Results for 'renown'

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  1.  25
    Unfulfilled renown: Thomas Preston and the anomalous Zeeman effect.D. Weaire & S. O'Connor - 1987 - Annals of Science 44 (6):617-644.
    When leading spectroscopists in Europe and America were engaged, during 1897, in exploring the recently-discovered Zeeman Effect, they were overtaken by a relatively obscure phsicist working in Dublin. Thomas Preston had previously been known only for his excellent textbooks. His achievement in discovering the Anomalous Zeeman Effect was immediately recognized, but his untimely death has deprived posterity until now of a full account of his life and qualities.
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  2.  18
    The Renown of the Brave is Eternal: The White Rose and Arendt's Love of the World.Tracey Stark - 1998 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 2 (3):111-147.
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  3.  28
    Seneca's Renown: "Gloria, Claritudo," and the Replication of the Roman Elite.Thomas Habinek - 2000 - Classical Antiquity 19 (2):264-303.
    The attention Seneca attracted in his lifetime and succeeding generations not only preserves information about his biography: it also merits interpretation as a cultural phenomenon on its own terms. This paper argues that the life of Seneca achieved exemplary status because it enabled Romans to think through issues critical to the preservation of social order. As a new man who rose to power as the republican noble families were dying out, Seneca posed the question of imperial succession in an acute (...)
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  4.  36
    Oxford Renowned. [REVIEW]James J. Daly - 1929 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 3 (4):692-696.
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  5.  11
    Rumour and Renown: Representations of Fama in Western Literature by Philip Hardie.Niklas Holzberg - 2013 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 107 (2):281-282.
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  6.  9
    Life Stories: World-Renowned Scientists Reflect on Their Lives and the Future of Life on Earth. Heather Newbold.Stephen Bocking - 2001 - Isis 92 (2):417-418.
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  7.  11
    The Tragedy of Renown: Nietzsche, Aeschylus, and the Might Have Been.Michael Naas - 1991 - Philosophy Today 35 (3):277-290.
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  8.  9
    Penelope's Renown: Meaning and Indeterminacy in the Odyssey by Marilyn Katz. [REVIEW]S. Olson - 1993 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 86:236-237.
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  9.  60
    Evaluations of Sung Dynasty Painters of Renown: Liu Taoch'un's Sung-ch'ao ming-hua p'ing.Susan Bush, Liu Taoch'un & Charles Lachman - 1995 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 115 (1):111.
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  10. It, the Nameless God of Dualism. Some Remarks on St. John, the First Non-dualist, and His Renowned Follower, Josef Mitterer.P. Strasser - 2008 - Constructivist Foundations 3 (3):269-271.
    Excerpt: Can you imagine a non-observable, un-describable state?... There are trivialities that hide abysses... To solve the paradox of the very beginning of the world one has to reject dualistic ontology... From now on, all of the perceptions and ideas embedded in God's mind have never been anything other than descriptions so far and from now on.
     
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  11.  3
    George Weidenfeld A publisher of inexhaustible vitality and a renowned international figure.John Curtis - 2005 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 16 (1):8-19.
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  12.  11
    The First Part of the Life and Achievements of the Renowned Don Quixote de la Mancha. [REVIEW]Carlos F. Mc Hale - 1947 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 22 (4):718-719.
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  13. 1. Suppose you leaf through the pages of a book on Taoism 1, written by a renowned expert, and that you do not know nothing about the Tao, or Chinese philosophy, or even the Chinese language, and you read this. [REVIEW]Pascal Engel - 1998 - Philosophical Explorations 1 (2):140-151.
     
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  14.  44
    Indeterminacy in the Odyssey- Marylin A. Katz: Penelope's Renown: Meaning and Indeterminacy in the Odyssey. Pp. xii + 223. Princeton University Press, 1991. $35. [REVIEW]M. M. Willcock - 1992 - The Classical Review 42 (02):250-252.
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  15.  10
    Fine arts and tradition: four essays by the renowned Greek icon painter, writer, and philosopher Photios Kontoglou (1895-1965).Phōtēs Kontoglou - 2004 - Belmont, Mass.: Institute for Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies. Edited by Constantine Cavarnos.
