Results for 'Jerome Paul Soneson'

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  1. Jerome Paul Soneson, "Pragmatism and Pluralism: John Dewey's Significance for Theology". [REVIEW]Robert S. Corrington - 1995 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 31 (3):702.
     
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  2.  78
    The legacy of Gordon Kaufman: Theological method and its pragmatic norms.Jerome P. Soneson - 2013 - Zygon 48 (3):533-543.
    I argue that the most significant contribution and legacy of Gordon Kaufman's work rests in his theological method. I limit my discussion to his methodological starting point, his concept of human nature, as he develops it in his book, In Face of Mystery. I show the relevance of this starting point for cultural and theological criticism by arguing two points: first, that this starting point embraces religious and cultural pluralism at its center, providing a framework for intercultural and interreligious discussion (...)
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  3.  8
    Inhabiting the house of history.Jerome P. Soneson - 1997 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 18 (2):121 - 133.
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  4.  29
    Preprints in times of COVID19: the time is ripe for agreeing on terminology and good practices.Paul N. Newton, Tammy Hoffmann, E. Bottieau, Peter W. Horby, Laura Merson, Ana Palmero, Amar Jesani, Carlos E. Durán, Aasim Ahmad, Philippe J. Guerin, Jerome Amir Singh, Muhammad H. Zaman, Céline Caillet & Raffaella Ravinetto - 2021 - BMC Medical Ethics 22 (1):1-5.
    Over recent years, the research community has been increasingly using preprint servers to share manuscripts that are not yet peer-reviewed. Even if it enables quick dissemination of research findings, this practice raises several challenges in publication ethics and integrity. In particular, preprints have become an important source of information for stakeholders interested in COVID19 research developments, including traditional media, social media, and policy makers. Despite caveats about their nature, many users can still confuse pre-prints with peer-reviewed manuscripts. If unconfirmed but (...)
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  5.  30
    William James and the Metaphysics of Experience (Book).Paul Jerome Croce & Andrew E. Spinnenweber - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (3):641-643.
    Reviews the book 'William James and the Metaphysics of Experience,' by David C. Lamberth.
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  6.  65
    David C. Lamberth, William James and the metaphysics of experience [cambridge studies in religion and critical though, no. 5].Paul Jerome Croce - 2002 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 51 (1):65-67.
  7. The Education of William James: Religion, Science, and the Possibilities for Belief Without Certainty in the Early Intellectual Development of William James.Paul Jerome Croce - 1987 - Dissertation, Brown University
    The dissertation explores the early life and thought of William James . Using James's published works as well as his letters, his published but little-known notes and reviews, and his unpublished diaries and notebooks, this dissertation constructs an intellectual biography employing intellectual history, the history of science, philosophy, and religious studies. ;William James experienced the culturally shaping influences of his grandfather's wealth and republican values, the eccentric and spiritual ideas instilled by his father in an almost chaotic process of education, (...)
     
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  8.  26
    Cinematics.Jerome Stolnitz & Paul Weiss - 1975 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 13 (2):111.
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  9. Margin for error and the transparency of knowledge.Jérôme Dokic & Paul Égré - 2009 - Synthese 166 (1):1-20.
    In chapter 5 of Knowledge and its Limits, T. Williamson formulates an argument against the principle (KK) of epistemic transparency, or luminosity of knowledge, namely “that if one knows something, then one knows that one knows it”. Williamson’s argument proceeds by reductio: from the description of a situation of approximate knowledge, he shows that a contradiction can be derived on the basis of principle (KK) and additional epistemic principles that he claims are better grounded. One of them is a reflective (...)
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  10.  8
    Young William James thinking.Paul Jerome Croce - 2018 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    Almost a philosopher -- First embrace of science -- Between scientific and sectarian medicine -- The ancient art of natural grace -- Crises and construction -- An earnestly inquiring state.
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  11.  16
    Rationality and Religious Theism.Paul Helm & Jerome Gellman - 2003 - Routledge.
    Throughout the ages one of the central topics in philosophy of religion has been the rationality of theistic belief. This book proposes that parties on both sides of this debate might shift their attention in a different direction, by focusing on the question of whether it is rational to be a religious theist. Explaining that having theistic beliefs is primarily a cognitive affair but being a religious theist involves a whole way of life that includes one's beliefs, Golding argues that (...)
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  12.  19
    Reflections.Paul Schilder, Learned Hand, Solomon Maimon, David R. Olson & Jerome S. Bruner - 1981 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 2 (3-4):33-37.
