Results for ' Prophet'

983 found
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  1.  10
    The economic philosophy of Jesus Christ vs. the religious philosophy of Karl Marx.Elizabeth Clare Prophet - 2019 - Gardiner, Montana: Summit University Press.
  2.  15
    The role of category valence in prototype preference.Moritz Ingendahl, Nadja Propheter & Tobias Vogel - 2024 - Cognition and Emotion 38 (6):963-969.
    People prefer prototypical stimuli over atypical stimuli. The dominant explanation for this prototype preference effect is that prototypical stimuli are processed more fluently. However, a more recent account proposes that prototypes are more strongly associated with their category’s valence, leading to a reversed prototype preference effect for negative categories. One critical but untested assumption of this category-valence account is that no prototype preference should emerge for entirely neutral categories. We tested this prediction by conditioning categories of dot patterns positively, negatively, (...)
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  3.  11
    Ethical prophets along the way: those hall of famers.Rufus Burrow - 2019 - Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books. Edited by Susannah Heschel & Mary Alice Mulligan.
    God's point of view to the people and the powers at a time when injustice, deceit, malfeasance, and crushing the poor and the oppressed was prominent--much like today! The prophets spoke courageously and emphatically about God's profound and unrelenting concern and compassion for human beings. Much influenced by the theology of prophecy developed by Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, this book discusses the nature, meaning, and relevance of ethical prophecy at a time when democracy--in the United States of America and elsewhere--is (...)
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  4.  10
    Prophet’s Medicine Among the Contemporary Indonesian Salafi Groups.Jajang Jahroni - 2020 - Epistemé: Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman 15 (2):315-343.
    The old-centuries medical forms claimed to have been exemplified by the Prophet Muhammad, called Prophet’s medicine, have been reinvented by the contemporary Indonesian Salafis. This invention is parts of their attempts to return all aspects of life to the authoritative resources. In doing so, the Salafis use modern packaging to attract non-Salafi Muslims. As a result, Prophet’s medicine has been popular among certain Muslim groups. The presence of Prophet’s medicine, to some extent, challenges conventional medicine which (...)
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  5.  20
    The Prophet's Unification in Society in The Context of -We – in His Tradition.Osman Yektar - 2016 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 20 (1):289-308.
    In hadith of the Prophet his "we" has become an emphasis on social awareness. Not so-called, it is formed in a self-conscious. In this way, the original is returned to the community of faith-communities. This "words, actions and feelings" as he tried to explain. Understood by all levels of society and it is a narrative encompassing their entire. It has managed to social cohesion in the application. This success also shed light on the present century is such a success.SUMMARY: (...)
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  6.  37
    Prophetic Authenticity: A Form-Critical Study of Amos 7:10–17.Gene M. Tucker - 1973 - Interpretation 27 (4):423-434.
    By rasing the form-critical questions our attention will be drawn directly to the text itself, and what it communicates concerning the prophetic role, the broad question of authority and validity in religious language, and the specific issue of the authentication of prophetic words... these are issues which refuse to be confined to the eighth century B.C. in Israel.
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  7.  30
    Prophetic Speech.Gene M. Tucker - 1978 - Interpretation 32 (1):31-45.
    A new assessment of the way prophets spoke shows that their basic vocation was to be as speakers who brought a communication from God announcing future events.
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  8.  34
    The Prophet Jeremiah and Exclusive Loyalty to God.Kathleen M. O'connor - 2005 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 59 (2):130-140.
    In the book of Jeremiah, the prophet's calling involves profound engagement with the world, with God, and with the local community. Exclusive allegiance to and intimate experience of God propel the prophet into the world, become the fiery source of his passion, and make Jeremiah the model of survival for his devastated community.
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  9.  25
    Nativist Prophets of Early Islamic Iran: Rural Revolt and Local Zoroastrianism. By Patricia Crone.Jamsheed K. Choksy - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 137 (1).
    The Nativist Prophets of Early Islamic Iran: Rural Revolt and Local Zoroastrianism. By Patricia Crone. Pp. xviii + 566, 6 maps. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012. Pp. xvii + 566. $109.99, $29.99, $24.
