Results for 'SKELTON John: ELIOT T.S., The Waste Land. POUND Ezra, Cantos '

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  1.  32
    Listening to pictures.Patrick Hutchings - 2007 - Sophia 46 (2):193-198.
    A review of Peter Steele’s: The Whispering Gallery: Art into Poetry, in which Steele writes poems on and to paintings and the sculpture Black Sun (By Inge King) in the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. Each work on which there is a poem is reproduced. In this book Steele writes more to the ‘contour’ of the topic-work than he did in Plenty. His poems – as ever sidenoted – are tensed between the topicality of the work of art in (...)
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  2.  59
    Limiting the Maternal in T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land.Virginia Costello - 2005 - Studies in Practical Philosophy 5 (1):26-40.
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  3.  56
    The purification of poetry: A note on the poetics of Ezra pound's ‘cantos’.K. T. S. Campbell - 1968 - British Journal of Aesthetics 8 (2):124-137.
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  4.  5
    From Sordid Sexuality to Ruin in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land.Syed Zamanat Abbas - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:16-27.
    Eliot’s poem, The Waste Land, in the wake of the Great War or the First World War, which was a time particularly in Western Europe when civilization had fallen to pieces, and it was literally, quite literally in ruin as trenches were dug across the fields of France and Belgium and other countries in Western Europe and as the landscape itself is torn apart, finds only death and self-destruction instead of rebirth or any sense of revivification or any (...)
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  5.  6
    Knowledge and Experience in the Philosophy of F. H. Bradley.T. S. Eliot - 1964 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Describes Bradley's doctrine of 'immediate experience' as a starting point of knowledge, then traces the development of the of subject and object out of immediate experience, with the question of independence, and with the precise meaning of the term 'objectivity.'.
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  6.  22
    London as Pre-Text for Eliot's The Waste Land and Pound's Hugh Selwyn Mauberly.Terri Brint Joseph - 1982 - Semiotics:379-388.
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  7.  17
    Imposing Order to See the Disorder: Student Depression and T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land: A (Mis)reading/Diagnosis.Joel Hawkes - 2018 - Journal of Medical Humanities 39 (4):455-471.
    Sometime ago, I found myself using the diagnosis of a student’s depression as a critical tool of interpretation, searching for signs of mental illness in her essay that explored order and disorder in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land. I realised that my reading had become a creative act, combining poem, poet, student essay and author to create, in a sense, one readable text. The present paper is a reflection upon the processes of order and disorder located in (...)
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  8. Knowledge and Experience in the philosophy F. H. Bradley.T. S. Eliot - 1964 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 70 (4):499-499.
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  9.  63
    To Criticize the Critic.T. S. Eliot - 1966 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 24 (4):606-607.
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  10. Knowledge and Experience in the philosophy of F. H. Bradley.T. S. Eliot - 1964 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 20 (3):350-350.
     
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  11. Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 33: 1947.T. S. Eliot - 1948
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  12. Annual Lecture on a Master Mind: Milton.T. S. Eliot - 1948 - In Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 33: 1947. pp. 61-79.
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  13. Letter in TLS 27 September 1928.." Milton.".T. S. Eliot - 1948 - In Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 33: 1947. pp. 61-79.
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  14.  36
    Between Fire and Fire: T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land.Francesca Bugliani Knox - 2015 - Heythrop Journal 56 (2):235-248.
  15. Ezra pound's confucianism.Chungeng Zhu - 2005 - Philosophy and Literature 29 (1):57-72.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Ezra Pound's ConfucianismChungeng ZhuTo T. S. Eliot's question "What does Mr. Pound believe?" Pound's answer is explicit and categorical: "I believe the Ta Hio" (Da Xue). Confucianism, Pound believes, offers a solution to the West that, from its political institutions to its economic system, has fallen into chaos and disorder. Ideology and aesthetics are inextricable. Pound also sees in Confucianism a way of (...)
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  16.  44
    Yogavārttika of VijñānabhikṣuYogavarttika of Vijnanabhiksu.John Borelli, T. S. Rukmani, Vijñānabhikṣu & Vijnanabhiksu - 1988 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 108 (4):638.
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  17.  5
    English Poetry: And its Contribution to the Knowledge of a Creative People.Leone Vivante & T. S. Eliot - 1950 - Southern Illinois University Press.
