Results for 'Herman Thomas Karsten'

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  1.  26
    The relationship of convergence and elevation changes to judgments of size.Thomas G. Hermans - 1954 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 48 (3):204.
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  2.  62
    Focus groups as collaborative research performances.Fernando Bosco & Thomas Herman - 2010 - In Dydia DeLyser, The SAGE handbook of qualitative geography. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE. pp. 193--207.
  3.  12
    Philosophie der Skepsis.Thomas Grundmann & Karsten Stüber - 1996
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  4.  13
    Philosophie und Phantastik: über die Bedingungen, das Mögliche zu denken.Karsten Weber, Hans Friesen & Thomas Zoglauer (eds.) - 2016 - Münster: Mentis.
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  5.  84
    Biological expansion—a perspective on evolution.Herman S. Forest & Thomas Morrill - 1964 - The Monist 48 (2):291 - 305.
    A new picture is emerging from the last hundred years’ study of evolution. Mountains of data to support—or bury—perspective are available, and there have been some substantial, recent summative works. Darlington in particular is recognized not only for comprehensiveness and insight, but for wit and clarity as well. Dobzhansky has done a rather lucid summary in nontechnical language, and Rensch has constructed a monument of documentation and intricate interpretation. Nevertheless, the picture of evolution has changed far more drastically than most (...)
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  6.  39
    After Theory: Post Modernism/Post Marxism.Herman Rapaport & Thomas Docherty - 1992 - Substance 21 (2):115.
  7.  3
    A Rose by Another Name? Odor Misnaming is Associated with Linguistic Properties.Thomas Hörberg, Murathan Kurfalı, Maria Larsson, Erika Jonsson Laukka, Pawel Herman & Jonas K. Olofsson - 2024 - Cognitive Science 48 (10):e70003.
    Naming common odors is a surprisingly difficult task: Odors are frequently misnamed. Little is known about the linguistic properties of odor misnamings. We test whether odor misnamings of old adults carry information about olfactory perception and its connection to lexical-semantic processing. We analyze the olfactory–semantic content of odor source naming failures in a large sample of older adults in Sweden (n = 2479; age 58–100 years). We investigate whether linguistic factors and semantic proximity to the target odor name predict how (...)
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  8. Beyond the Senses: How Self-Directed Speech and Word Meaning Structure Impact Executive Functioning and Theory of Mind in Individuals With Hearing and Language Problems.Thomas F. Camminga, Daan Hermans, Eliane Segers & Constance T. W. M. Vissers - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:646181.
    Many individuals with developmental language disorder (DLD) and individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing (D/HH) have social–emotional problems, such as social difficulties, and show signs of aggression, depression, and anxiety. These problems can be partly associated with their executive functions (EFs) and theory of mind (ToM). The difficulties of both groups in EF and ToM may in turn be related to self-directed speech (i.e., overt or covert speech that is directed at the self). Self-directed speech is thought to (...)
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  9.  48
    Polis & politics: studies in Ancient Greek history: presented to Mogens Herman Hansen on his sixtieth birthday, August 20, 2000.Mogens Herman Hansen, Pernille Flensted-Jensen, Thomas Heine Nielsen & Lene Rubinstein (eds.) - 2001 - Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, University of Copenhagen.
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  10.  31
    Beneventan fragments at Altamura.Thomas Forrest Kelly & Herman F. Holbrook - 1987 - Mediaeval Studies 49 (1):466-479.
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  11.  31
    The Effects of Liking Norms and Descriptive Norms on Vegetable Consumption: A Randomized Experiment.Jason M. Thomas, Jinyu Liu, Eric L. Robinson, Paul Aveyard, C. Peter Herman & Suzanne Higgs - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  12.  22
    Cooking and Eating with Love: A Whiteheadian Theology of Meals for Planetary Well-Being.Thomas G. Hermans-Webster - 2023 - Process Studies 52 (1):28-46.
    This article pursues a Whiteheadian association of meals and cooking with an orienting concern for ecological well-being and planetary health. Process thought helps those who eat to recognize the real influences that our meals have upon the emerging world.
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  13.  29
    American catholic philosophical quarterly 214.Bernard Montagnes, Thomas Ryba, George D. Bond, Herman Tull, Eberhard Schockenhoff, James K. A. Smith & Henry Isaac Venema - 2004 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 78 (4).
