Results for ' planetary humanism'

971 found
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  1.  14
    How Blue Can You Get? B.B. King, Planetary Humanism and the Blues behind Bars.Les Back - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (7-8):274-285.
    This article honours the memory of blues musician B.B. King, who died on 14 May 2015, through focusing on his performances in prisons. The article situates his concerts inside Cook County jail and Sing Sing within the wider political crisis during the 1970s surrounding issues of race and class in the American prison system. It suggests the historical resonance of these events can be interpreted through using Paul Gilroy’s notion of planetary humanism. The tone of B.B. King’s guitar (...)
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  2. Planetary Humanism.Paul Kurtz - 2003 - Free Inquiry 24.
  3. Chapter Eleven La Dividua—A Gendered Figuration for a Planetary Humanism.Covi Glovanna - 2008 - In Mina Karavanta & Nina Morgan (eds.), Edward Said and Jacques Derrida: reconstellating humanism and the global hybrid. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Press.
  4.  24
    Entangled Humanism as a Political Project: William Connolly’s Facing the Planetary.Anatoli Ignatov, Nicole Grove, Alexander Livingston & William E. Connolly - 2019 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (1):115-134.
  5.  17
    Facing the Planetary: Entangled Humanism and the Politics of Swarming.William E. Connolly - 2017 - Duke University Press.
    In _Facing the Planetary_ William E. Connolly expands his influential work on the politics of pluralization, capitalism, fragility, and secularism to address the complexities of climate change and to complicate notions of the Anthropocene. Focusing on planetary processes—including the ocean conveyor, glacier flows, tectonic plates, and species evolution—he combines a critical understanding of capitalism with an appreciation of how such nonhuman systems periodically change on their own. Drawing upon scientists and intellectuals such as Lynn Margulis, Michael Benton, Alfred North (...)
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  6.  33
    Facing the planetary: Entangled humanism and the politics of swarming.Andrew Biro - 2019 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (2):141-144.
  7.  31
    Planetary democracy.Oliver Leslie Reiser - 1944 - New York,: Creative age press. Edited by Davis, Blodwen & [From Old Catalog].
  8.  16
    Extending Planetary Health: Global Ethics and Global Governance in the Noosphere.Clément Vidal - 2023 - Humanistic Management Journal 8 (1):89-95.
    This essay proposes ways to extend the concept of _planetary health_, in the framework of major evolutionary transition applied to the planet as a whole. I argue that planetary health can be naturally extended to a fully planetary scale, including issues related to geo- bio- techno- and noo- spheres. I show the need and importance for ethics and governance to become global and I give some examples of physiological and psychological health issues from a planetary perspective.
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  9.  14
    The origins of planetary ethics in the philosophy of Russian cosmism.A. V. Bezgodov - 2019 - [Dartford]: Xlibris. Edited by Konstantin V. Barezhev.
    In this book, Aleksandr V. Bezgodov and Konstantin V. Barezhev formulate planetary ethics--the most important part of the philosophy of the Planetary Project. Planetary ethics represent the moral basis and value code for building a biocompatible, harmonious, and manageable civilization. They analyze the moral and ethical views of those Russian cosmists who belonged to the natural science branch of this unique philosophical, scientific, and cultural phenomenon. Looking at the world through the prism of a planetary-cosmic consciousness, (...)
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  10. The Dialectic of American Humanism.H. Vernon Leighton - 2012 - Renascence 64 (2):201-215.
    A Confederacy of Dunces (Confederacy) by John Kennedy Toole portrays an interplay between competing definitions of humanism. The one school of humanism—called by some the Modernist Paradigm—saw the Italian Renaissance as the origin of nineteenth- and twentieth-century modernist views that celebrated science, technology, and individual human freedom. The other school, led by Paul Oskar Kristeller, sought to historicize humanism by establishing that Renaissance writers and thinkers were generally conservative and preserved the philosophical ideas of the medieval era. (...)
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  11.  43
    Anthropocene/Anthroposcene: Integrating Temporal and Spatial Aspects of Human-Planetary Interaction toward Ethical Adaptation.Bina Gogineni & Kyle Nichols - 2021 - Critical Inquiry 47 (2):349-369.