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  18.  27
    Giorgio Agamben. Profanations. Translated by Jeff Fort (New York: Zone Books, 2007), 98 pp. $25.95 cloth. Abraham Ascher. A Community under Siege: The Jews of Breslau under Nazism. Studies in Jewish History and Culture (Palo Alta, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007), x+ 324 pp. $55.00 cloth. [REVIEW]Giovanni Cianci, Jason Harding & T. S. Eliot - 2008 - The European Legacy 13 (6):797-800.
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  19.  41
    Maxwell's equations, linear gravity, and twistors.Carlos N. Kozameh, Ezra T. Newman & John R. Porter - 1984 - Foundations of Physics 14 (11):1061-1081.
    A detailed outline is presented of several convergent points of view connecting the self-dual and anti-self-dual fields with their free data. This is done for the Maxwell and for linearized gravity as exemplifying the approaches. The Sparling equation provides one tool of great power and characterizes one approach. The twistor theory of Penrose yields another equally powerful point of view. The links between these two basic approaches given in this paper provide a unification that allows workers and others with interest (...)
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  20. T. S. Eliot, Dharma bum: Buddhist lessons in the waste land.Thomas Michael LeCarner - 2009 - Philosophy and Literature 33 (2):pp. 402-416.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:T. S. Eliot, Dharma Bum:Buddhist Lessons in The Waste LandThomas Michael LeCarnerMany critics have argued that T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land is a poem that attempts to deal with the physical destruction and human atrocities of the First World War, or that he had somehow expressed the disillusionment of a generation. For Eliot, such a characterization was too reductive. He replied, "Nonsense, I (...)
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  21.  8
    The Confucian Odes, the Classic Anthology Defined by Confucius.Chauncey S. Goodrich & Ezra Pound - 1972 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 92 (4):587.
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  22.  6
    The Letters of T. S. Eliot_, Volume 5, _1930 – 31 Young Eliot: From St. Louis to “The Waste Land”.William M. Chace - 2016 - Common Knowledge 22 (2):323-324.
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  23.  34
    T. S. Eliot, cultural criticism, and Multiculture in the waste land.Dennis Ryan - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (3):1088-1095.
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  24.  39
    The "Cantos" of Ezra Pound, the Truth in Contradiction.Jerome J. McGann - 1988 - Critical Inquiry 15 (1):1-25.
    … [T]he scandals surrounding the work of these men are as nothing compared to the scandal of Ezra Pound’s Cantos. We are amused to think that anyone ever felt Byron might have been mad, bad, and dangerous to know. We are not amused by the Cantos. Like Pound’s letters and so much of his prose, the Cantos is difficult to like or enjoy. It is a paradigm of poetic obscurity because its often cryptic style is (...)
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  25.  12
    The Letters of George Santayana, Book Six, 1937--1940: The Works of George Santayana, Volume V.William G. Holzberger, Herman J. Saatkamp & Marianne S. Wokeck (eds.) - 2004 - MIT Press.
    The eight books of The Letters of George Santayana bring together over 3,000 letters, many of which have been discovered in the fifty years since Santayana's death. This sixth book covers four years of Santayana's life in Rome, his permanent residence since the late 1920s. During these years, Santayana, in his seventies, saw the publication of the remaining nine volumes of the Triton Edition of his work as well as the last two books of his Realms of Being: The Realm (...)
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  26.  43
    Buddhist Conceptual Rhyming and T.S.Eliot's Crisis of Connection in TheWaste Land and ‘Burnt Norton’.Tim Bruno - 2013 - Asian Philosophy 23 (4):365-378.
    In this essay, I elaborate a reading of the Buddhist allusions throughout T.S. Eliot's poetry as being not confessions of Buddhist faith or merely syncretic experiments, but rather ‘conceptual rhymes’ with the crisis of personal connection that preoccupies Eliot across multiple texts. In the Buddhist concepts of pratītya-samutpāda, śūnyatā, saṃsāra, and the pretas, Eliot finds thematic resonances with his own emotional and psychological concerns and so alludes to these concepts in ‘The Fire Sermon’ section of The (...) Land and ‘Burnt Norton’ of Four Quartets as part of his characteristic poetic collage. By examining the connection between Eliot's personal poetic practice and the cross-cultural traditions upon which he drew, my argument intervenes in a long-standing debate regarding the meaning of Asian religio-philosophical influences in the poet's key texts. Moreover, by close reading the third movement of ‘Burnt Norton’ for Buddhist allusions, I attempt to refocus scrutiny of Buddhism in Eliot from the oft-discussed ‘Fire Sermon’ section of The Waste Land to Eliot's later Four Quartets, which remains under-examined for its Buddhist influences by scholars who instead attend to the latter text's more pronounced Vedic references. (shrink)
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  27. The Metamorphic Tradition in Modern Poetry: Essays on the Work of Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, T. S. Eliot, Hart Crane, Randall Jarrell, and William Butler Yeats.SISTER M. BERNETTA QUINN - 1955
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  28.  47
    The Development of Leibniz’s Monadism.T. Stearns Eliot - 1916 - The Monist 26 (4):534-556.