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  13. William James's scientific education.Paul Jerome Croce - 1995 - History of the Human Sciences 8 (1):9-27.
    William James's disgust for scientific arrogance was not in defiance of his early education in science, but because of it. In particular, James was influenced by the probabilistic method of Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection, especially as interpreted by Charles Sanders Peirce. Peirce, who was James's most immediate scientific influence, maintained an unresolved ambiguity between a probabilistic scientific fallibilism and a confidence in science's quest for certainty, while James emphasized the fallibilism of science as the crowning evidence for epistemological (...)
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  14.  88
    Mankind's own providence: From swedenborgian philosophy of use to William James's pragmatism.Paul Jerome Croce - 2007 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 43 (3):490 - 508.
    : It is part of the conventional wisdom about the James family that the elder Henry James (1811–82) had a large influence on his son, William James (1842–1910), in the direction of religious interests. But William neither adopted his father's spirituality nor did he regard it as a foil to his own secularity. Instead, after first rejecting the elder James's idiosyncratic faith, he became increasingly intrigued with his insights into the natural world, which were in turn shaped by the Swedenborgian (...)
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  15. (1 other version)Science and Religion in the Era of William James, Vol. 1.Paul Jerome Croce - 1995 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 31 (4):906-912.
     
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  16.  24
    Between Spiritualism and Science: William James on Religion and Human Nature.Paul Jerome Croce - 1997 - Journal for the History of Modern Theology/Zeitschrift für Neuere Theologiegeschichte 4 (2):197-220.
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  17. A Useful EccentricityWilliam James. The Correspondence Of William James. Edited by, Ignas K. Skrupskelis and Elizabeth M. Berkeley. Forewords by, John J. McDermott. 9 volumes to date. Charlottesville/London: University Press of Virginia.Volume 1: William and Henry, 1861–1884. Introduction by Gerald E. Meyers. lxiv + 477 pp., illus., apps., index. 1992. $45.Volume 2: William and Henry, 1885–1896. Introduction by Daniel Mark Fogel. lxii + 514 pp., frontis., index. 1993. $45.Volume 3: William and Henry, 1897–1910. Introduction by Robert Dawidoff. lviii + 517 pp., frontis., index. 1994. $45.Volume 4: 1856–1877. Introduction by Giles Gunn. lxvi + 714 pp., frontis., illus., index. 1995. $55.Volume 5: 1878–1884. Introduction by Linda Simon. lxvi + 677 pp., frontis., index. 1997. $60.Volume 6: 1885–1889. Introduction by Linda Simon. liv + 746 pp., frontis., index. 1998. $60.Volume 7: 1890–1894. Introduction by Robert Coles. lxii + 745 pp., frontis., index. 1999. $65.Volume 8: 1895–June 1899. I. [REVIEW]Paul Jerome Croce - 2002 - Isis 93 (2):272-276.
  18.  23
    Cue utilization as a function of monetary incentive and learning efficiency.Jerome S. Cohen, Gabor A. Telegdy, Jean Paul Laroche & Yaakov Getz - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (6):452-454.
  19.  11
    Jerome Liebling: The Minnesota Photographs, 1949-1969.Jerome Liebling - 1997 - Minnesota Historical Society Press.
    Here in more than a hundred photographs is portrayed Liebling's Minnesota. During two decades marked by social, political and cultural change, Liebling travelled the state and found his largest subject -- the depiction and interpretation of commonplace human experience. The images range from the grain elevators and skid row of Minneapolis to the slaughterhouses in South St. Paul and the poor, working-class streets of St. Paul's West Side; from the Iron Range and the Red Lake Indian reservation in (...)
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  20.  32
    Halfway to Revolution. [REVIEW]Paul Jerome Croce - 1992 - Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 20 (62):27-30.
  21. Review: Wayne Proudfoot, ed. William James and a science of religions: Reexperiencing the varieties of religious experience. New York: Columbia university press, 2004. [REVIEW]Paul Jerome Croce - 2005 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 41 (4):845-851.
  22.  20
    The Metaphysical Club. [REVIEW]Paul Jerome Croce - 2002 - Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 30 (92):23-25.
  23.  32
    Varieties of Religion Today. [REVIEW]Paul Jerome Croce - 2002 - Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 30 (92):28-31.
  24.  23
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Paul Jerome Croce, John A. Taber & George I. Mavrodes - 1991 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 29 (3):187-192.