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  10.  34
    The Prophet of Non-Violence: Spirit of Peace, Compassion & Universality in Islam.Asgharali Engineer - 2011 - Vitasta.
    Section 1. Introduction. The prophet of non-violence -- section 2. Women in Islam. Women in the light of hadith -- Violence against women and religion -- section 3. War and peace in Islam. Theory of war and peace in Islam -- Centrality of jihad in post Qurʼanic period -- Jihad? But what about other verses in the Qurʼan? -- Islam, democracy and violence -- A critical look at Qurʼanic verses on war and violence -- section 4. Justice and compassion (...)
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  11. Prophetic pastoral leadership: The Adelaide archdiocesan pastoral team, 1986-2001 [Book Review].James McEvoy - 2018 - The Australasian Catholic Record 95 (4):507.
    Review of: Prophetic pastoral leadership: The Adelaide archdiocesan pastoral team, 1986-2001, by Paul K. Hawkes,, pp. 138; paperback, AU$23.00;1 Kindle, US$7.29.
     
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  12.  16
    Prophets competing against each other in a commercial age: Have some prophets or neoprophetic churches gone too far?Hulisani Ramantswana & Ithapeleng Sebetseli - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (4):1-10.
    In recent years, there is growing concern with some of the bizarre practices in some neoprophetic churches. Amongst the concerns raised are the bizarre practices and the commercialisation of churches with claims that churches are being turned into lucrative businesses. In this article, the relationship amongst prophets, churches and commerce is explored, focusing on competitive behaviour in an open market or free market. The article engages the following issues: firstly, the issue of religious marketing in the context of a free (...)
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  13.  25
    "Prophet" looking for a nineteenth century future.Susantha Goonatilake - 2005 - Social Epistemology 19 (1):129 – 146.
    Nanda writes disparagingly of "Hindu" intellectuals--including those in the West - who try to produce alternative sciences often inspired by post-modernism. She is unaware that many - including Einstein and Schrödinger - fit her descriptions of such "Hindu" Western prophets "facing backward" who revolutionized science by "alternative sciences". She misreads those positions she criticizes into one anti-science conspiracy of post-modernism and Vedic science adherents. Her misconstructions are easy to spot Examples: Key citations on India are Western; her statements often ex-cathedra (...)
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  14. Prophetic Religion: A Transracial Challenge to Modern Democracy.David L. Chappell - 2009 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 76 (4):1261-1276.
    Most contributors approach the secularization question out of concern with intolerance and repression. But a peculiar kind of religion may impinge upon secular life in a different way: a prophetic religion may generate the solidarity and will-to-sacrifice that oppressed peoples need to fight for freedom and equality. The tradition of the Hebrew Prophets played a key role in the American civil rights struggle. Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King, and other exponents of the tradition rejected the idea that minority rights could (...)
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  15.  21
    A Prophetic Peace: Judaism, Religion, and Politics.Alick Isaacs - 2011 - Indiana University Press.
    Challenging deeply held convictions about Judaism, Zionism, war, and peace, Alick Isaacs's combat experience in the second Lebanon war provoked him to search for a way of reconciling the belligerence of religion with its messages of peace. In his insightful readings of the texts of Biblical prophecy and rabbinic law, Isaacs draws on the writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein, Jacques Derrida, Abraham Joshua Heschel, and Martin Buber, among others, to propose an ambitious vision of religiously inspired peace. Rejecting the notion of (...)
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  16.  35
    Prophetic Politics: Emmanuel Levinas and the Sanctification of Suffering.Philip J. Harold - 2009 - Ohio University Press.
    In Prophetic Politics, Philip J. Harold offers an original interpretation of the political dimension of Emmanuel Levinas’s thought.