    The Anthropocene debates are rooted in epistemological differences. Geologists seek temporal markers of spatially even anthropogenic impact. Thus, they favor geologic data that fit this category. Humanists and social scientists, on the other hand, tend to focus on the negative effects of spatial unevenness. Without linking the Anthropocene’s temporal and spatial components, the official designation, ultimately determined by geologists, will be a futile exercise that will not make good on the Anthropocene Working Group’s intention for it to be useful for (...)
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  12. A Literature Review on Digital Ethics from a Humanistic and Sustainable Perspective.Ivo Wallimann-Helmer, Luis Teran, Jhonny Pincay & Edy Portmann - 2021 - In Euripidis Loukis, Marie Anne Macadar, Morten Meyerhoff Nielsen & Mário Peixoto (eds.), 14th International Conference on Theory. pp. 57-64.
    The rapid technological transition requires the adoptive approach to the digital conduct of public and private institutions. Countries and companies strive to integrate a balanced understanding of digital ethics and sustainability concepts from various standpoints, which results in a dispersed and uncategorized knowledge base. This work presents a literature review on digital ethics published from 2010 to 2020 in three technical libraries and one library maintained by the community of philosophers. The investigation process integrates a thorough review of digital ethics (...)
     
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  13.  14
    Sociology and Human Ecology: Complexity and Post-Humanist Perspectives.John A. Smith & Chris Jenks - 2017 - Routledge.
    Traditionally, Sociology has identified its subject matter as a distinct set - social phenomena - that can be taken as quite different and largely disconnected from potentially relevant disciplines such as Psychology, Economics or Planetary Ecology. Within Sociology and Human Ecology, Smith and Jenks argue that this position is no longer sustainable. Indeed, exhorting the reader to confront human ecology and its relation to the physical and biological environments, Smith and Jenks suggest that the development of understanding with regards (...)
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  14.  28
    Fratelli tutti: Reading the Social Magisterium of Pope Francis.Meghan J. Clark & Anna Rowlands - 2022 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 19 (1):5-23.
    This article explores the teaching of Fratelli tutti as an integrating document of the papacy of Francis. Exploring the title as greeting and imperative, the authors make a case for exploring FT as both a development of the themes of earlier social encyclicals and as an attempt to explore an integral humanism for a new age facing economic, environmental, migratory, and social-conflictual challenges. The article lays out a summary of these main themes of Francis’s social teaching. Nonetheless, the authors (...)
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  15.  30
    The (M)other of All Posts.Namita Goswami - 2013 - Critical Philosophy of Race 1 (1):104-120.
    Paul Gilroy's subtle use of Theodor Adorno in Postcolonial Melancholia misses the opportunity to forge for the postcolonial world a sense of responsibility for the colonial cultures that this postcolonial world helped to create. Gilroy rightly emphasizes the naïveté often associated with attempts to “dwell convivially with difference”. His negatively dialectical reading of the deterministic logics of racial difference brings into view an already present demotic multiculturalism. He neglects, however, how Adorno's conception of negative dialectics can be understood as postcolonial (...)
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  16. The overlooked contributors to climate and biodiversity crises: Military operations and wars.Quan-Hoang Vuong, Minh-Hoang Nguyen & Viet-Phuong La - 2024 - Environmental Management 73:1-5.
    The military-industrial complex, military operations, and wars are major contributors to exacerbating both climate change and biodiversity crises. However, their environmental impacts are often shadowed due to national security reasons. The current paper aims to go through the devastating impacts of military operations and wars on climate change and biodiversity loss and challenges that hinder the inclusion of military-related activities into environmental crisis mitigation efforts. The information blind spot induced by concerns about national security reasons jeopardizes the efforts to involve (...)
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  17.  10
    Nothing sacred.Stathis Gourgouris - 2024 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Enlightenment thought is widely considered to consist of four key features--atheism, democracy, humanism, and modernity. Common to all is an explicit process of desacralization. Yet the intellectual history of these concepts reveals that in the process of desacralization new sacred spaces arose in their name. The aim of Nothing Sacred is to question this second-order sacralization and consider, in a form of negative dialectics, whether (and how) these domains can argue against themselves in order to once again desacralize their (...)
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  18.  29
    Systemic Social Innovation: Co-Creating a Future Where Humans and all Life Thrive.Raymond Fisk, Angie Fuessel, Christopher Laszlo, Patrick Struebi, Alessandro Valera & Carey Weiss - 2019 - Humanistic Management Journal 4 (2):191-214.