  29. The Development of Leibniz's Monadism.T. Stearns Eliot - 1917 - Philosophical Review 26:252.
     
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  30.  54
    Leibniz’s Monads and Bradley’s Finite Centers.T. Stearns Eliot - 1916 - The Monist 26 (4):566-576.
  31.  6
    Leibniz’s Monads and Bradley’s Finite Centers.T. Stearns Eliot - 1916 - The Monist 26 (4):566-576.
  32.  4
    From Fears of Entropy to Comfort in Chaos: Arcadia, The Waste Land, Numb3rs, and Man's Relationship With Science.Kristen Miller - 2007 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 27 (1):81-94.
    Through the use of some purposeful anachronisms, Tom Stoppard uses his 1993 play Arcadia to explore the effects on man's psyche of the transition from Newton's Laws to the laws of thermodynamics and from thermodynamics to chaos theory. However, remarkably similar reactions to these changes are also reflected in works from the actual time periods following these shifts in scientific understanding. Modernist literature is believed by many to reflect a sense of depression about the implications of the second law of (...)
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  33. Land of the Soviets: A Handbook of the U.S.S.R.Nicholas Mikhailov, T. A. Taracouzio & John N. Hazard - 1940 - Science and Society 4 (2):245-251.
     
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  34. The Nature and Management of Ethical Corporate Identity: A Commentary on Corporate Identity, Corporate Social Responsibility and Ethics.John M. T. Balmer, Kyoko Fukukawa & Edmund R. Gray - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 76 (1):7-15.
    In this paper we open up the topic of ethical corporate identity: what we believe to be a new, as well as highly salient, field of inquiry for scholarship in ethics and corporate social responsibility. Taking as our starting point Balmer’s (in Balmer and Greyser, 2002) AC2ID test model of corporate identity – a pragmatic tool of identity management – we explore the specificities of an ethical form of corporate identity. We draw key insights from conceptualizations of corporate social responsibility (...)
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  35. T.S. Eliot: Language, Sincerity and the Self.John Casey - 1978 - In Casey John (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 63: 1977. pp. 95-124.
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  36.  14
    The Role of Negative Information in Distributional Semantic Learning.Brendan T. Johns, Douglas J. K. Mewhort & Michael N. Jones - 2019 - Cognitive Science 43 (5):e12730.
    Distributional models of semantics learn word meanings from contextual co‐occurrence patterns across a large sample of natural language. Early models, such as LSA and HAL (Landauer & Dumais, 1997; Lund & Burgess, 1996), counted co‐occurrence events; later models, such as BEAGLE (Jones & Mewhort, 2007), replaced counting co‐occurrences with vector accumulation. All of these models learned from positive information only: Words that occur together within a context become related to each other. A recent class of distributional models, referred to as (...)
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  37.  11
    The Middle Works of John Dewey, Volume 6: Journal Articles, Book Reviews, Miscellany in the 1910-1911 Period, and How We Think.John Dewey, H. S. Thayer & V. T. Thayer - 2008 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    The forty items in this volume also include an analysis of Thomas Hobbe's philosophy; an affectionate commemorative tribute to Theodore Roosevelt, our Teddy; the syllabus for Dewey's lectures at the Imperial University in Tokyo, which were ...
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  38.  12
    The Middle Works of John Dewey, Volume 6, 1899-1924: Journal Articles, Book Reviews, Miscellany in the 1910-1911 Period, and How We Think.John Dewey, H. S. Thayer & V. T. Thayer - 1976 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    William James, remarking in 1909 on the differences among the three leading spokesmen for pragmatism--himself, F. C. S. Schiller, and John Dewey--said that Schiller’s views were essentially "psychological,” his own, "epistemological,” whereas Dewey’s "panorama is the widest of the three.” The two main subjects of Dewey’s essays at this time are also two of the most fundamental and persistent philosophical questions: the nature of knowledge and the meaning of truth. Dewey’s distinctive analysis is concentrated chiefly in seven essays, in (...)
