Results for 'feminisms, antipunitivism, crosses, history'

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  1.  17
    Sketches for an Antipunitivist Feminism.Camila Arbuet Osuna - 2020 - Las Torres de Lucca. International Journal of Political Philosophy 9 (17):103-137.
    Throughout its great history, the feminist movement has thought the different facets of the repressive apparatus of the State, as a political problem and as part of its strategy of struggle and survival. In different contexts, antipunitivism —that is, the political response to the philosophy of punishment as the way to act to social issues— has emerged as a crucial element in the diatribes of antisystemic feminisms. However, we could not claim that there is something like a structuring and (...)
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  2. European Feminisms 1700-1950: A Political History. By Karen Offen.M. F. Cross - 2003 - The European Legacy 8 (1):98-99.
  3.  19
    Campus Feminisms: A Conversation with Jess Lishak, Women’s Officer, University of Manchester Students’ Union, 2014–2016.Neil Cobb & Nikki Godden-Rasul - 2017 - Feminist Legal Studies 25 (2):229-252.
    Drawing from a long history of feminist writing grounded in personal reflection and informal dialogue between feminist thinkers, Cobb and Godden-Rasul present an email-based conversation with Jess Lishak, the outgoing Women’s Officer at the University of Manchester Students’ Union. The conversation draws on Cobb and Godden-Rasul’s experience as feminist academics engaged in critical institutional practice through such initiatives as editing the Inherently Human blog, organising the Inspirational Women of Law exhibition, and participating in university working groups on campus-based harassment (...)
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  4.  26
    Felicia GORDON, Maire CROSS, Early French Feminisms, 1830-1940. A Passion for Liberty, Cheltenham, UK, Brookfield, US, Edward Elgar, 1996, 287 p. [REVIEW]Christine Bard - 1998 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 1:22-22.
    Early French Feminisms est un reader, type de publication encore peu développé en France, destiné principalement à un public étudiant. Y figurent des textes (par larges extraits ou dans leur intégralité) de Flora Tristan (1803-1844), Jeanne Deroin (1805-1852), Pauline Roland (1805-1892), Madeleine Pelletier (1874-1939) et Hélène Brion (1882-1962), assortis de longues introductions, de copieuses notes infrapaginales et d'une belle bibliographie. Cette anthologie a été conçue par deux hi..
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  5. Bertrand Russell's History of Western Philosophy.R. Nicol Cross - 1946 - Hibbert Journal 45:193.
     
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  6.  27
    Duns Scotus’s Theory of Cognition.Richard Cross - 2014 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Richard Cross provides the first full study of Duns Scotus's theory of cognition, examining his account of the processes involved in cognition, from sensation, through intuition and abstraction, to conceptual thought. Cross places Scotus's thought clearly within the context of 13th-century study on the mind, and of his intellectual forebears.
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  7. Qumran and the History of the Biblical Text.Frank M. Cross & She-Maryahu Talmon - 1975
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  8.  27
    Richard Cross’s Response to Brian Davies.Richard Cross - 2018 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 92 (2):329-331.
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  9. The Cross: History, Art, and Controversy.[author unknown] - 2017
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  10. A right to be lazy? Busyness in retrospective.Gary Cross - 2005 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 72 (2):263-286.
    I recall an old man selling Paul Lafargue’s Right to be Lazy on a busy street in the Latin Quarter in the 1980s. At the time, I was writing then my first book on the history of work time and leisure and felt by seeing this strange and grumpy man so energetically promoting the nearly forgotten work of Marx’s son-in-law somehow vindicated in my efforts. Paul Lafargue’s pamphlet makes an interesting assumption: The “natural” state of human being was relaxation (...)
     
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  11.  18
    The Metaphysics of the Incarnation: Thomas Aquinas to Duns Scotus.Richard Cross - 2005 - Oxford University Press on Demand.
    The period from Thomas Aquinas to Duns Scotus is one of the richest in the history of Christian theology. The Metaphysics of the Incarnation aims to provide a thorough examination of the doctrine in this era, making explicit its philosophical and theological foundations. Medieval theologians believed that there were good reasons for supposing that Christ's human nature was an individual. In the light of this, Part 1 discusses how the various thinkers held that an individual nature could be united (...)