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  16. The Phenomenon of Man.Pierre Teilhard de Chardin - 1976 - New York,: Harper Perennial.
    Pierre Teilhard De Chardin was one of the most distinguished thinkers and scientists of our time. He fits into no familiar category for he was at once a biologist and a paleontologist of world renown, and also a Jesuit priest. He applied his whole life, his tremendous intellect and his great spiritual faith to building a philosophy that would reconcile Christian theology with the scientific theory of evolution, to relate the facts of religious experience to those of natural science. (...)
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  17.  71
    Mind, reason, and being-in-the-world: the McDowell-Dreyfus debate.Joseph K. Schear (ed.) - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    John McDowell and Hubert L. Dreyfus are philosophers of world renown, whose work has decisively shaped the fields of analytic philosophy and phenomenology respectively. Mind, Reason, and Being-in-the-World: The McDowell-Dreyfus Debate opens with their debate over one of the most important and controversial subjects of philosophy: is human experience pervaded by conceptual rationality, or does experience mark the limits of reason? Is all intelligibility rational, or is there a form of intelligibility at work in our skilful bodily rapport with (...)
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  18.  42
    Richard Rorty: the making of an American philosopher.Neil Gross - 2008 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    On his death in 2007, Richard Rorty was heralded by the New York Times as “one of the world’s most influential contemporary thinkers.” Controversial on the left and the right for his critiques of objectivity and political radicalism, Rorty experienced a renown denied to all but a handful of living philosophers. In this masterly biography, Neil Gross explores the path of Rorty’s thought over the decades in order to trace the intellectual and professional journey that led him to that (...)
  19.  7
    The phenomenon of man.Pierre Teilhard de Chardin - 1959 - New York: Harper.
    Pierre Teilhard De Chardin was one of the most distinguished thinkers and scientists of our time. He fits into no familiar category for he was at once a biologist and a paleontologist of world renown, and also a Jesuit priest. He applied his whole life, his tremendous intellect and his great spiritual faith to building a philosophy that would reconcile Christian theology with the scientific theory of evolution, to relate the facts of religious experience to those of natural science. (...)
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  20.  16
    Martin Heidegger: between good and evil.Rüdiger Safranski & Ru Diger Safranski - 1998 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    One of the century's greatest philosophers, without whom there would be no Sartre, no Foucault, no Frankfurt School, Martin Heidegger was also a man of great failures and flaws, a Faustus who made a pact with the devil of his time, Adolf Hitler. The story of Heidegger's life and philosophy, a quintessentially German story in which good and evil, brilliance and blindness are inextricably entwined and the passions and disasters of a whole century come into play, is told in this (...)
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  21. Introduction. The School: Its Genesis, Development and Significance.U. Wybraniec-Skardowska - 2018 - In Urszula Wybraniec-Skardowska & Ángel Garrido (eds.), The Lvov-Warsaw School. Past and Present. Cham, Switzerland: Springer- Birkhauser,. pp. 3-14.
    The Introduction outlines, in a concise way, the history of the Lvov-Warsaw School – a most unique Polish school of worldwide renown, which pioneered trends combining philosophy, logic, mathematics and language. The author accepts that the beginnings of the School fall on the year 1895, when its founder Kazimierz Twardowski, a disciple of Franz Brentano, came to Lvov on his mission to organize a scientific circle. Soon, among the characteristic features of the School was its serious approach towards philosophical (...)
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  22.  24
    The future of man.Pierre Teilhard de Chardin - 1964 - New York,: Image Books/Doubleday.
    The Future of Man is a magnificent introduction to the thoughts and writings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, one of the few figures in the history of the Catholic Church to achieve renown as both a scientist and a theologian. Trained as a paleontologist and ordained as a Jesuit priest, Teilhard de Chardin devoted himself to establishing the intimate, interdependent connection between science—particularly the theory of evolution—and the basic tenets of the Christian faith. At the center of his philosophy (...)
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  23.  15
    Aristotle’s ‘Essentialism’ and Quine’s Cycling Mathematician.Edward Black - 1968 - The Monist 52 (2):288-297.