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  14.  20
    Infant Phonetic Learning as Perceptual Space Learning: A Crosslinguistic Evaluation of Computational Models.Yevgen Matusevych, Thomas Schatz, Herman Kamper, Naomi H. Feldman & Sharon Goldwater - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (7):e13314.
    In the first year of life, infants' speech perception becomes attuned to the sounds of their native language. This process of early phonetic learning has traditionally been framed as phonetic category acquisition. However, recent studies have hypothesized that the attunement may instead reflect a perceptual space learning process that does not involve categories. In this article, we explore the idea of perceptual space learning by implementing five different perceptual space learning models and testing them on three phonetic contrasts that have (...)
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  15.  8
    Odor identification errors reveal cognitive aspects of age-associated smell loss.Rohan Raj, Thomas Hörberg, Robert Lindroos, Maria Larsson, Pawel Herman, Erika J. Laukka & Jonas K. Olofsson - 2023 - Cognition 236 (C):105445.
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  16.  17
    Politics of Practical Reasoning: Integrating Action, Discourse and Argument.Keith Breen, Frank Canavan, Gerard Casey, Heike Felzmann, Thomas Gil, Karsten Harries, Richard Hull, Sebastian Lalla, Elizabeth Langhorne, Thomas Nisters, Felix O'Murchadha & Fran O'Rourke (eds.) - 2012 - Lexington Books.
    This book treats practical and political reasoning as an active engagement with the world and other people; it cannot be understood as exclusively cognitive and this is seen as a virtue rather than a deficiency. Informal, emotional, characterological, aesthetic and interactional aspects of thought can be constituents of reasonable arguing. The work examines key capacities connected with argumentation, in a variety of fields from professional and medical ethics to work organization and the practice of art.
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  17.  10
    3. Foucault korrigiert sich. Thomas Lemke rekonstruiert Foucaults Entwicklung des Regierungsbegriffes.Karsten Schubert - 2018 - In Freiheit Als Kritik: Sozialphilosophie Nach Foucault - Inhalt und Einleitung. Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag. pp. 63-172.
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  18.  29
    Saint Thomas d’Aquin.Herman Morlion - 1963 - International Philosophical Quarterly 3 (1):155-155.
  19. The Logic of being in Thomas Aquinas.Herman Weidemann - 2002 - In Brian Davies, Thomas Aquinas: contemporary philosophical perspectives. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  20. The Metaphysics of St. Thomas Aquinas.C. S. C. HERMAN REITH - 1958
     
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  21.  32
    Karl Popper and Thomas Kuhn: Historical Figures with Future SignificanceAlexander Blum; Kostas Gavroglu; Christian Joas; Jürgen Renn . Shifting Paradigms: Thomas S. Kuhn and the History of Science. ix + 387 pp., figs., index. Berlin: Edition Open Access, 2016. €21.99 .Jeremy Shearmur; Geoffrey Stokes . The Cambridge Companion to Popper. x + 394 pp., indexes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016. £22.99. [REVIEW]Bart Karstens - 2018 - Isis 109 (2):360-364.
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  22. What is it like to encounter an autonomous artificial agent?Karsten Weber - 2013 - AI and Society 28 (4):483-489.
    Following up on Thomas Nagel’s paper “What is it like to be a bat?” and Alan Turing’s essay “Computing machinery and intelligence,” it shall be claimed that a successful interaction of human beings and autonomous artificial agents depends more on which characteristics human beings ascribe to the agent than on whether the agent really has those characteristics. It will be argued that Masahiro Mori’s concept of the “uncanny valley” as well as evidence from several empirical studies supports that assertion. (...)
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  23.  29
    Torah et Éthique : l'histoire d'un débat.Karsten Lehmkühler - 2008 - Revue des Sciences Religieuses 82:343-360.
    La signification de la Torah pour l’éthique chrétienne se prête à trois perspectives différentes : la création divine, la rédemption en Christ, la sanctification par l’Esprit Saint. Selon la première approche, examinée à partir de Thomas d’Aquin, la Torah affirme que la « loi naturelle » est inscrite par le Créateur dans le coeur de l’homme. Selon la seconde, christologique, suivie dans les écrits de Luther, la relation créatrice se trouve reprise dans la dialectique Loi-Évangile, en évitant à la (...)