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  25.  28
    Effect of number of alternatives and set on the visual discrimination of numerals.Gilbert K. Krulee, Jerome E. Podell & Paul G. Ronco - 1954 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 48 (1):75.
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  26.  54
    Justifications philosophiques du critere de fair innings et controverses.Clémence Thébaut, Paul-Loup Weil-Dubuc & Jérôme Wittwer - 2020 - Les Ateliers de l'Éthique / the Ethics Forum 15 (1-2):67-86.
    Financing innovative and costly treatments in various therapeutic fields entails a number of problems in countries where costs are covered by public services. Providing these drugs is forcing actors to define the maximum sums of money society is willing to spend for given health improvements. This raises the question of whether maximum financing should vary according individuals’ circumstances, such as the rareness of a disease, lifestyles, social inequalities experienced over a life time, etc. This article examines a particular priority, namely (...)
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  27.  44
    Introduction to the Special Issue.Kevin Gluck, Paul Bello & Jerome Busemeyer - 2008 - Cognitive Science 32 (8):1245-1247.
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  28. Jean Paul Sartre: The Mystical Atheist.Jerome Gellman - 2009 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 1 (2):127 - 137.
    Within Jean Paul Sartre’s atheistic program, he objected to Christian mysticism as a delusory desire for substantive being. I suggest that a Christian mystic might reply to Sartre’s attack by claiming that Sartre indeed grasps something right about the human condition but falls short of fully understanding what he grasps. Then I argue that the true basis of Sartre’s atheism is neither philosophical nor existentialist, but rather mystical. Sartre had an early mystical atheistic intuition that later developed into atheistic (...)
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  29.  18
    Paul Ricoeur and Axel Honneth: Two founding recourses for adult education.Jérôme Eneau & Samia Langar - 2022 - Revue Phronesis 11 (3):98.
    Le travail et la formation des adultes sont aujourd’hui traversés de syntagmes mobilisés par une idéologie managériale dévoyant les termes d’autonomie, de responsabilité ou de capacité. À partir d’une analyse critique, l’article se propose de resituer ces glissements sémantiques dans le champ des recherches et des pratiques actuelles de la formation. Le recours aux travaux de Ricoeur et d’Honneth permet ensuite d’aborder leurs contributions respectives pour prolonger ces questions et leurs apports, en particulier, pour penser la reconnaissance. L’article se termine (...)
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  30.  9
    Rezension: Parin, Paul, Werkausgabe. 19 Bde. Hg. von Johannes & Michael Reichmayr.Jérôme Seeburger - 2022 - Psyche 76 (4):357-362.
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  31.  30
    Ethics of Consumption: The Good Life, Justice, and Global Stewardship.Luis A. Camacho, Colin Campbell, David A. Crocker, Eleonora Curlo, Herman E. Daly, Eliezer Diamond, Robert Goodland, Allen L. Hammond, Nathan Keyfitz, Robert E. Lane, Judith Lichtenberg, David Luban, James A. Nash, Martha C. Nussbaum, ThomasW Pogge, Mark Sagoff, Juliet B. Schor, Michael Schudson, Jerome M. Segal, Amartya Sen, Alan Strudler, Paul L. Wachtel, Paul E. Waggoner, David Wasserman & Charles K. Wilber (eds.) - 1997 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In this comprehensive collection of essays, most of which appear for the first time, eminent scholars from many disciplines—philosophy, economics, sociology, political science, demography, theology, history, and social psychology—examine the causes, nature, and consequences of present-day consumption patterns in the United States and throughout the world.
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  32.  11
    Paul Natorp. Husserl’s Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology.Jerome Veith - 2018 - In Evan Clarke & Andrea Staiti (eds.), The Sources of Husserl’s 'Ideas I'. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 319-338.
