4 found
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  1. Overcoming Gnosticism: Hans Jonas, Hans Blumenberg, and the Legitimacy of the Natural World.Benjamin Lazier - 2003 - Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (4):619-637.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 64.4 (2003) 619-637 [Access article in PDF] Overcoming Gnosticism:Hans Jonas, Hans Blumenberg, and the Legitimacy of the Natural World Benjamin Lazier University of Chicago In 1984, about a decade before his own murder, the Romanian scholar of religion Ioan Culianu complained of a more widespread, if decidedly less grisly form of assault. 1 The gnostics, he declared in a moment of high jocularity, (...)
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    Natural right and liberalism: Leo Strauss in our time: Benjamin Lazier.Benjamin Lazier - 2009 - Modern Intellectual History 6 (1):171-188.
    Not long ago, the actor and playwright Tim Robbins directed a production in New York and Los Angeles called Embedded. The play is strange, but nowhere more so than in one, infamous scene: a black mass in honor of the deceased political philosopher Leo Strauss, conducted by candlelight by advisers to President Bush in the run-up to the Iraq war. Characters who are transparent representations of Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz and Condoleezza Rice masturbate with abandon, all (...)
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  3. Przezwyciężyć gnozę. Hans Jonas, Hans Blumenberg i prawomocność świata natury.Benjamin Lazier - 2013 - Kronos - metafizyka, kultura, religia 2 (25).
     
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  4. Redemption Through Sin: Judaism and Heresy in Interwar Europe.Benjamin Lazier - 2002 - Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley
    This is a study of the encounter with the problem of heresy in Europe between the World Wars, in Germany and among Jews above all. It is first and foremost an intellectual history, though not exclusively so, and has four related aims. It argues, first, that the advent of a heretical ideal among Jews in the interwar period marked the definitive end of a chapter in German-Jewish history that began with Moses Mendelssohn. Mendelssohn's gambit and the liberal Judaism that arose (...)
     
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