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  24.  38
    EMG patterns during assisted walking in the exoskeleton.Francesca Sylos-Labini, Valentina La Scaleia, Andrea D'Avella, Iolanda Pisotta, Federica Tamburella, Giorgio Scivoletto, Marco Molinari, Shiqian Wang, Letian Wang, Edwin van Asseldonk, Herman van der Kooij, Thomas Hoellinger, Guy Cheron, Freygardur Thorsteinsson, Michel Ilzkovitz, Jeremi Gancet, Ralf Hauffe, Frank Zanov, Francesco Lacquaniti & Yuri P. Ivanenko - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  25.  66
    Thomas Aquinas on the Relation Between Good and Evil in the Created World.Maja Herman Duvel & Anto Gavrić - 2021 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 41 (2):415-431.
    This paper aims to show that Thomas Aquinas consider the problem of evil, not only as a question of evil in itself, but in the much broader context of God’s work of creation and providential government, and thus proves that the existence of evil in the world is not a viable argument against God’s existence. For Thomas Aquinas, evil is not something, some being with its essence and nature, but it is the lack of a good that should (...)
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  26.  5
    The metaphysics of St. Thomas Aquinas.Herman Robert Reith - 1958 - Milwaukee,: Bruce.
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  27.  31
    Choosing to Wait: Waiting as a Possible Part of Projects of Action.Karsten Krampe, Svenja Reinhardt & Sebastian Weste - 2020 - Schutzian Research 12:69-79.
    In this paper we examine the concept of waiting from a phenomenological point of view. In order to do so, we start with a definition from Andreas Göttlich and contextualize it within the theoretical framework provided by Alfred Schutz, Thomas Luckmann and Peter L. Berger. Additionally, we discuss waiting on the basis of our previous research, specifically within the context of a field extract from an earlier life-world analytical ethnography on the parents of pre-adolescent, non-professional soccer players. The field (...)
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  28. Parfit’s and Scanlon’s Non-Metaphysical Moral Realism as Alethic Pluralism.Herman Veluwenkamp - 2017 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 20 (4):751-761.
    Thomas Scanlon and Derek Parfit have recently defended a meta-ethical view that is supposed to satisfy realistic intuitions about morality, without the metaphysical implications that many find hard to accept in other realist views. Both philosophers argue that truths in the normative domain do not have ontological implications, while truths in the scientific domain presuppose a metaphysical reality. What distinguishes Scanlon and Parfit’s approach from other realistic meta-ethical theories is that they maintain that normative entities exist in a way (...)
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  29. Review: The plurality of moral challenges in information societies and the need for systematic thinking. [REVIEW]Karsten Weber - 2005 - International Review of Information Ethics 3:06.
    This paper shall give a review of some recently published and some older books, which were published as second or third edition, on Information Ethics and Internet related topics: - Brennan, Linda L. & Victoria E. Johnson : Social, Ethical, and Policy Implications of Information Technology. Hershey, PA: Information Science Publishing, 2004. – 304 pages, paperback, $59.95 - Capurro, Rafael: Ethik im Netz. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner, 2003. 278 pages, paperback, €26.00 - Cavalier, Robert J. : The impact of the Internet (...)
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  30.  54
    The Illusion of Self Revisited: Replies to Critics.Karsten J. Struhl - 2021 - Comparative Philosophy 12 (1).
    Anand Vaidya, Sean Smith, and Mark Siderits have presented thoughtful comments and provocative challenges to my article “What Kind of an Illusion is the Illusion of Self?” Their challenges raise significant questions about the nature of illusion, whether Buddhism is denying the self in all senses of the term, whether there could be a self that exists for some limited duration of time and has at least some measure of control, whether there is a phenomenal illusion of self, whether the (...)
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  31.  81
    The Legal Fictions of Herman Melville and Lemuel Shaw.Brook Thomas - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 11 (1):24-51.
    I have three aims in this essay. I want to offer an example of an interdisciplinary historical inquiry combining literary criticism with the relatively new field of critical legal studies. I intend to use this historical inquiry to argue that the ambiguity of literary texts might better be understood in terms of an era’s social contradictions rather than in terms of the inherent qualities of literary language or rhetoric and, conversely, that a text’s ambiguity can help us expose the contradictions (...)
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  32.  44
    A Survey of Kantian Philosophy.Herman Jean De Vleeschauwer - 1957 - Review of Metaphysics 11 (1):122-142.
    Every epoch possesses its proper Plato, its proper Thomas and its proper Kant. To interpret or to assimilate a doctrine does not merely consist in the knowledge of that which the author has literally taught but rather in representing to oneself one's own impression while reading. The new literature which has appeared since 1950 will in the future behave just like the preceding: the attempt will be made to re-think the authentic Criticism as well as to complete Kant's intellectual (...)
