50 años después de Medellín, se ha entretejido desde allí. Prueba fehaciente de ello, en este continente, son (...)
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  19.  6
    The dynamic observation of the formation of defects in silicon under electron and proton irradiation.M. D. Matthews & S. J. Ashby - 1973 - Philosophical Magazine 27 (6):1313-1322.
  20.  8
    Towards a contextual understanding of human rights.S. J. Moka-Mubelo - 2019 - Ethics and Global Politics 12 (4):40-52.
  21.  12
    Gabriel García Márquez y la ética en Cien años de soledad – II.S. J. Molina Herrera - 2015 - Universitas Philosophica 32 (65):245.
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  22. The Nature of Belief.S. J. M. C. D’ARCY - 1958
     
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  23. The Sense of History: Secular and Sacred.S. J. M. C. D’Arcy - 1959
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  24. Republicanism and the Future of Democracy edited by Yiftah Elazar and Geneviève Rousselière. [REVIEW]Alan M. S. J. Coffee - 2019 - Perspectives on Politics 4.
  25. Eternity in Time. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (1):148-149.
    Anyone interested in the relationship between culture and the intellectual life, has no doubt turned to the works of Christopher Dawson. This collection of ten essays from a recent conference at Oxford acts as an excellent commentary on Dawson’s main academic concerns: recovering history as a philosophical-theological category, and the reintegration of the disciplines so as to provide future generations with an understanding of culture in the truest sense of the term. As John Morrill points out in his introductory essay, (...)
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  26. Engaging Unbelief: A Captivating Strategy from Augustine and Aquinas. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (2):381-381.
    The head of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship at Harvard, MIT, and Tufts, Curtis Chang turns to the seminal works of Augustine and Thomas as a way of engaging the challenges of postmodernity. He accordingly argues that Aquinas’s De Civitate Dei and Aquinas’s Summa Contra Gentiles were composed precisely to challenge a world growing suspicious, if not negligent, of the Christian story. The rhetorical strategy Chang cleverly uncovers in both DCD and SCG is threefold: both Augustine and Thomas enter their opponents’ unique (...)
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  27. John of Scythopolis and the Dionysian Corpus: Annotating the Areopagite. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (4):952-952.
    In the earlier part of the sixth century, John of Scythopotis collected and edited the writings of Dionysius the Areopagite. Elevated to the episcopacy of the important see of Palestina Secunda, sometime between 538 and 544, John not only gathered these texts of Dionysius, he also lent his own Neochalcedonian Christology to them in order to have one more apostolic authority from which to quote against the Monophysites of his day. Thanks in large part to Beate Regina Suchla's recent work (...)
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  28. On the Trinity, Books 8–15. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Mecone - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (1):140-140.
    St. Augustine tells us that he worked on the De Trinitate on and off between 400 and 416. The aim of this work is basically twofold: to examine both how the absolute monotheism of Christianity can speak of three divine persons as well as to examine how humanity images this triune God. A rare treasure of theology and psychology, the DT has shaped most of the West’s talk about the Trinity. For how we read Scripture’s often oblique references to the (...)
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  29. Reading Neoplatonism: Non-discursive Thinking in the Texts of Plotinus, Proclus, and Damascius. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (1):156-156.
    It was Plato who informed the Greek philosophical tradition of how the King of Egypt declared that writing will inevitably “implant forgetfulness in men’s souls; they will cease to exercise memory because they rely on that which is written, calling things to remembrance no longer from within themselves, but by means of external marks”. Plotinus likewise knew how these “wise men of Egypt” therefore chose to inscribe only one image in their temples and thus “manifested the non-discursiveness of the intelligible (...)
     
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  30. The Confession of Augustine. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (4):924-924.
    There is something appropriate about Lyotard’s last printed work being his most intimate and revealing. Best known for The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, Lyotard died in the April of 1998, leaving his Confession d’Augustin, as Dolorès Lyotard tells us in her “Forewarning,” “scarcely half” finished. Although his New York Times obituary claimed that “awaiting publication is his final book about the ‘Confessions’ of St. Augustine”, this work is less a book about the Confessions as it is an insight (...)
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  31. The Philosophy of Peter Abelard. [REVIEW]S. J. David Meconi - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 52 (3):706-706.
    From the outset Marenbon contends that in treating Peter Abelard as a critic and logician only, most scholars have neglected the originality of thought which Abelard brought to the questions of his day: “The aim of this book is to show that... [Abelard’s] was more than a fleeting superficial brilliance. He was a constructive and, at times, systematic philosopher; and, although it is certainly true that he used the methods of logic in treating Christian doctrine, his theology is remarkable for (...)
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  32. Unde Malum: Die Frage nach dem Woher des Bösen bei Plotin, Augustinus und Dionysius. [REVIEW]S. J. David V. Meconi - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (3):649-649.
    Plotinus knew that evils “wander about mortal nature and this place forever” and Schäfer begins his analysis of evil in the Enneads with a very helpful survey of the philosophical schools and literary tradition of ancient Greece which influenced Plotinus. These opening pages thus treat χαχόν as understood by Heraclitus, Plato, and Sophocles. Schäfer stresses the quasi-dualism present in these earlier thinkers in order to show how Plotinus’ insistence that all is derived from a single origin, the One, forced him (...)
     
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  33. What Has Athens to Do with Jerusalem? Timaeus and Genesis in Counterpoint. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (1):190-190.
    These six lectures from the twentyfirst Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures, an annual series exploring various dimensions of Roman life, provide an invaluable reflection on the relationship, Pelikan’s “counterpoint,” between Genesis and the Timaeus down through the ages. How did the only Platonic dialogue known in its entirety during the Middle Ages influence Judaeo-Christian cosmology? Pelikan chooses to answer this question by first discussing “Classical Rome: ‘Description of the Universe as Philosophy’” and Lucretius’ theological and literary contributions to the history of (...)
     