    As Aristotle before him, Quine has earned a just renown for his exposure of untenable dualisms: he is best-known, of course, for his rejection of the ‘dogma’ of the radical distinction between analytic and synthetic truths. But another dualism which Quine has no use for has scarcely caused a murmuring in the assembly of philosophers, where Quine’s opposition to the analytic-synthetic dichotomy placed him on the far left, because on this matter he has aligned himself with the philosophical right, (...)
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  24.  35
    The Plague Fighter: Wu Lien-teh and the beginning of the Chinese public health system.Carsten Flohr - 1996 - Annals of Science 53 (4):361-380.
    SummaryAt the end of 1910, when the Qing dynasty was on the verge of collapse and the whole Chinese empire in a process of transformation, North Manchuria was devastated by a large pneumonic plague epidemic. The Russian and Japanese governments wanted to use the outbreak of the disease as a pretext to invade north-east China, making plague an issue of international politics. At this dramatic moment the empire relied on the skills of the young Chinese doctor Wu Lien-teh, the first (...)
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  25.  35
    A Critical Introduction to Alexandre Kojève’s Esquisse D’Une PhénomÉnologie Du Droit.Bryan-Paul Frost - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 52 (3):595 - 640.
    SINCE ITS PUBLICATION IN 1981, Alexandre Kojève’s Esquisse d’une phénoménologie du droit has received scant scholarly attention. Except for a brief note on the book by Michael S. Roth, and some scattered references here and there, the Esquisse has been eclipsed by Kojève’s Introduction à la lecture de Hegel and by his debate and longstanding correspondence with Leo Strauss in the latter’s On Tyranny. Despite the renown of these two books, the Esquisse is an indispensable work in Kojève’s corpus (...)
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  26. The Ontological Significance of Foundherentism.Ryan Wasser - unknown
    From a pragmatic standpoint, there is great utility in proffering a theoretical "third way" to a traditionally binary problem, even if that third way is no more complicated than harnessing the strengths of two competing positions, and mitigating their weaknesses in an attempt to resolve the issue at hand. In continental philosophy, Ricour gained notoriety by utilizing such an approach in his treatment of the Gadamer and Habermas debates; Susan Haack achieved similar renown in her attempt to bridge the (...)
     
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  27.  71
    “Facts of nature or products of reason? - Edgar Zilsel caught between ontological and epistemic conceptions of natural laws”.Donata Romizi - 2022 - In Donata Romizi, Monika Wulz & Elisabeth Nemeth (eds.), Edgar Zilsel: Philosopher, Historian, Sociologist. (Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook, vol. 27). Cham: Springer Nature.
    In this paper, I reconstruct the development and the complex character of Zilsel’s conception of scientific laws. This concept functions as a fil rouge for understanding Zilsel’s philosophy throughout different times (here, the focus is on his Viennese writings and how they pave the way to the more renown American ones) and across his many fields of work (from physics to politics). A good decade before Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle was going to mark the outbreak of indeterminism in quantum physics, (...)
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  28.  3
    The future of man.Pierre Teilhard de Chardin - 1964 - New York,: Harper & Row.
    The Future of Man is a magnificent introduction to the thoughts and writings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, one of the few figures in the history of the Catholic Church to achieve renown as both a scientist and a theologian. Trained as a paleontologist and ordained as a Jesuit priest, Teilhard de Chardin devoted himself to establishing the intimate, interdependent connection between science—particularly the theory of evolution—and the basic tenets of the Christian faith. At the center of his philosophy (...)
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  29.  15
    Beyond Babel: Religion and Linguistic Pluralism.Vestrucci Andrea (ed.) - 2023 - Springer Verlag.
    This volume is the first attempt to explicitly investigate how the multiplicity of religions and forms of spirituality interconnect with the multiplicities of language, such as digital lingo and the language of science. This book analyzes how religious and linguistic multiplicities become a pluralism, that is, how they enter into polyphonic relations, as well as how they interconnect, grow together, and why they often clash. The contributors are renown international scholars working in interreligious dialogue, philosophy and sociology of religion, (...)