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  17.  7
    Leibniz: prophet of new era science.Jürgen Lawrenz - 2013 - Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    In this book, modern scientists and philosophers of science confront the prophetic legacy of the 17th century philosopher Leibnizâ "a metaphysical agenda full of ideas presaging todayâ (TM)s state of the art research into relativity and quantum cosmology; the physics of force, mass, momentum, time and space; complexity and chaos theories; fundamental particles and multiple worlds; and of the electronic cosmos of our computer era. Their immense relevance to us is demonstrated by the engagement with them of over 200 present-day (...)
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  18.  47
    A Prophetic Church in a Post-Constantinian Age: The Implicit Theology of Cornel West.Jeffrey Stout - 2007 - Contemporary Pragmatism 4 (1):39-45.
    This article concerns central theological commitments in Cornel West's prophetic social criticism. West is best interpreted as someone proposing a politics of charism, in which human arrangements need constantly to make room for and conform themselves to the divine gifts of inspired speech, music, knowledge, and love. The church, for West, is a fallible, earthen vessel into which God's charismatic treasures are poured. The church's prophetic mission must receive prophetic criticism; it should disconnect itself from empire, capital, racism, sexism, and (...)
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  19. Prophets, Philosophers and Poets of the Ancient World.Henry Osborn Taylor - 1915 - New York: F. Ungar Pub. Co..
    Chaldaea and Egypt.--China: duty and detachment.--The Indian annihilation of individuality.--Zarathushtra.--The prophets of Israel.--The heroic adjustment in Greek poetry.--Greek philosophers.--Intermediaries.--Jesus.--Paul.--Augustine.--The arrows are beyond thee.
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  20.  16
    A Prophetic Presence in the Margins.Jayakumar Christian - 2019 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 36 (2):53-57.
    The article sets the tone for the rest of this journal by raising some fundamental question of the relevance of the margins for theology of the local church. It explores a possible theology for the local church in the margins of our society. Purusing the theme of Jubilee as ‘presence’ rather than as activism, the author explores five themes for constructing a missiology for the local church’s in the margins. The article defines the local church in the margins of our (...)
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  21.  17
    Introducing Prophetic Pragmatism: A Dialogue on Hope, the Philosophy of Race, and the Spiritual Blues.Jacob L. Goodson & Brad Elliott Stone - 2019 - Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books. Edited by Brad Elliott Stone.
    Pragmatism is a philosophical school of thought emphasizing action, practices, and practical reasoning whereas prophecy is an ancient religious concept that requires belief in the reality of God. Although these two concepts seem to not be a natural fit with one another, the authors demonstrate why prophetic pragmatism is “pragmatism at its best.”.
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  22.  23
    The Prophetic Challenge of Disability Art.Devan Stahl - 2019 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 39 (2):251-268.
    For many persons with chronic illness and disability, medical images can come to represent their stigmatized “otherness.” A growing group of artists, however, are transforming their medical images into works of visual art, which better represent their lived experience and challenge viewers to see disability and illness differently. Although few of these artists are self-professed Christians, they challenge the Church to live into the communion to which it has been called. Using a method of correlation, Christian ethicists can find within (...)
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  23.  23
    Prophetic Voice and Sacramental Insight in Walt Whitman’s “Messenger Leaves” Poems.Maire Mullins - 2016 - Renascence 68 (4):246-265.
    The fifteen “Messenger Leaves” poems Whitman assembled as part of the third (1860) edition of Leaves of Grass exhibit a tension between the prophetic and the sacramental that would become more significant as the United States entered the decade of the Civil War. Comprised of poems that provide warnings and admonitions (the prophetic) and poems that offer consolation and healing (the sacramental), in “Messenger Leaves” Whitman uses biblical models and texts to appeal to the religious sensibilities of the American people. (...)
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  24.  32
    Prophets, priests, and kings today? theological and practical problems with the use of the munus triplex as a leadership typology.Timothy Paul Jones - 2018 - Perichoresis 16 (3):63-85.
