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Wendell O'Brien [7]Wendell Mark O'brien [1]
  1. Boredom.Wendell O'Brien - 2018 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Boredom: A History of Western Philosophical Perspectives The essayist Joseph Epstein has remarked, "Boredom is after all part of consciousness, and about consciousness the neurologists still have much less to tell us than do the poets and the philosophers." Although not a major topic for Western philosophers, some important Western philosophers have spoken of it, … Continue reading Boredom →.
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  2.  70
    Meaning and Mattering.Wendell O'Brien - 1996 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 34 (3):339-360.
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  3. Meaning of Life, The: Early Continental and Analytic Perspectives.Wendell O'Brien - 2014 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    The Meaning of Life: Early Continental and Analytic Perspectives The question of the meaning of life is one that interests philosophers and non-philosophers alike. The question itself is notoriously ambiguous and possibly vague. In asking about the meaning of life, one may be asking about the essence of life, about life's purpose, about whether and […].
     
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    Butler and the Authority of Conscience.Wendell O'Brien - 1991 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 8 (1):43 - 57.
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    Judgments of Character.Wendell O'Brien - 1992 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 7 (2):15-18.
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    Thoreau and the Animals.Wendell O'Brien - 2006 - Between the Species 13 (6):6.
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    The Permissibility of Happiness in a World of Suffering.Wendell O'Brien - 2014 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 21 (2):26-38.
    There is a rather disturbing argument that it is wrong for us ever to smile and be glad, in light of our knowledge of horrors happening everywhere all the time. The paper's primary aim is to respond to the challenge this argument presents and to see what can be said for being happy in spite of it. Drawing from the works of Tolstoy, Joseph Butler, and others, the author develops two or three lines of response to the argument against happiness. (...)
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