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  12. Studying Political Activism: Biographical Approaches to the Writing of Party Histories.R. Cross & A. Flinn - 2006 - Science and Society 70 (1).
     
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  13.  9
    Interdisciplinarity: History, Theory, and PracticeJulie Thompson Klein.Stephen J. Cross - 1992 - Isis 83 (1):107-107.
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  14.  28
    Border Crossings: History, Fiction, and Dead Certainties.Cushing Strout - 1992 - History and Theory 31 (2):153-162.
    Simon Schama's Dead Certainties is assessed in the light of the complex relationship between history and fiction, which share some limited common territory. Examples are cited from Mary Chesnut, Oscar Handlin, Georg Lukács, Herman Melville, Robert Penn Warren, P. D. James, and Wallace Stegner.Schama's book has some kinship to the skepticism found in "the new historicism" and "deconstruction," but also has its own differences from the fashionable "inverted positivism" which concludes that since evidence is not an open window on (...)
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  15.  73
    Precedent in English Law.Rupert Cross & J. W. Harris - 1968 - Oxford University Press UK.
    This fourth edition of Precedent in English Law presents a basic guide to the current doctrine of precedent in England, set in the wider context of the jurisprudential problems which any treatment of this topic involves. Such problems include the nature of _ratio_ _decidendi_ of a precedentand of its binding force, the significance of precedents alongside other sources of law, their role in legal reasoning, and the account which must be taken of them by any general theory of law. Considerable (...)
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  16. "The Cambridge History of Later Greek and Early Medieval Philosophy" Ed. by A. H. Armstrong. [REVIEW]R. C. Cross - 1969 - Mind 78:631.
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  17.  13
    Wulfstan and Abbo of Saint-Germain-des-Près.James E. Cross & Alan Brown - 1989 - Mediaevalia 15:71-91.
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  18.  5
    The Use of A Passio S. Sebastiani in the Old English Martyrology.James E. Cross - 1988 - Mediaevalia 14:39-50.
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  19.  49
    Impairment, Normalcy, and a Social Theory of Disability.Richard Cross - 2016 - Res Philosophica 93 (4):693-714.
    I argue that, if it is thought desirable to avoid the collapse of disability into generic social disadvantage, it is necessary to draw a distinction between impairment (a bodily configuration) and disability (the way in which the environment prevents someone with an impairment from undertaking certain kinds of activities), as in social models of disability. I show how to draw such a distinction by utilizing a distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic properties. I argue further that, using this distinction, it is (...)
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  20.  37
    The Problem of History and the Three Movements of Existence in Patočka on the Basis of an Appropriation of Arendt’s Anthropology.Eric Pommier & D. J. S. Cross - 2020 - Philosophy Today 64 (1):185-203.
    Jan Patočka holds that both the Husserlian and the Heideggerian descriptions of history remain abstract because they lack an authentic reflection on historical sense’s appearing, which presupposes a description of the transition from the nonhistorical and prehistorical states of humanity to its final historical state. Nevertheless, it seems that Patočka would confront an internal aporia here because, even if he sought to think the continuity of these three movements, he tends to affirm the rupture between them. To overcome that (...)
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  21.  20
    Forum: Chinese and western historical thinking.Crossing Cultural Borders, Howto Understand & Jorn Rusen - 2007 - History and Theory 46 (2):189-193.
  22. Duns Scotus and Analogy.Richard Cross - 2012 - Modern Schoolman 89 (3-4):147-154.
    Duns Scotus defends the view that we can speak univocally of God and creatures. When we do so, we use words in the same sense in the two cases. Scotus maintains that the concepts that these univocal words signify are themselves univocal: the same concept in the two cases. In this paper, I consider a related question: does Duns Scotus have the notion of analogous concepts—concepts whose relation to each other lies somewhere between the univocal and the equivocal? Using some (...)
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  23.  1
    Ideas in Politics: The Conservation Policies of the Two Roosevelts.Whitney R. Cross - 1953 - Journal of the History of Ideas 14 (3):421.
  24.  7
    From Epic to Canon: History and Literature in Ancient Israel.Ronald S. Hendel & Frank Moore Cross - 2001 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (1):139.