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  33. Paul and Qumran: Studies in New Testament Exegesis.Jerome Murphy-O'connor - 1968
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  34.  96
    Integral Field Spectroscopy of the Low-mass Companion HD 984 B with the Gemini Planet Imager.Mara Johnson-Groh, Christian Marois, Robert J. De Rosa, Eric L. Nielsen, Julien Rameau, Sarah Blunt, Jeffrey Vargas, S. Mark Ammons, Vanessa P. Bailey, Travis S. Barman, Joanna Bulger, Jeffrey K. Chilcote, Tara Cotten, René Doyon, Gaspard Duchêne, Michael P. Fitzgerald, Kate B. Follette, Stephen Goodsell, James R. Graham, Alexandra Z. Greenbaum, Pascale Hibon, Li-Wei Hung, Patrick Ingraham, Paul Kalas, Quinn M. Konopacky, James E. Larkin, Bruce Macintosh, Jérôme Maire, Franck Marchis, Mark S. Marley, Stanimir Metchev, Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer, Rebecca Oppenheimer, David W. Palmer, Jenny Patience, Marshall Perrin, Lisa A. Poyneer, Laurent Pueyo, Abhijith Rajan, Fredrik T. Rantakyrö, Dmitry Savransky, Adam C. Schneider, Anand Sivaramakrishnan, Inseok Song, Remi Soummer, Sandrine Thomas, David Vega, J. Kent Wallace, Jason J. Wang, Kimberly Ward-Duong, Sloane J. Wiktorowicz & Schuyler G. Wolff - 2017 - Astronomical Journal 153 (4):190.
    © 2017. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.We present new observations of the low-mass companion to HD 984 taken with the Gemini Planet Imager as a part of the GPI Exoplanet Survey campaign. Images of HD 984 B were obtained in the J and H bands. Combined with archival epochs from 2012 and 2014, we fit the first orbit to the companion to find an 18 au orbit with a 68% confidence interval between 14 and 28 au, an eccentricity (...)
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  35. Karl Jaspers et Paul Ricœur: Le déchiffrement de l'existence.Jérome Poree - 2006 - Revue D'Histoire Et de Philosophie Religieuses 86 (1):7-40.
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  36.  8
    Jerome Ashmore 1901-1985.Paul Grimley Kuntz - 1991 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 64 (7):29 - 30.
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  37. Becoming Human Together: The Pastoral Anthropology of St. Paul.Jerome Murphy-O'Connor - 1982
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  38.  37
    "Like a Guilty Thing Surprised": Deconstruction, Coleridge, and the Apostasy of Criticism.Jerome Christensen - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (4):769-787.
    In his recent book Criticism and Social Change Frank Lentricchia melodramatically pits his critical hero Kenneth Burke, advocate of the intellect’s intervention in social life, against the villainous Paul de Man, “undisputed master in the United States of what is called deconstruction.” Lentricchia charges that “the insidious effect of [de Man’s] work is not the proliferating replication of his way of reading … but the paralysis of praxis itself: an effect that traditionalism, with its liberal view of the division (...)
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  39.  47
    A recurrent 16p12.1 microdeletion supports a two-hit model for severe developmental delay.Santhosh Girirajan, Jill A. Rosenfeld, Gregory M. Cooper, Francesca Antonacci, Priscillia Siswara, Andy Itsara, Laura Vives, Tom Walsh, Shane E. McCarthy, Carl Baker, Heather C. Mefford, Jeffrey M. Kidd, Sharon R. Browning, Brian L. Browning, Diane E. Dickel, Deborah L. Levy, Blake C. Ballif, Kathryn Platky, Darren M. Farber, Gordon C. Gowans, Jessica J. Wetherbee, Alexander Asamoah, David D. Weaver, Paul R. Mark, Jennifer Dickerson, Bhuwan P. Garg, Sara A. Ellingwood, Rosemarie Smith, Valerie C. Banks, Wendy Smith, Marie T. McDonald, Joe J. Hoo, Beatrice N. French, Cindy Hudson, John P. Johnson, Jillian R. Ozmore, John B. Moeschler, Urvashi Surti, Luis F. Escobar, Dima El-Khechen, Jerome L. Gorski, Jennifer Kussmann, Bonnie Salbert, Yves Lacassie, Alisha Biser, Donna M. McDonald-McGinn, Elaine H. Zackai, Matthew A. Deardorff, Tamim H. Shaikh, Eric Haan, Kathryn L. Friend, Marco Fichera, Corrado Romano, Jozef Gécz, Lynn E. DeLisi, Jonathan Sebat, Mary-Claire King, Lisa G. Shaffer & Eic - unknown
    We report the identification of a recurrent, 520-kb 16p12.1 microdeletion associated with childhood developmental delay. The microdeletion was detected in 20 of 11,873 cases compared with 2 of 8,540 controls and replicated in a second series of 22 of 9,254 cases compared with 6 of 6,299 controls. Most deletions were inherited, with carrier parents likely to manifest neuropsychiatric phenotypes compared to non-carrier parents. Probands were more likely to carry an additional large copy-number variant when compared to matched controls. The clinical (...)
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  40.  19
    JÉRÔME, Commentaire sur JonasJÉRÔME, Commentaire sur Jonas.Paul-Hubert Poirier - 1987 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 43 (3):419-420.