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  30.  15
    Patterns of wisdom in Safavid Iran: the philosophical school of Isfahan and the gnostic of Shiraz.Janis Esots - 2021 - New York, NY: I. B. Tauris in association with The Institute of Ismaili Studies.
    The exceptional intellectual richness of seventeenth-century Safavid Iran is epitomised by the philosophical school of Isfahan, and in particular by its ostensible founder, Mir Damad (d. 1631), and his great student Mulla Sadra (aka Sadr al-Din Shirazi, d. 1636). Equally important to the school is the apophatic wisdom of Rajab 'Ali Tabrizi that followed later (d. 1669/70). However, despite these philosophers' renown, the identification of the 'philosophical school of Isfahan' was only proposed in 1956, by the celebrated French Iranologist (...)
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  31.  22
    Te veniente die, te decedente canebat: il τόπος del mattino e della sera tra neoterismo e poesia augustea.Paola Gagliardi - 2019 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 163 (1):129-144.
    The reference to the rising and setting of the sun to indicate the unceasing duration of an action becomes a τόπος in Latin poetry from an influential distich of Cinna onwards, which was reworked a number of times in Augustan poetry. As well as Vergil and Horace, who adapt the model to different genres and occasions, the treatment of it by the elegists is interesting, in whom the two terms that define East and West are set in relation to the (...)
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  32.  8
    Peripheral and central: Dan Charly Christensen: Hans Christian Ørsted: Reading nature’s mind: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013, 743pp, £41.99 HB.David Knight - 2014 - Metascience 24 (1):103-105.
    Oersted has been a puzzle for historians of science. Unflatteringly regarded by contemporaries in Britain and France as a metaphysician, he astonished and galvanised the learned world in 1820 with his discovery of electromagnetism. Suddenly famous, he was belatedly honoured; but, like Röntgen with X-rays, did no more serious work on the discovery that brought him renown, leaving that to Ampère and Faraday while he concentrated on an aesthetics that would bridge arts and sciences, and on building up scientific (...)
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  33.  7
    Limb-Loosening and the Care of History: Tracing a Motif in Vergil.George Saad - 2020 - Arion 28 (2):43-64.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Limb-Loosening and the Care of History: Tracing a Motif in Vergil GEORGE SAAD the counter-voice of eros in epic While the Homeric world clearly underlies Vergil’s Aeneid, this Roman appropriation of Greek epic is not without complications. Vergil, taking the whole of history as his theme, develops a world subject to cosmic forces beyond the might and craft of Homeric heroes. To overcome enemies is no mean feat, but (...)
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  34.  4
    Science in an age of unreason.John Staddon - 2022 - Washington, D.C.: Regnery Gateway.
    Science is undergoing an identity crisis! A renown psychologist and biologist diagnoses our age of wishful, magical thinking and blasts out a clarion call for a return to reason and the search for objective knowledge and truth. Fans of Matt Ridley and Nicholas Wade will adore this trenchant meditation and call to action. Science is in trouble. Real questions in desperate need of answers—especially those surrounding ethnicity, gender, climate change, and almost anything related to ‘health and safety’—are swiftly buckling (...)
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  35.  4
    Who is Mad Here?Goran Sunajko - 2019 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 39 (1):119-134.
    The paper aesthetically examines the connection, that is inseparability between art and ‘madness’. Madness as a psychological and psychiatric term does not exist, and it is a social construct and a qualification that is often used to by the social majority to disqualify social minority or individuals who deviate from values majority cares about. In this paper, I interpret how art, in this sense given, is madness because to have an original artistic creation, it is necessary to have eccentricity that (...)
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  36.  33
    The ethics of care: the state of the art.Frans J. H. Vosman, A. J. Baart & Jacobus Retief Hoffman (eds.) - 2020 - Bristol, CT: Peeters.
    The ethics of care, developed in early 1980s within feminism as a critique on the biases of neokantian ethics, is 40 years old. This book presents its key insights, the developments and debates over the years and the challenges care ethics faces. Internationally renown scholars from various continents have contributed, a clear sign that care ethics has spread over the globe. The key insights regard issues close by, care from person to person, but also at an institutional level and (...)