    Society is at a crossroads. Interconnected systems, radical transparency, and rapidly increasing sophistication in skills, communications, and technologies provide a unique context for fostering social innovation at a planetary scale. We argue that unprecedented rates of systemic social change are possible for co-creating a future where humans and all life can thrive. Yet, this requires innovation in the conceptions, practice, teaching, and researching of social innovation itself to reimagine what it is and can be. As a multidisciplinary group of (...)
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  19.  11
    Climate Machines, Fascist Drives, and Truth.William E. Connolly - 2019 - Duke University Press.
    In this new installation of his work, William E. Connolly examines entanglements between volatile earth processes and emerging cultural practices. He highlights relays between extractive capitalism, self-amplifying climate processes, migrations, democratic aspirations, and fascist dangers. In three interwoven essays, Connolly takes up thinkers in the "minor tradition" of European thought who, unlike Cartesians and Kantians, cross divisions between nature and culture. He first offers readings of Sophocles and Mary Shelley, asking whether close attention to the Anthropocene could perhaps have arrived (...)
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  20.  9
    Posthuman: consciousness and pathic engagement.Mauro Maldonato (ed.) - 2017 - Portland, Oregon: Sussex Academic Press.
    Emerging at the margins of science fiction, the concept of posthuman has become the most potent and pervasive movement of contemporary culture. From science to ethics, from philosophy to art, from politics to communication, posthuman studies transcend analytical-conceptual categories of traditional disciplines. This new anthropology, open to a hetero-referential alterity (bio-techno-IT), requires, on the pathic level, new forms of adaptation and integration. The emancipation of the idea of a presumed human 'essence' brings possibilities as well as risks. This book sets (...)
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  21.  5
    The turbulent universe.Paul Kurtz - 2013 - Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books.
    Citing the emergence of a new planetary civilization, Kurtz proposes the development of planetary ethics based on universal human rights, free scientific inquiry unfettered by dogma, an attitude of exuberance toward human potentials, and determination in the face of daunting challenges.
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  22.  16
    Musical vitalities: ventures in a biotic aesthetics of music.Holly Watkins - 2018 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Does it make sense to refer to bird song - a complex vocalization, full of repetitive and transformative patterns that are carefully calculated to woo a mate - as art? What about a pack of wolves howling in unison or the cacophony made by an entire rain forest? Redefining music as "the art of possibly animate things," Musical Vitalities charts a new path for music studies that blends musicological methods with perspectives drawn from the life sciences. In opposition to humanist (...)
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  23.  17
    Breaking Earth.Alexis Rider & Paul A. Harris - 2023 - Substance 52 (3):3-8.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Breaking EarthAlexis Rider (bio) and Paul A. Harris (bio)“He takes all that, the strata and the magma and the people and the power, in his imaginary hands. Everything. He holds it. He is not alone. The earth is with him. Then he breaks it.”― N. K. Jemisin, The Fifth SeasonBreaking Earth, a collection of visual and written essays brought together for this special issue of SubStance, is a disruptive (...)
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  24.  11
    Dancing with Sophia: integral philosophy on the verge.Michael Schwartz (ed.) - 2019 - Albany: SUNY Press.
    Explores the philosophical dimensions and implications of integral theory. Dancing with Sophia is the first book of essays to focus on the philosophical dimensions and implications of integral theory. A metatheory that organizes first order theories and disciplines into higher order modes of knowing and insight needed to address the complexity of today’s world, integral theory has already impacted a wide range of disciplines, from psychology to business to religious studies to art. Included here are perspectives by scholars in the (...)
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  25.  3
    Pensar lo humano desde transepistemes en la decolonialidad planetaria-complejidad.Milagros Elena Rodríguez - 2024 - Trans/Form/Ação 47 (2):e02400235.
    The epistemes of human beings enter into crisis with their practice. They make evident their inability to have known each other; while its expeditious complexity is: nature-body-mind-soul-spirit-God. As a research objective, we support transepistemes to think about human beings in planetary decoloniality-complexity. The trans prefix inherits concepts from the legacy of Enrique Dussel. We investigate in the midst of wonderful transmethodologies, in the lines of research titled: planetary decoloniality-complexity in re-linkage; complex transmethodologies and planetary-complex decolonial transmethods. With (...)
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  26.  52
    The posthuman abstract: AI, DRONOLOGY & “BECOMING ALIEN”.Louis Armand - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2571-2576.