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  39.  54
    Proceedings of the 4th World Conference on Research Integrity: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro. 31 May - 3 June 2015.Lex Bouter, Melissa S. Anderson, Ana Marusic, Sabine Kleinert, Susan Zimmerman, Paulo S. L. Beirão, Laura Beranzoli, Giuseppe Di Capua, Silvia Peppoloni, Maria Betânia de Freitas Marques, Adriana Sousa, Claudia Rech, Torunn Ellefsen, Adele Flakke Johannessen, Jacob Holen, Raymond Tait, Jillon Van der Wall, John Chibnall, James M. DuBois, Farida Lada, Jigisha Patel, Stephanie Harriman, Leila Posenato Garcia, Adriana Nascimento Sousa, Cláudia Maria Correia Borges Rech, Oliveira Patrocínio, Raphaela Dias Fernandes, Laressa Lima Amâncio, Anja Gillis, David Gallacher, David Malwitz, Tom Lavrijssen, Mariusz Lubomirski, Malini Dasgupta, Katie Speanburg, Elizabeth C. Moylan, Maria K. Kowalczuk, Nikolas Offenhauser, Markus Feufel, Niklas Keller, Volker Bähr, Diego Oliveira Guedes, Douglas Leonardo Gomes Filho, Vincent Larivière, Rodrigo Costas, Daniele Fanelli, Mark William Neff, Aline Carolina de Oliveira Machado Prata, Limbanazo Matandika, Sonia Maria Ramos de Vasconcelos & Karina de A. Rocha - 2016 - Research Integrity and Peer Review 1 (Suppl 1).
    Table of contentsI1 Proceedings of the 4th World Conference on Research IntegrityConcurrent Sessions:1. Countries' systems and policies to foster research integrityCS01.1 Second time around: Implementing and embedding a review of responsible conduct of research policy and practice in an Australian research-intensive universitySusan Patricia O'BrienCS01.2 Measures to promote research integrity in a university: the case of an Asian universityDanny Chan, Frederick Leung2. Examples of research integrity education programmes in different countriesCS02.1 Development of a state-run “cyber education program of research ethics” in (...)
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  40.  10
    John Graham Lough: A transitional sculptor.T. S. R. Boase - 1960 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 23 (3/4):277-290.
  41.  37
    The early T.S. Eliot and western philosophy.Rafey Habib - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Rafey Habib's book offers a comprehensive study of Eliot's philosophical writings and attempts to assess their impact on both his early poetry through 'The Waste Land' and the central concepts of his literary criticsm. Habib presents the first scholalrly analysis of Eliot's difficult unpublished papers on Kant and Bergson and establishes the nature of Eliot's connections with major figures in the Western philosophical tradition, including Plato, Aristotle, Locke, Hume, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Bradley and Russell. The Early (...)
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  42. Shades of indian philosophy in ts Eliot's the waste land.Darshana Trivedi - 2006 - In Yajñeśvara Sadāśiva Śāstrī, Intaj Malek & Sunanda Y. Shastri (eds.), In Quest of Peace: Indian Culture Shows the Path. Bharatiya Kala Prakashan. pp. 2--604.
     
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  43. Conway’s Ontological Objection to Cartesian Dualism.John R. T. Grey - 2017 - Philosophers' Imprint 17:1-19.
    Anne Conway disagrees with substance dualism, the thesis that minds and bodies differ in nature or essence. Instead, she holds that “the distinction between spirit and body is only modal and incremental, not essential and substantial”. Yet several of her arguments against dualism have little force against the Cartesian, since they rely on premises no Cartesian would accept. In this paper, I show that Conway does have at least one powerful objection to substance dualism, drawn from premises that Descartes seems (...)
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  44. Species and the Good in Anne Conway's Metaethics.John R. T. Grey - 2020 - In Colin Marshall (ed.), Comparative Metaethics: Neglected Perspectives on the Foundations of Morality. Routledge. pp. 102-118.
    Anne Conway rejects the view that creatures are essentially members of any natural kind more specific than the kind 'creature'. That is, she rejects essentialism about species membership. This chapter provides an analysis of one of Anne Conway's arguments against such essentialism, which (as I argue) is drawn from metaethical rather than metaphysical premises. In her view, if a creature's species or kind were inscribed in its essence, that essence would constitute a limit on the creature's potential to participate in (...)
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  45. The Metaphysics of Natural Right in Spinoza.John R. T. Grey - 2021 - Oxford Studies in Early Modern Philosophy 10:37-60.