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  33.  5
    Wissenschaftsfreiheit und Wahrheit.Thomas Wyrwich - 2024 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 72 (4):459-479.
    Against the background of current debates on the topic of ‘academic freedom’, this article analyses the relationship between academic freedom and truth as found in the philosophical approaches of Immanuel Kant, Martin Heidegger and Karsten Schubert (et al.). The aim is to show that the two concepts – despite different interpretations and accentuations – are mutually dependent for all authors and are correlated with the dimension of the political. In Kant’s work – as later in the system of the (...)
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  34.  32
    Herman GEERTMAN (ed.), Atti del colloquio internazionale Il Liber Pontificalis e la storia materiale, Roma, 21–22 febbraio 2002. Mededelingen van het Nederlands Instituut te Rome/Papers of the Netherlands Institute in Rome, 60–61. [REVIEW]Thomas F. X. Noble - 2006 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 99 (1):234-237.
    In his introduction to this extraordinarily important and useful volume, Herman Geertman (G.) points out that the editions of the Liber Pontificalis produced around a century ago by Theodor Mommsen and Louis Duchesne made the Liber more an instrument, than an object, of research. For some years an international group of scholars under the leadership of Girolamo Arnaldi, François Bougard, Paolo Delogu, and G. himself, have been conducting a collaborative project on “The Liber Pontificalis as Source for the History (...)
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  35.  45
    Damaged Goods—or Durable?Stewart W. Herman - 2002 - Business Ethics Quarterly 12 (3):371-377.
    Contrary to criticisms by Thomas McInerney, Durable Goods proposes a realistic and empirically testable “covenantal” ethic for moving management and labor beyond tactics of mutual coercion and evasion. Nonetheless, two questions asked by McInerney remain germane. First, should the moral claims of management and labor always receive equal moral consideration, as a matter of justice? To this substantive question Durable Goods admittedly provides a less than satisfactory answer. Second, can the normative theory proposed by Durable Goods, based in part (...)
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  36.  54
    Beyond postmodernism: Restoring the primal Quest for meaning to political inquiry. [REVIEW]Louis Herman - 1997 - Human Studies 20 (1):75-94.
    My paper picks up a long ignored suggestion of Sheldon Wolin - that we use Thomas Kuhn''s analysis of scientific revolutions to examine the crisis of "normal" political science. This approach allows us to see the connection between the state of the discipline and the larger crisis of meaning afflicting modernity. I then use Eric Voegelin''s notion of a multicivilizational "truth quest" - or search for meaning - to make a case for institutionalizing "extraordinary" or "revolutionary" political science. I (...)
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  37.  11
    Sphere Sovereignty, Civil Society and the Pursuit of Holistic Transformation in Asia.Thomas Harvey - 2016 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 33 (1):50-64.
    This article examines the relative efficacy of Abraham Kuyper and Herman Dooyeweerd’s sphere sovereignty for holistic transformation in Asia. It examines interest in China and Malaysia in Neo-Calvinism, Civil Society, and sphere sovereignty and its social, cultural, and political implications. It considers the strengths and weaknesses of sphere sovereignty in a secular age particularly in light of the sharp antithesis Kuyper and Dooyeweerd posited between the epistemological and ethical frameworks of secular modernist versus Christian approaches to understanding and social, (...)
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  38.  81
    Commentary on the Metaphysics of Aristotle (review). [REVIEW]Herman Shapiro - 1963 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 1 (2):249-251.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 249 larger sections of the work will be translated-preferably not from the Latin, but from the Arabic original. JOSEPHL. B~u Columbia University Commentary on the Metaphysics of Aristotle. By St. Thomas Aquinas. Trans. by John P. Rowan. (Chicago, Illinois: Henry Regnery Company, 1961. Pp. xxiii + 955.2 vols., boxed, $25.00.) Generally speaking, the two Summae of St. Thomas, long available in English translation, contain all (...)
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  39.  19
    ʼn Praktykbenadering tot geloofsvorming vanuit die benadering van Thomas Groome en die Gestaltteorie: ʼn Prakties-teologiese dialoog.Siegfried W. Louw, Rudy A. Denton & Herman B. Grobler - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (3).
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  40.  8
    Erkenntnistheorie. Positionen zwischen Tradition und Gegenwart.Thomas Grundmann (ed.) - 2001 - mentis.