    It has become widespread, not only among pastors and conference speakers but also among scholars such as Vern Poythress and John Frame, to utilize the threefold offices of Christ as a typology for church leadership. According to this application of the threefold office, different church leaders possess prophetic, priestly, and kingly capacities in differing degrees, and the most appropriate role for each leader depends on which of these capacities happens to be strongest. According to some proponents, the offices of (...), priest, and king function as leadership personality types, with prophets identified as those leaders who are gifted as teachers, priests as those who care for people’s needs, and kings as planners and organizers. This article undertakes an exploration of these three leadership roles and contends that, though the munus triplex itself is a venerable and biblical structure, the appropriation of prophet, priest, and king as typological categories for church leadership is not. Through examination both of relevant Old Testament texts and of New Testament appropriations of these offices of leadership, it is demonstrated that the typological categorization of leaders as prophets, priests, or kings falls far short when it comes to biblical support. Particularly absent in Scripture is any clear identification of these offices with specific traits that different church leaders possess in differing degrees. Kingship and priesthood in particular are not individualized traits but a communal identity, shared by the whole people of God and grounded in union with Christ. (shrink)
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  25.  19
    Buber on False Prophets and Nationalism.Warren Zeev Harvey - 2019 - Journal of World Philosophies 4 (2):1-7.
    Martin Buber’s essay “False Prophets” was written in Hebrew in Jerusalem two years after he fled Nazi Germany and assumed a professorship at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The essay offers a political analysis of the dramatic confrontation between the prophets Jeremiah and Hananiah. It speaks about the dangers of nationalism in Jeremiah’s biblical Jerusalem and in Buber’s own modern Jerusalem, eight years before the proclamation of the State of Israel. Who is the real lover of the homeland, Buber asks, (...)
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  26.  17
    Prophets of the Jewish Counterculture – Martin Buber, Erich Fromm, and Abraham Joshua Heschel.Domagoj Akrap - 2022 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 42 (4):761-773.
    The text deals with the emergence of a specific Jewish counterculture in the wake of the civil rights movement and the anti-war movement in the USA in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Martin Buber’s philosophy of dialogue, Erich Fromm’s humanism and the religious existentialism of Abraham Joshua Heschel had a significant impact on the ideas of the young Jewish generation and influenced their striving for a renewal of Jewish life. Although the three Jewish thinkers differed in their forms of (...)
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  27.  52
    Prophets facing backwards: An appreciation.T. Jayaraman - 2005 - Social Epistemology 19 (1):99 – 110.
    This appreciation of Meera Nanda's book 'Prophets Facing Backwards' deals primarily with the contemporary socio-political relevance of her work. This essay highlights the significance of the book in the study of the Hindu fundamentalist stance towards the natural sciences and its roots in the construction of the world view of neo-Hinduism. It also situates the emergence of the post-modernist critique of science in India, that has made ideological common cause with Hindu fundamentalim on the question of science, in the context (...)
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  28.  14
    Prophets, Prophecy, and Ancient Israelite Historiography. Edited by Mark J. Boda and Lissa M. Wray Beal.Steven S. Tuell - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 137 (3).
    Prophets, Prophecy, and Ancient Israelite Historiography. Edited by Mark J. Boda and Lissa M. Wray Beal. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2013. Pp. xii + 400. $54.50.
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  29.  22
    Contemporary Prophetic and Deliverance Ministry Challenges in Africa.Christian Tsekpoe - 2019 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 36 (4):280-291.
    This paper contends that in Africa, the belief in the reality of the spirit world is a persistent phenomenon, which occupies a significant place in their religiosity. By building their theologies around the existential needs of the African people, the prophetic and deliverance ministries represent a contextual approach to Christianity in Africa. Nevertheless, an examination of the strengths and weaknesses of these ministries reveal that their approach may fit well into the African cultural milieu, but their emphasis is a threat (...)
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  30.  8
    Prophet of Decline: Spengler on World History and Politics.John Farrenkopf - 2001 - LSU Press.
    Oswald Spengler (1880--1936) is best known for The Decline of the West, in which he propounded his pathbreaking philosophy of world history and penetrating diagnosis of the crisis of modernity. This monumental work launched a seminal attack on the idea of progress and supplanted the outmoded Eurocentric understanding of history. His provocative pessimism seems to be confirmed in retrospect by the twentieth-century horrors of economic depression, totalitarianism, genocide, the dawn of the nuclear age, and the emerging global environmental crisis. In (...)