    This paper is addressed to recent theoretical discussions of the Anthropocene, in particular Bernard Stiegler’s Neganthropocene (Open Universities Press, 2018), which argues: “As we drift past tipping points that put future biota at risk, while a post-truth regime institutes the denial of ‘climate change’ (as fake news), and as Silicon Valley assistants snatch decision and memory, and as gene-editing and a financially-engineered bifurcation advances over the rising hum of extinction events and the innumerable toxins and conceptual opiates that Anthropocene Talk (...)
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  27.  5
    Statues of Jeff Bezos.Steven D. Brown - 2024 - Angelaki 29 (4):88-97.
    The passage of human civilization into the new geological era of the Anthropocene raises the question of species extinction. How can we confront the possibility of collective death in a way that does not descend into uncontained anxiety or melancholy? Michel Serres’s works in the Foundations and Humanism series offer critical insights into the way in which human violence and death operate as mechanisms for binding together human collectives. Serres draws attention to the role of “social technologies” based around (...)
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  28.  14
    Bernard Stiegler and aesthetic technê.Virgilio A. Rivas - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    This essay discusses the aesthetic potential within Bernard Stiegler’s concept of technics, particularly its nascent or preactual form of realism. This realism fosters a sense of spontaneity, crucial to a modal engagement with time, being, and history in the face of contemporary planetary enframing. By critically appraising Stiegler’s framework, the essay proposes an aesthetics of care that aligns with restoring art’s primordial inhumanism. This stands in stark contrast to the inhumanism inherent in technological modernity. Reviving this aesthetics, a global (...)
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  29.  6
    The new face of humanity.Robert Redeker - 2007 - Bethesda: Academica Press.
    Introduction: human instability -- Architecture and philosophy : mutation of the human -- The contemporary destabilization of humanity and the impasse of philosophy -- The vanishing universal -- In human place : the inhuman, the dehumanized and the nonhuman -- Sport : the planetary manufacture of dehumanization -- Biodoxacracy, strategy of dehumanization -- Conclusion: man of war in times of peace and the challenge of culture.
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  30.  13
    Unthought: the power of the cognitive nonconscious.N. Katherine Hayles - 2017 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    N. Katherine Hayles is known for breaking new ground at the intersection of the sciences and the humanities. In Unthought, she once again bridges disciplines by revealing how we think without thinking—how we use cognitive processes that are inaccessible to consciousness yet necessary for it to function. Marshalling fresh insights from neuroscience, cognitive science, cognitive biology, and literature, Hayles expands our understanding of cognition and demonstrates that it involves more than consciousness alone. Cognition, as Hayles defines it, is applicable not (...)
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  31.  21
    Corporate Citizenship, Social Responsibility, and Sustainability Reports as “Would-be” Narratives.Michel Dion - 2017 - Humanistic Management Journal 2 (1):83-102.
    Corporate citizenship, social responsibility and sustainability reports could be analyzed from a philosophical viewpoint. In this article, we will use Paul Ricoeur’s hermeneutic philosophy to assess the narrativity of such reports. Out of a philosophical viewpoint, our exploratory study analyzes the contents of ten reports: two corporate citizenship reports, three corporate social responsibility reports, and five sustainability reports. Those reports are arising in-time and are thus referring to past corporate events and phenomena. Sometimes such reports introduce a corporate world-dream that (...)
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  32.  30
    Globalisolationism and its Implications for TNCs’ Global Responsibility.Frederick Ahen - 2019 - Humanistic Management Journal 4 (1):33-54.
    The complex structure of the tragic aspects of globalization has been accounted for in extant literature. What remains unclear is how deglobalization, isolationism and all the radically disruptive movements and politics in-between will shape transnational corporations’ organizational practices. The purpose of this study is to interrogate and problematize the implications of anarchic ‘globalisolationism’ vis-à-vis the atlas of insurrection and the TNCs’ global responsibility towards human-centric management practices. We situate our analysis in the heavily politicized and contested discursive space of emergent (...)
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  33.  3
    A Framework for Deep Resilience in the Anthropocene.Dekila Chungyalpa, Pilar E. Gauthier, Robin I. Goldman, M. Vikas & Christine D. Wilson-Mendenhall - forthcoming - Humanistic Management Journal:1-16.
    This paper presents a conceptual framework proposed by the Loka Initiative for building inner, community, and planetary resilience as a unified vision and goal. Titled “A Framework for Deep Resilience in the Anthropocene,” the framework emerged from a three-day dialogue with over 40 researchers, academics, community experts, clinical psychologists, and contemplative leaders who participated in the Resilience in the Anthropocene Summit from August 8–10, 2023. We propose that a unified goal of inner, community, and planetary resilience is necessary (...)