    Wie sieht die korrekte Struktur der Rechtfertigung menschlichen Wissens aus? Welches sind ihre legitimen Quellen? Wie groß ist der Umfang unserer gerechtfertigten Meinungen? Von der normativen Erkenntnistheorie erhoffen wir uns Antworten auf diese und ähnliche Fragen. Allzu oft wird dabei übersehen, daß die Antworten ganz entscheidend davon abhängen, was wir unter 'Rechtfertigung' verstehen. Mit den Beiträgen einer internationalen Autorenschaft möchte das Buch durch die Konfrontation der traditionellen Erkenntnistheorie mit ihren Gegnern die versteckten Prämissen und Implikationen der traditionellen Perspektive transparenter machen. (...)
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  41.  53
    Tafsīr and Translation: Traditional Arabic Qurʾān Exegesis and the Latin Qurʾāns of Robert of Ketton and Mark of Toledo.Thomas E. Burman - 1998 - Speculum 73 (3):703-732.
    It was a strange posthumous fate that awaited the Englishman Robert of Ketton : he was to be both best known and most strenuously criticized for a work that he surely viewed as a sideline to his own interests and career. By trade Robert was a Latin translator of Arabic scientific and mathematical works, one of those remarkable twelfth-century men who, as his contemporary Petrus Alfonsi put it, were willing “to traverse distant provinces and withdraw into remote regions so as (...)
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  42. The Practice of Moral Judgment by Barbara Herman[REVIEW]Thomas E. Hill Jr - 1995 - Journal of Philosophy 92 (1):47-51.
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  43.  21
    Aristotle’s Teaching in the Politics by Thomas Pangle and Reflections on Aristotle’s Politics by Mogens Herman Hansen.Curtis N. Johnson - 2015 - Ancient Philosophy 35 (1):230-234.
  44.  97
    Walter E. Broman, Timothy C. Lord, Roy W. Perrett, Colin Dickson, Jill P. Baumgaertner, Eva L. Corredor, William E. Cain, Ronald Bogue, Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Jay S. Andrews, David M. Thompson, David Carey, David Parker, David Novitz, Norman Simms, David Herman, Paul Taylor, Jeff Mason, Robert D. Cottrell, David Gorman, Mark Stein, Constance S. Spreen, Will Morrisey, Jan Pilditch, Herman Rapaport, Mark Johnson, Michael McClintick, John D. Cox, Arthur Kirsch, Burton Watson, Michael Platt, Gary M. Ciuba, Karsten Harries, Mary Anne O'Neil. [REVIEW]Wendell V. Harris - 1992 - Philosophy and Literature 16 (2):373.
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  45.  28
    The Development of Kantian Thought. By Herman-J. de Vleeschauwer. Translated by A. R. C. Duncan. Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson, 1962. Pp. xvi, 200. 21. [REVIEW]P. L. Heath - 1964 - Dialogue 3 (1):93-95.
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  46.  13
    Thomas, Thomisms, and Truth.Bruce D. Marshall - 1992 - The Thomist 56 (3):499-524.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:THOMAS, THOMISMS, AND TRUTH BRUCE D. MARSHALL Saint Olaf College Northfield, Minnesota I HE GREAT, as Hegel's dictum has it, condemn the rest f us to the task of understanding them. We take our evenge upon the great, especialy upon great thinkers, by enlisting them for our own purposes, as our supporters and defenders in conflicts perhaps quite different from those in which they themselves were engaged. (...) Aquinas was a master, virtually without peer, at the intellectual enlistment of the great, and he himself has been perhaps as widely and variously recruited as any of those to whom he devoted his own attentions. When we enlist Thomas for our own purposes with some consistency and success, the result is a " Thomism," of which there have been many, sometimes quite conflicting varieties. My article " Aquinas as Postliberal Theologian " does not propose anything so developed as a Thomism, but perhaps at most a fragment of one.1 In their responses to it, Frederick J. Crosson and Louis 1 The Thomist 53 (1989) : 353-402. The interpretation of Thomas proposed there bears a family resemblance to that of some recent Thomisms and so is not wholly without precedent. Cf. Michel Corbin, Le chemin de la theologie chez Thomas D'Aquin (Paris: Beauchesne, 1974); Otto Herman Pesch, Die Theologie der Rechtfertigung bei Martin Luther und Thomas von Aquin (Mainz: Matthias-Grunewald-Verlag, 1967) ; idem, Thomas von Aquin: Grenze und Grosse mittelalterlichen Theologie, 2nd ed. (Mainz: MatthiasGrunewald -Verlag, 1989); Gerhard Ludwig Muller, "Hebt das Sola-FidePrinzip die Moglichkeit einer naturlichen Theologie auf? Eine Ruckfrage bei Thomas von Aquin," Catholica 40 (1986) : 59-96; Victor Preller, Divine Science and the Science of God (Princeton: University Press, 1967). Reference to these Thomisms should not, of course, be taken to