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  37.  5
    101 Essays That Will Change the Way You Think.Brianna Wiest - 2016 - Brooklyn, NY: Thought Catalog Books.
    Over the past few years, Brianna Wiest has gained renown for her deeply moving, philosophical writing. This new compilation of her published work features pieces on why you should pursue purpose over passion, embrace negative thinking, see the wisdom in daily routine, and become aware of the cognitive biases that are creating the way you see your life. Some of these pieces have never been seen; others have been read by millions of people around the world. Regardless, each will (...)
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  38. Elias canetti and T. S. Eliot on fame.Suzanne Smith - 2010 - Philosophy and Literature 34 (1):pp. 145-160.
    "Fame," observes Elias Canetti, "wants to hang from the stars because they are so far removed . . ."1 What the seeker after fame finds attractive in the prospect of hanging from the stars are the conditions of distance and elevation, which promise security in the form of detachment and abstraction from the world below. We find in Canetti's image of the fame-seeking sensibility not two conflicting desires (for the renown conferred upon successful risk-takers and the safety secured through (...)
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  39.  41
    Deceptive readings: poetry and its value reconsidered.Sitta von Reden - 1995 - Classical Quarterly 45 (01):30-.
    In his analysis of the social and economic conditions of intellectual activity in ancient Greece, Gentili argues that the value of poetry underwent a notable change in the late archaic period. Poetry came to be produced within a contractual relationship between patrons and poets, it became a commercial good available to the one who could pay for it and its value was expressed no longer by honouring the poet but by paying for his product. At the time of Solon and (...)
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  40.  6
    The Offer to Achilles.E. Watson Williams - 1957 - Classical Quarterly 7 (1-2):103-.
    Probably no part of the Iliad has given rise to more discussion than the apparent contradiction between Books 9 and 16. In the former, Agamemnon's embassy offers Achilles the restoration of Briseis and ‘handsome gifts’ in recompense for taking her: in the latter Achilles tells Patroklos to obey his battle-orders exactly, ‘so that you may win me great renown and glory from all the Danaans, and they shall restore the lovely damsel and also give splendid gifts’ —just as though (...)
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  41.  19
    Zoologica Pindarica.E. K. Borthwick - 1976 - Classical Quarterly 26 (02):198-.
    Bowra , referring to the image of the , and to the striking impression , states ‘Pindar seems to fuse two unusually disparate images into a single result… While the sheddingof leaves implies that he would have grown old without winning any wide renown, the cock means that such renown as he would have got would have beenof little account in the Greek world at large.’ Gildersleeve's comment ad loc, ‘The thus becomes a flower’, implies a similar assumption, (...)
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  42.  32
    Actions, Reasons and Reason.Ralf Stoecker & Marco Iorio (eds.) - 2015 - Boston: De Gruyter.
    Through the whole history of mankind philosophers have taken pride in being reasonable agents. During the last decades Rüdiger Bittner, one of the internationally best renown german philosophers and winner of the Gottlob Frege award 2011, has developed a surprisingly different picture: We are much more part than master of the universe. The articles in the volume address this challenging view, illuminating and discussing it from various angles of practical philosophy including the aesthetics of film and theatre.
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  43. Benjamin Franklin in Jewish Eastern Europe: Cultural Appropriation in the Age of the Enlightenment.Nancy Sinkoff - 2000 - Journal of the History of Ideas 61 (1):133-152.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 61.1 (2000) 133-152 [Access article in PDF] Benjamin Franklin in Jewish Eastern Europe: Cultural Appropriation in the Age of the Enlightenment Nancy Sinkoff * Figures In 1808 an anonymous Hebrew chapbook detailing a behaviorist guide to moral education and self-improvement appeared in Lemberg, Austrian Galicia. Composed by Mendel Lefin of Satanów, an enlightened Polish Jew (maskil in the Hebrew terminology of the period), (...)
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  44.  24
    The Memory of the Persian Wars through the Eyes of Aeschylus: Commemorating the Victory of the Power of Democracy.Eleni Krikona - 2018 - AKROPOLIS: Journal of Hellenic Studies 2:85-104.