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  25. Duns scotus: Some recent research.Richard Cross - 2011 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (3):271-295.
    Duns Scotus (c. 1266-1308) has long ranked as one of the most challenging of philosophers. He was known from shortly after his death as doctor subtilis—the subtle doctor—and his obscure style and complex thought-processes make him a hard thinker to study. That said, he quickly established an almost cult following among his students, and his thought, for all its density, remained hugely popular throughout the Middle Ages and beyond. It is no exaggeration to claim that the last two decades have (...)
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  26.  72
    Temporal necessity and the conditional.Charles B. Cross - 1990 - Studia Logica 49 (3):345-363.
    Temporal necessity and the subjunctive conditional appear to be related by the principle of Past Predominance, according to which past similarities and differences take priority over future similarities and differences in determining the comparative similarity of alternative possible histories with respect to the present moment. R. H. Thomason and Anil Gupta have formalized Past Predominance in a semantics that combines selection functions with branching time; in this paper I show that Past Predominance can be formalized and axiomatized using ordinary possible (...)
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  27. Four-dimensionalism and identity across time: Henry of ghent vs. Bonaventure.Richard Cross - 1999 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 37 (3):393-414.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Four-Dimensionalism and Identity Across Time: Henry of Ghent vs. BonaventureRichard CrossModern accounts of the identity of an object across time tend to fall roughly into two basic types.Let us say that something persists ıff, somehow or other, it exists at various times; this is the neutral word. Something perdures iff it persists by having different temporal parts, or stages, at different times, though no one part of it is (...)
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  28.  57
    Duns Scotus on Divine Substance and the Trinity.Richard Cross - 2003 - Medieval Philosophy & Theology 11 (2):181-201.
  29.  85
    Divisibility, Communicability, and Predicability in Duns Scotus’s Theories of the Common Nature.Richard Cross - 2003 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 11 (1):43-63.
  30.  19
    Divisibility, Communicability, and Predicability in Duns Scotus’s Theories of the Common Nature.Richard Cross - 2003 - Medieval Philosophy & Theology 11 (1):43-63.
  31.  6
    Dividends of the Colour Line: Slaveholder Indemnities and the Philosophy of Right.Ciaran Cross - forthcoming - Hegel Bulletin:1-28.
    In notes to Hegel's Rechtsphilosophie lectures, written around the time of Haiti's 1825 ‘ransom’—the 150 million francs demanded by France to indemnify former slave and plantation owners—we find an uncanny remark. Hegel appears to report on a different ransom, a compensated abolition of slavery in North America that never happened, anticipating an application of the Fifth Amendment's takings clause that US legal scholarship routinely fails to mention. In view of Alan Brudner's enlistment of Hegel as the philosopher ‘uniquely’ able to (...)
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  32. Neuroaesthetics and beyond: new horizons in applying the science of the brain to the art of dance. [REVIEW]Emily S. Cross & Luca F. Ticini - 2012 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 11 (1):5-16.
    Throughout history, dance has maintained a critical presence across all human cultures, defying barriers of class, race, and status. How dance has synergistically co-evolved with humans has fueled a rich debate on the function of art and the essence of aesthetic experience, engaging numerous artists, historians, philosophers, and scientists. While dance shares many features with other art forms, one attribute unique to dance is that it is most commonly expressed with the human body. Because of this, social scientists and (...)
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  33.  11
    Individuation in Scholasticism: The Later Middle Ages and the Counter-Reformation 1150-1650. [REVIEW]Richard Cross - 1995 - International Philosophical Quarterly 35 (3):349-351.
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  34. H. McLachlan, Warrington Academy: Its History and Influence. [REVIEW]R. Nicol Cross - 1943 - Hibbert Journal 42:379.
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  35.  74
    Form and Universal in Boethius.Richard Cross - 2012 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 20 (3):439-458.
    Contrary to the claims of recent commentators, I argue that Boethius holds a modified version of the Ammonian three-fold universal (transcendent, immanent, and conceptual). He probably identifies transcendent universals as divine ideas, and accepts too forms immanent in corporeal particulars, most likely construing these along the Aphrodisian lines that he hints at in a well-known passage from his second commentary on Porphyry's Isagoge. Boethius never states the theory of the three-fold form outright, but I attempt to show that this theory (...)