constitute agreement with any particular claim one of them may make. 499 500 BRUCE D. MARSHALL Roy, O.P., argue that as a piece of Thomism-as the enlistment of Thomas in defense and support of a particular contemporary view of truth, meaning, and epistemic justification-it is at best unpromising. In so doing, they indicate, at least in part, what views on these matters they think Thomas can plausibly be enlisted to support, that is, the sort of Thomism they find more convincing. Great thinkers are not, however, defenseless against our efforts to recruit them for our ends. Especially in the case of one whose thought is as ramified, precise, and historically distant as is that of Thomas Aquinas, these efforts are likely to meet with some resistance. (Indeed, we will be inclined to distrust them if they claim not to.) We may even find ourselves compelled to refashion our own ends in order not to forgo plausible appeal to his precedent and support. Sometimes different Thomisms will no doubt include purposes distant enough from Thomas's own (as best we can grasp them) that it may be impossible to adjudicate conflicts between them by appeal to his texts. But in many cases it ought to be possible to decide reasonably between competing Thomisms (that is, to decide which more plausibly enlists Thomas for its own purposes) by assessing the amount and type of resistance each meets from the text of Thomas (of course this includes the possibility that competition between Thomisms reflects unresolved conflict within Thomas's own thought). In the present case the prospect of reasonable adjudication seems much increased by the fact that the large issues with which it is concerned -truth, meaning, and justification-tend to coalesce around what seems to be a straightforward matter of fact: whether Thomas taught that persons without Christian faith, and especially pre-Christian philosophers, knew, or were even able to know, God. Crosson and Roy both argue that the implausibility of my interpretation of Aquinas on these larger issues-the linking of a comprehensively coherentist account of justification an~ a contextualist account of meaning to Thomas's correspondence notion of truth-is especially clear in its attribution to Thomas of a posi- THOMA$, THOMISMS, AND TRUTH 501 tion he manifestly rejects: that a pre-Christian philosopher like Aristotle did not, and indeed could not, know God. This seems obvious to most modern Thomisms, which, however... (shrink)
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  47.  11
    Alles doet mee aan de werkelijkheid: Herman Wolf, 1893-1942.Paul Scheffer - 2013 - Amsterdam: De Bezige Bij.
    Biografie van de filosoof en cultuurpessimist die trachtte tegenstellingen tussen emotie en ratio te overbruggen en correspondeerde met beroemde schrijvers zoals Thomas Mann.
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  48.  9
    Church and Culture: German Catholic Theology, 1860–1914 by Thomas Franklin O’Meara, O.P.John Ford - 1994 - The Thomist 58 (2):354-357.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:354 BOOK REVIEWS (continuously) revisable character, he falls back on an account of theology as rhetoric so as to make the best of a bad job. For persuasion is what we use when we know demonstration is hopeless. As a result, Professor Cunningham's study, which could most usefully have "placed" a variety of theologies of past, present, and, prospectively, future on the spectrum of (onto-) logic, poetic, and rhetoric, (...)
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  49. Could it be Worth Thinking about Kant on Sex and Marriage?Barbara Herman - 1993 - In Louise M. Antony & Charlotte Witt, A Mind of One’s Own: Feminist Essays on Reason and Objectivity. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press. pp. 49-68.
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  50.  11
    Nicholas of Cusa and his age: intellect and spirituality: essays dedicated to the memory of F. Edward Cranz, Thomas P. McTighe, and Charles Trinkaus.Thomas M. Izbicki & Christopher M. Bellitto (eds.) - 2002 - Boston, MA: Brill.
    This volume commemorates the 6th centennial of the birth of Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464), a Renaissance polymath whose interests included law, politics, metaphysics, epistemology, theology, mysticism and relations between Christians and non-Christian peoples. The contributors to this volume reflect Cusanus' multiple interests; and, by doing so they commemorate three deceased luminaries of the American Cusanus Society: F. Edward Cranz, Thomas P. McTighe and Charles Trinkaus. Contributors include: Christopher M. Bellitto, H. Lawrence Bond, Elizabeth Brient, Louis Dupré, Wilhelm Dupré, Walter (...)
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