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  34. Gnosticism and Later Platonism: Themes, Figures, and Texts. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (1):207-210.
    Every year in connection with the Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature, a special seminar in gnosticism and later Platonism is held. Ten of the papers presented between 1993 and 1998 have been gathered into this volume. Each essay here examines some particular theme where the exchange between gnostics and later Platonic philosophers has proven particularly rich.
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  35. Glaube als Tugend bei Thomas von Aquin: Erkenntnistheoretische und religionsphilosophische Interpretationen. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 2005 - Review of Metaphysics 59 (1):190-191.
    Echoing much of the neo-Thomistic revival of the twentieth century, Fides et Ratio §76 sketches the two main characteristics of a Christian philosophy: it is a type of thinking which simultaneously employs yet always seeks to purify reason and, secondly, it does not close itself off to the concerns and content of revelation. In this way, Pope John Paul II calls for a contemporary understanding of faith which is seen as a virtue freeing human reason from presumption, "the typical temptation (...)
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  36. St. Augustine on Marriage and Sexuality. [REVIEW]S. J. David Vincent Meconi - 1998 - Review of Metaphysics 51 (3):667-667.
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  37.  94
    God of Many Names. [REVIEW]Robert S. J. Garland - 1994 - Ancient Philosophy 14 (1):200-201.
  38.  93
    From Autothanasia to Suicide. [REVIEW]Robert S. J. Garland - 1993 - Ancient Philosophy 13 (2):470-471.
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  39.  6
    Nature as Guide: Wittgenstein and the Renewal of Moral Theology. By David Goodill. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2022. Pp. xiii, 319. $75.00. [REVIEW]S. J. Matthew Dunch - 2023 - Heythrop Journal 64 (4):582-583.
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  40.  10
    The Development of Social Knowledge. Morality and Convention.S. J. Eggleston & Elliot Turiel - 1985 - British Journal of Educational Studies 33 (2):186.
  41. The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm : a critique of the adaptationist programme.S. J. Gould & R. C. Lewontin - 2014 - In Francisco José Ayala & John C. Avise (eds.), Essential readings in evolutionary biology. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
     
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  42.  32
    Ramsey's record: Wittgenstein on infinity and generalization.S. J. Methven - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (6):1116-1133.
    There is, in the Ramsey Archive at the Hillman Library of the University of Pittsburgh, a note, written in 1929, in Ramsey's hand and mostly in German, consisting of twenty paragraphs the contents...
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  43.  19
    Research ethics committees and paternalism.S. J. L. Edwards - 2004 - Journal of Medical Ethics 30 (1):88-91.
    In this paper the authors argue that research ethics committees should not be paternalistic by rejecting research that poses risk to people competent to decide for themselves. However it is important they help to ensure valid consent is sought from potential recruits and protect vulnerable people who cannot look after their own best interests. The authors first describe the tragic deaths of Jesse Gelsinger and Ellen Roche. They then discuss the following claims to support their case: competent individuals are epistemologically (...)
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  44.  3
    The logic of special relativity.S. J. Prokhovnik - 1967 - London,: Cambridge University Press.
  45.  5
    Children's and Adults' Attributions of Emotion to a Wrongdoer: The Influence of the Onlooker's Reaction.S. J. Murgatroydand & E. J. Robinson - 1997 - Cognition and Emotion 11 (1):83-101.
  46.  5
    Spitzer, Robert J. S.J., Ph.D., with Robin A. Bernhoft, M.D., and Camille E. De Blasi, M.A. Healing the Culture: A Commonsense Philosophy of Happiness, Freedom, and the Life Issues. [REVIEW]S. J. Koterski - 2001 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 1 (4):658-660.
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  47. So Far – From Now On. Josef Mitterer's Non-dualistic Critique of Radical Constructivism and Some Consequences.S. J. Schmidt - 2008 - Constructivist Foundations 3 (3):163-171.
    Problem: Mitterer's critique of the central argumentations of radical constructivists has been mostly neglected until today. The paper presents and evaluates his criticism and, in the second part, outlines a format of constructivism that tries to draw appropriate consequences. Solution: In his critique Mitterer explains why the radical constructivism represented above all by Maturana, Varela, von Glasersfeld or Roth still remains in a dualistic format. In his view Neurobiology is used in their writings as the indisputable basis for deriving far-reaching (...)
     
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  48.  8
    The kenosis of the creator and of the created co‐creator.Manuel G. Doncel S. J. - 2004 - Zygon 39 (4):791-800.
  49.  82
    Whistling in 1929: Ramsey and Wittgenstein on the Infinite.S. J. Methven - 2014 - European Journal of Philosophy 24 (3):651-669.
    Cora Diamond has recently criticised as mere legend the interpretation of a quip of Ramsey's, contained in the epigraph below, which takes him to be objecting to or rejecting Wittgenstein's Tractarian distinction between saying and showing. Whilst I agree with Diamond's discussion of the legend, I argue that her interpretation of the quip has little evidential support, and runs foul of a criticism sometimes made against intuitionism. Rather than seeing Ramsey as making a claim about the nature of propositions, as (...)
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  50.  26
    Ramsey's record: Wittgenstein on infinity and generalization.S. J. Methven - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (6):1116-1133.
    ABSTRACT There is, in the Ramsey Archive at the Hillman Library of the University of Pittsburgh, a note, written in 1929, in Ramsey's hand and mostly in German, consisting of twenty paragraphs the contents of which deal, in large part, with the infinite and generality. In this article, I provide an English translation of that note, followed by a philosophical commentary. The purpose of the commentary is to bring out the connections and, most importantly, the differences between Wittgenstein's and Ramsey's (...)
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