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  36.  12
    By the Way.Donald Cross - 2024 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (2):405-427.
    No one who reads Derrida closely could accuse him of “technophobia.” More than any other contemporary thinker, on the contrary, he has shown the limit of attempts to protect thinking and even being itself from technē. Yet, Derrida nevertheless insists that “deconstruction” is neither a “technique” nor the technology of thinking that modern philosophy calls “method.” What allows Derrida to exclude “technique” and “method” when he himself shows, in relation to Heidegger above all, that a certain technicity and methodicity always (...)
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  37.  49
    Identity, Origin, and Persistence in Duns Scotus's Physics.Richard Cross - 1999 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 16 (1):1 - 18.
  38.  15
    Infinity, Continuity, and Composition: The Contribution of Gregory of Rimini.Richard Cross - 1998 - Medieval Philosophy & Theology 7 (1):89-110.
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  39.  8
    The Imitation Game: Interstate Alliances and the Failure of Theban Hegemony in Greece.Nicholas D. Cross - 2017 - Journal of Ancient History 5 (2):280-303.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Journal of Ancient History Jahrgang: 5 Heft: 2 Seiten: 280-303.
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  40. Reflection : The Trinity and the Human.Richard Cross - 2022 - In Karolina Hübner (ed.), Human: A History (Oxford Philosophical Concepts). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
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  41.  40
    Are Names Said of God and Creatures Univocally?Richard Cross - 2018 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 92 (2):313-320.
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  42.  17
    Individuation in Scholasticism: The Later Middle Ages and the Counter-Reformation 1150-1650.Richard Cross - 1995 - International Philosophical Quarterly 35 (3):349-351.
  43.  36
    Time and the Russell Definition of Number.Charles Byron Cross - 1979 - Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 10 (2):177-180.
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  44.  9
    The Philosophy of Aquinas.Richard Cross - 2005 - International Philosophical Quarterly 45 (3):398-399.
  45.  14
    Antonio Becchi;, Massimo Corradi;, Federico Foce;, Orietta Pedemonte . Essays on the History of Mechanics: In Memory of Clifford Ambrose Truesdell and Edoardo Benvenuto. 256 pp., index. Basel/Boston: Birkhäuser, 2003. €42. [REVIEW]Jim Cross - 2004 - Isis 95 (4):673-673.
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  46.  4
    Book Review: To Light Such a Candle: Chapters in the History of Science and Technology. [REVIEW]Gary S. Cross - 1999 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 19 (3):244-245.
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  47.  82
    Is Aquinas's proof for the indestructibility of the soul successful?Richard Cross - 1997 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 5 (1):1 – 20.
  48.  8
    La volonté de croire au Moyen-Âge. Les theories de la foi dans la pensée scolastique du XIIIe siècle by Nicolas Faucher.Richard Cross - 2022 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 60 (2):338-340.
    This excellent book provides a novel analysis of medieval theories of faith, using as its conceptual basis the notion of doxastic voluntarism: the thought that belief is in some sense in our power to choose. This notion fits very neatly with medieval accounts, since, other than in cases in which the intellect's assent is compelled, the medieval philosophers all maintained that assent to a given proposition—paradigmatically the supernatural claims of Catholic Christianity, the principal interest of the earliest thinkers in Nicolas (...)
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  49.  14
    Young Marx, Marxism: Viktor Chernov'S Use Of The Theses Of Feuerbach.Truman B. Cross - 1971 - Journal of the History of Ideas 32 (October-December):600-606.
  50. The Hijab: Islam, Women and the Politics of Clothing.Devarakshanam Betty Govinden - 2024 - Kronos 50 (1):1-3.
    Dedicated to the 'Muslim girls and women protesting for their rights in India and Iran', historians P. K. Yasser Arafath and G. Arunima have compiled a deeply engaging collection of essays that explore the wearing of the hijab from a multitude of perspectives. The contributions traverse different national contexts and explore multiple and entangled strands of the debates around the hijab, underscoring its breadth and complexity. And as the essays in The Hijab: Islam, Women and the Politics of Clothing demonstrate, (...)
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