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  34. Moulakis, Athanasios,„Civic Humanism “.Humanism Moulakis - 2012 - In Ed Zalta (ed.), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, CA: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  35.  25
    Wellbeing Economics Narratives for a Sustainable Future.Sandra Waddock - 2021 - Humanistic Management Journal 6 (2):151-167.
    There is increasing attention to the idea of bringing about what is termed a wellbeing economy, and recognition that a coherent story or narrative is important in countering the strength of today’s dominant economic narrative--neoliberalism. Yet there has been relatively little consensus on what such an idea might mean in practice, despite the proliferation of many different initiatives attempting to bring such an economy about. Many of these initiatives have allied with an aggregator called WEAll, the Wellbeing Economy Alliance. In (...)
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  36. Acknowledgments. Introduction: Sisyphus, humanism, and the challenge of three. Section One.Race : Racing Humanism: Two Examples For Context - 2015 - In Anthony B. Pinn (ed.), Humanism: essays on race, religion and cultural production. London: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
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  37.  41
    Newman’s Romantic Meta-Rhetoric in An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent.Christian Humanism, Cold Grace & Christian Faith - 2008 - Renascence 61 (1):39-50.
  38. Dialogue and universausm no. 1-2/2003.Lithuanian Humanists - 2003 - Dialogue and Universalism 13 (1-5):95.
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  39. Iris M. Young.Gynocentrism Humanism - 2006 - In Elizabeth Hackett & Sally Anne Haslanger (eds.), Theorizing feminisms: a reader. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 174.
  40.  27
    Mark A. Lutz.Beyond Economic Man & Humanistic Economics11 - 1985 - In Peter Koslowski (ed.), Economics and philosophy. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr. pp. 91.
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  41. Robert C. Solomon.Environmentalism as A. Humanism - forthcoming - Business, Ethics, and the Environment: The Public Policy Debate.
     
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  42. The humanism debate.Thomas Baldwin - 2007 - In Brian Leiter & Michael Rosen (eds.), The Oxford handbook of continental philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  43. Christian Humanism in Economics and Business.Martin Schlag & Domènec Melé - 2015 - In Martin Schlag & Domènec Melé (eds.), Humanism in Economics and Business: Perspectives of the Catholic Social Tradition. Dordrecht: Springer Verlag.
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  44.  29
    Humanism of the Other.Emmanuel Levinas & Richard A. Cohen - 2003 - University of Illinois Press.
    Levinas on the possibility and need for humanist ethics In Humanism of the Other, Emmanuel Levinas argues that it is not only possible but of the highest exigency to understand one's humanity through the humanity of others. In paperback for the first time, Levinas's work here is based in a new appreciation for ethics and takes new distances from phenomenology, idealism, and skepticism to rehabilitate humanism and restore its promises. Painfully aware of the long history of dehumanization that (...)
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  45.  7
    The psychology of rigorous humanism.Joseph Frank Rychlak - 1987 - New York: New York University Press.
    In this second edition, Joseph Rychlak has retained his analysis of the philosophical antecedents of psychology and, at the same time, has considerably revised more complicated material illustration rigorous humanism to make the book more accessible for students. Rychlak here offers an analysis of the philosophical traditions underlying the social sciences and shows how functionalism came to dominate the modern science of psychology in America.
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  46. Humanism.Nicola Abbagnano - 1967 - In Paul Edwards (ed.), The Encyclopedia of philosophy. New York,: Macmillan. pp. 4--69.
  47.  50
    Humanist Methods in Natural Philosophy: The Commonplace Book.Ann Blair - 1992 - Journal of the History of Ideas 53 (4):541-551.
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  48.  7
    Integral Humanism or Exclusive Humanism? Reconsidering Maritain’s Political Philosophy.David Klassen - 2011 - Philosophy, Culture, and Traditions 7:87-101.
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  49.  7
    The Humanism of Thomas More: Continuities and Transformations in His Latin Letters.Elizabeth McCutcheon - 2015 - Moreana 52 (Number 201-52 (3-4):359-382.
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  50.  8
    Humanism in the Tudor Jestbook.Anne Lake Prescott - 1987 - Moreana 24 (Number 95-24 (3-4):5-16.
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