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  31.  31
    The Prophets in Recent Study: 1967–197.James Limburg - 1978 - Interpretation 32 (1):56-68.
    During the last decade the library of resources for the study of Old Testament prophets has been substantially expanded ; especially noteworthy is the way the need for commentaries has been met.
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  32.  23
    Prophetic Voices: Simone Weil and Flannery O'Connor.E. Jane Doering & Ruthann Knechel Johansen - 2020 - Philosophical Investigations 43 (1-2):101-114.
    This study juxtaposes Simone Weil's exposition of God's invitation to know and love the good through the divine signature of beauty stamped on the order of the world and Flannery O'Connor's depiction of a society whose oppressive order allows some characters to oppose outright a divine order or to live under the illusion that the divine invitation is irrelevant because they, in their egoism and materialist values, are the centre of the universe. An examination of O'Connor's and Weil's ideas on (...)
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  33.  17
    Prophetic sensing of Yahweh’s word.Wilhelm J. Wessels - 2015 - HTS Theological Studies 71 (3):9.
    This article focuses on Jeremiah 23:18, which implies that the prophet stood in the council of Yahweh (sôd) to see and hear the word of Yahweh. In this verse, it seems that the senses of the prophet played a role in receiving Yahweh’s words. Verse 18 forms part of 23:16–22 in which Jeremiah warned the people of Judah not to listen to prophets who mislead them with optimistic messages. In this article, attention is given to the question whether (...)
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  34. Prophetic Preaching: A Pastoral Approach.[author unknown] - 2010
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  35.  32
    Prophetic Experience as Revelation.Bernard Cooke - 1987 - Philosophy and Theology 1 (3):214-224.
    To attempt in two short articles to provide an adequate review of present-day reflection about divine revelation to humans is folly; in addition to suggest and justify a particular understanding of revelation borders on the impossible. What I propose to do is something much more limited: within the content of contemporary discussion about revelation to examine only two critical and, I hope, illumining instances - namely, the revelation of the divine that occurs in prophetic experience (which I will deal with (...)
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  36.  10
    Anarchist Prophets: Disappointing Vision and the Power of Collective Sight.James R. Martel - 2022 - Duke University Press.
    In _Anarchist Prophets_ James R. Martel juxtaposes anarchism with what he calls archism in order to theorize the potential for a radical democratic politics. He shows how archism—a centralized and hierarchical political form that is a secularization of ancient Greek and Hebrew prophetic traditions—dominates contemporary politics through a prophet’s promises of peace and prosperity or the threat of violence. Archism is met by anarchism, in which a community shares a collective form of judgment and vision. Martel focuses on the (...)
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  37. Evaluation of Prophetic Narrations about the Sunnahs of Friday Prayer.Cemil Cahit Mollaibrahimoğlu - 2018 - Tasavvur - Tekirdag Theology Journal 4 (2):684 - 708.
    Prophet (pbuh) has given notice that the Salah [prayer] is the first deed in which the Muslim servant will be brought to account on the Day of Judgement. The Prophet (pbuh) also informed that if the believer’s obligatory (fardh) prayers are lacking this will be made up from voluntary (nawafil) prayers and that the servant comes close to Allah by fulfilling obligatories and continues to draw near to him with voluntary deeds. One of nawafil is the prayer which (...)
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  38.  45
    Max Weber’s charismatic prophets.Christopher Adair-Toteff - 2014 - History of the Human Sciences 27 (1):3-20.
    Most accounts of Weber’s notion of charisma follow his own explicit comments and seek its origins in the writings of Rudolf Sohm. While I acknowledge the validity of this, I follow Weber’s suggestions and locate the charismatic forces in the political and ethical conduct and beliefs of certain Old Testament prophets, specifically Amos, Jeremiah and Isaiah. Their emphasis on political justice and ethical fairness, coupled with their unwavering belief in the power of prophecy, infuse Weber’s conception of charisma and in (...)