    The present paper addresses Aeschylus, and the way he wanted to be remembered by his fellow Athenians and the other Greeks. Having lived from 525/524 until 456/455 BCE, Aeschylus experienced the quick transition of his polis from a small city-state to a leading political and military force to be reckoned with throughout the Greek world. The inscription on his gravestone at Gela, Italy, commemorates his military achievements against the Persians, but makes no mention on his enormous theatrical renown. His (...)
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  45.  13
    Laudatio.Timothy B. Noone - 2010 - Franciscan Studies 68 (1):259-264.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:LaudatioTimothy B. Noone (bio)On Sunday, July 26, 2009, the Franciscan Institute was pleased to award to Dr. Girard J. Etzkorn its 22nd Franciscan Institute Medal in recognition of a lifetime of scholarship, editing and publication of texts on medieval philosophy and theology, with a special emphasis on the Franciscan intellectual tradition. The ceremony was held in the Trustees Room of Doyle Hall on the campus of St. Bonaventure University (...)
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  46.  25
    Laws of Nature Outlawed.Stephen Mumford - 1998 - Dialectica 52 (2):83-101.
    SummaryThere are two rival ways in which events in the world can be explained: the covering law way and the dispositionalist way. The covering law model, which takes the law of nature as its fundamental explanatory unit, faces a number of renown difficulties. Rather than attempt to patch up this approach, the alternative dispositionalist strategy is recommended. On this view, general facts are dependent upon particular facts about what things do, rather than vice versa. This way of viewing the (...)
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  47.  15
    Editors' Introduction: Examining Deeper Questions Posed by Disputes About Conscience in Medicine.Farr A. Curlin & Kevin Powell - 2019 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 62 (3):379-382.
    Over the past decade, scores of articles have been published debating whether and when it is ethical for physicians to refuse requests from patients for legal, professionally permitted interventions. Numerous voices have condemned "conscientious refusals" for obstructing patients' access to needed and "standard" health-care services, for imposing physicians' personal ideologies on patients, and for contradicting physicians' professional ethical obligations. Conversely, other voices argue that conscientious refusals are essential for maintaining the integrity of clinicians as moral agents, for assuring the (...) of the broader medical profession, and for preventing the imposition of moral viewpoints onto minorities... (shrink)
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  48.  22
    Order in Early Chinese Excavated Texts: Natural, Supernatural, and Legal Approaches by Zhongjiang Wang.Thomas Michael - 2019 - Philosophy East and West 69 (2):654-656.
    Order in Early Chinese Excavated Texts represents a selection of essays composed by Wang Zhongjiang of Beijing University, edited and translated by Misha Tadd. Its appearance comes on the heels of a separate book-length selection of various other of Wang's essays translated by Livia Kohn, entitled Daoism Excavated: Cosmos and Humanity in Early Manuscripts. The proximity of the publications of these two English-language works is important to note. It demonstrates the growing international renown of Wang, a foremost expert on (...)
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  49.  8
    ΚΛΕΟΣ ΑΦΘΙΤΟΝ in Sappho fr. 44.4 V.Ruobing Xian - 2019 - Hermes 147 (4):392.
    In this paper I offer a new interpretation of Sappho fr. 44 V by arguing for a sophisticated reading of the phrase κλέος ἄφθιτον at Sappho fr. 44.4 V in light of two Homeric sources. While the Sapphic verse directly alludes to the identical expression found in Achilles’ famous speech (Il. 9.413), the Iliadic passage serves further as a ‘window reference’ to Hector’s imagination of his future renown (Il. 7.91), which is the ultimate source of Sappho’s allusion.
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  50. The Leader's Two Bodies: Slavoj Zizek's Postmodern Political Theology.Claudia Breger - 2001 - Diacritics 31 (1):73-90.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 31.1 (2001) 73-90 [Access article in PDF] The Leader's Two BodiesSlavoj Zizek's Postmodern Political Theology Claudia Breger Over the course of the last decade, Slavoj Zizek and his "Slovenian Lacanian school" have gained renown in the Western theory market. Academics are fascinated not only by Zizek's performances as a speaker, his nondogmatic approach to issues of genre and (inter)mediality, 1 and the "literary" character of his theoretical (...)
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