    In the Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (TTP), Spinoza argues that an individual’s natural right extends as far as their power. Subsequently, in the Tractatus Politicus (TP), he offers a revised argument for the same conclusion. Here I offer an account of the reasons for the revision. In both arguments, an individual’s natural right derives from God’s natural right. However, the TTP argument hinges on the claim that each individual is part of the whole of nature (totius naturae), and for this reason inherits (...)
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  46.  33
    The Ideology of Canon-Formation: T. S. Eliot and Cleanth Brooks.John Guillory - 1983 - Critical Inquiry 10 (1):173-198.
    Nostalgia is only the beginning of a recognizably ideological discourse. The way through to the ideological sense of Tennyson’s “failure,” beneath the phenomenal glow of Eliot’s nostalgia, lies in the entanglement of minority in this complex of meanings, the determination that Tennyson is properly placed when seen as a “minor Virgil.” The diffusion of a major talent in minor works suggests that what Tennyson or Eliot might have been was another Virgil, and for Eliot that means simply (...)
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  47. Looking into the Heart of Light: Considering the Poetic Event in the Work of T.S. Eliot and Martin Heidegger.Dominic Griffiths - 2014 - Philosophy and Literature 38 (2):350-367.
    No one is quite sure what happened to T.S. Eliot in that rose-garden. What we do know is that it formed the basis for Four Quartets, arguably the greatest English poem written in the twentieth century. Luckily it turns out that Martin Heidegger, when not pondering the meaning of being, spent a great deal of time thinking and writing about the kind of event that Eliot experienced. This essay explores how Heidegger developed the concept of Ereignis, “event” which, (...)
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  48.  13
    European and American Philosophers.John Marenbon, Douglas Kellner, Richard D. Parry, Gregory Schufreider, Ralph McInerny, Andrea Nye, R. M. Dancy, Vernon J. Bourke, A. A. Long, James F. Harris, Thomas Oberdan, Paul S. MacDonald, Véronique M. Fóti, F. Rosen, James Dye, Pete A. Y. Gunter, Lisa J. Downing, W. J. Mander, Peter Simons, Maurice Friedman, Robert C. Solomon, Nigel Love, Mary Pickering, Andrew Reck, Simon J. Evnine, Iakovos Vasiliou, John C. Coker, Georges Dicker, James Gouinlock, Paul J. Welty, Gianluigi Oliveri, Jack Zupko, Tom Rockmore, Wayne M. Martin, Ladelle McWhorter, Hans-Johann Glock, Georgia Warnke, John Haldane, Joseph S. Ullian, Steven Rieber, David Ingram, Nick Fotion, George Rainbolt, Thomas Sheehan, Gerald J. Massey, Barbara D. Massey, David E. Cooper, David Gauthier, James M. Humber, J. N. Mohanty, Michael H. Dearmey, Oswald O. Schrag, Ralf Meerbote, George J. Stack, John P. Burgess, Paul Hoyningen-Huene, Nicholas Jolley, Adriaan T. Peperzak, E. J. Lowe, William D. Richardson, Stephen Mulhall & C. - 2017 - In Robert L. Arrington (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophers. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 109–557.
    Peter Abelard (1079–1142 ce) was the most wide‐ranging philosopher of the twelfth century. He quickly established himself as a leading teacher of logic in and near Paris shortly after 1100. After his affair with Heloise, and his subsequent castration, Abelard became a monk, but he returned to teaching in the Paris schools until 1140, when his work was condemned by a Church Council at Sens. His logical writings were based around discussion of the “Old Logic”: Porphyry's Isagoge, aristotle'S Categories and (...)
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  49.  9
    John Mayow in Contemporary Setting. A Contribution to the History of Respiration and Combustion.T. S. Patterson - 1931 - Isis 15 (1):47-96.
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  50. Explicating Ethical Corporate Marketing. Insights from the BP Deepwater Horizon Catastrophe: The Ethical Brand that Exploded and then Imploded. [REVIEW]John M. T. Balmer, Shaun M. Powell & Stephen A. Greyser - 2011 - Journal of Business Ethics 102 (1):1-14.
    Ethical corporate marketing—as an organisational-wide philosophy—transcends the domains of corporate social responsibility, business ethics, stakeholder theory and corporate marketing. This being said, ethical corporate marketing represents a logical development vis-a-vis the nascent domain of corporate marketing has an explicit ethical/CSR dimension and extends stakeholder theory by taking account of an institution’s past, present and (prospective) future stakeholders. In our article, we discuss, scrutinise and elaborate the notion of ethical corporate marketing. We argue that an ethical corporate marketing positioning is a (...)
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