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  39.  81
    Prophets: More Patriots Than Traitors?—A Discussion of Prophetic Patriotism Using the Prophet to the Nations, Jeremiah, as an Example.Liu Ping - 2016 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 47 (4):255-269.
    Liu Ping discusses patriotism and nationalism in regard to culture and values and also the role of the prophetic voice in Chinese society. His provocative allegorical rewriting of a prophecy from the Biblical book of Amos, setting it in contemporary China, is pointedly political. Liu writes in the Chinese intellectual tradition of pointing out when a society or a country is on the brink of destruction.
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  40.  69
    Prophetic Pragmatism and the Practices of Freedom: On Cornel West's Foucauldian Methodology.Brad Elliott Stone - 2011 - Foucault Studies 11:92-105.
    This essay explores the Foucauldian influence on Cornel West’s prophetic pragmatism. Although West argues that Foucauldian methods are insufficient to deliver a philosophy of liberation, I argue that there is nothing in Foucault that would prohibit West from such a goal, even though a philosophy of liberation was not one of Foucault’s goals. Fortunately, one can understand West’s own project of liberation in terms of “practices of freedom,” allowing one to describe West’s philosophical project in strict Foucauldian terms.
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  41. Prophetic rhetoric and moral disagreement.M. Cathleen Kaveny - 2009 - In Lawrence Cunningham, Intractable Disputes About the Natural Law: Alasdair Macintyre and Critics. University of Notre Dame Press.
     
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  42.  48
    Review. Prophets and emperors: human and divine authority from Augustus to Theodosius. D Potter.Christopher Kelly - 1997 - The Classical Review 47 (1):123-124.
  43.  57
    The Prophets of Notting Hill.Roy Kerridge - 1979 - The Chesterton Review 6 (1):116-130.
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  44.  14
    Prophets, resurgences, and the truth: in discussion with Maurizio Viroli’s Prophetic Times.Fernanda Gallo - 2024 - History of European Ideas 50 (7):1304-1306.
    Maurizio Viroli’s Prophetic Times: Visions of Emancipation in the History of Italy (2023) is the latest in a long list of outstanding works on Italian intellectual history that the scholar has publ...
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  45.  56
    The Prophetic Church: History and Doctrinal Development in John Henry Newman and Yves Congar by Andrew Meszaros.Elizabeth H. Farnsworth - 2017 - Newman Studies Journal 14 (1):83-85.
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  46. Reading Prophetic Narratives.Uriel Simon - 1997
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  47.  39
    Disarming the Prophets: Thomas Hobbes and Predictive Power.Kinch Hoekstra - 2004 - Rivista di Storia Della Filosofia 59 (1):97-153.
    Disarming the Prophets - ABSTRACT: Kinch Hoekstra takes up another question related to supposed revelatory experience, namely, the claim to prophesy, and, more particularly, why Hobbes’s concern with it grows during the decade after 1640, what varieties of it preoccupy him and what his responses are to them. Of central importance for Hobbes was his contemporaries’ concern with biblical prophecy, both radical and royalist. Trying to pluck its political sting, Hobbes argues that apocalyptic prophecy is a form of madness but (...)
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  48. The Prophetic Imagination.Walter Brueggemann - 1978
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  49.  16
    Prophets and Patrons: The French University and the Emergence of the Social Sciences. Terry Nichols Clark.John Sevier - 1975 - Isis 66 (2):285-287.
  50.  11
    The Prophetic Law: Essays in Judaism, Girardianism, Literary Studies, and the Ethical.Sandor Goodhart - 2014 - East Lansing: Michigan State University Press.
    To read literature is to read the way literature reads. René Girard’s immense body of work supports this thesis bountifully. Whether engaging the European novel, ancient Greek tragedy, Shakespeare’s plays, or Jewish and Christian scripture, Girard teaches us to read prophetically, not by offering a method he has developed, but by presenting the methodologies they have developed, the interpretative readings already available within (and constitutive of) such bodies of classical writing. In The Prophetic Law, literary scholar, theorist, and critic Sandor (...)
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