  41.  10
    Le toucher – lecture croisée de Levinas et Merleau-Ponty.Jérôme de Gramont - 2012 - Alter: revue de phénoménologie 20:39-53.
    En 1972, Emmanuel Levinas ouvre l’article qu’il consacre à Paul Celan par une citation justement célèbre : « Je ne vois pas de différence entre une poignée de mains et un poème ». Ce que voit Paul Celan dans une poignée de mains mériterait assurément de longs commentaires, ce qu’entend Emmanuel Levinas dans ce poème élémentaire est et n’est pas plus simple. D’une certaine manière, la poignée de mains ne dit rien mais elle dit : simple signe lancé (...)
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  42.  37
    Les limites du récit.Jérôme Porée - 2013 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 4 (2):38-49.
    The notions of “narrated time” and “narrative identity” have become, in less than three decades, commonplaces, not only for philosophers, but also for psychologists and ethicists. This would be welcomed, if only it were not used nowadays in what must be called a new dogmatic way. Now, Paul Ricœur indeed asserted, in various ways, the wealth of the notion of narrative; but he also readily acknowleged its limits – aren’t these limits those of hermeneutics itself? Normal 0 false false (...)
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  43.  16
    (1 other version)Paul Ricoeur et le destin de la phénoménologie.Jérôme de Gramont - 2017 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 22 (2):139-160.
    Every reader of Ricoeur knows that hermeneutics endeavors to answer the aporiae of historical phenomenology. Hence arises the need to return to those aporiae and those answers. On the one hand, phenomenology, born with the maxim of going “directly to things themselves,” is confronted with the incessant evasion of the thing itself and with its dreams of presence being thereby shattered. This reversal should not be blamed on the failings of this or that thinker, but attributed to the very destiny (...)
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  44.  31
    From Rhetoric to Corporate Populism: A Romantic Critique of the Academy in an Age of High Gossip.Jerome Christensen - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 16 (2):438-465.
    If you are anything like me, you may feel yourself unsure of what, as a critic these days, you ought to be talking about—whether literature qua literature, literature as rhetoric, literature as politics or as history, whether about the persistence of romanticism or the waxing of postmodernism, the decline of Yale or the rise of Duke. If, like me, you are puzzled by what we now ought to be about, you may also be like Paul de Man, who bespoke (...)
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  45.  35
    Exister vivant.Jérôme Porée - 2009 - Archives de Philosophie 72 (2):317-336.
    L’ontologie heideggérienne de l’être-pour-la-mort a souvent servi de référence négative à Paul Ricœur. Il lui a très tôt opposé trois thèses qu’il n’aurait peut-être pas formulées s’il n’avait pas croisé la philosophie de Jaspers : a) « La naissance signifie plus que la mort » ; b) « la rencontre décisive avec la mort est la mort de l’être aimé » ; c) « la mortalité elle-même doit être pensée sub specie vitae et non sub specie mortis ». La (...)
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  46. A Surviving Version of the Common Sense Problem of Evil.Jerome Gellman - 2017 - Faith and Philosophy 34 (1):82-92.
    Chris Tweedt has offered a solution to the “common sense problem of evil,” on which that there is gratuitous evil is justified non-inferentially as a trivial inference from non-inferentially justified premises by invoking versions of CORNEA. Tweedt claims his solution applies not only to the versions of the common sense problem of evil offered by Paul Draper and Trent Dougherty, but also to that offered by me in this journal in 1992. Here I argue that Tweedt fails to defeat (...)
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  47.  30
    La philosophie au miroir de la psychanalyse.Jérôme Porée - 2009 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 65 (3):405-429.
    Il n’est pas de discipline qui ait, autant que la psychanalyse, inquiété la philosophie de Paul Ricoeur. Elle accompagne tout son chemin de pensée et ne cesse d’en troubler le cours. On aurait tort cependant de croire que ce long compagnonnage soit marqué avant tout par l’hostilité ou la polémique. Même dans l’Essai sur Freud, où elle incarne l’«herméneutique du soupçon», la psychanalyse est rencontrée non comme une ennemie certaine mais comme une alliée possible. Elle est le miroir que (...)
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  48.  50
    Einstein, Race, and the Myth of the Cultural Icon.Fred Jerome - 2004 - Isis 95 (4):627-639.
    The most remarkable aspect of Einstein’s 1946 address at Lincoln University is that it has vanished from Einstein’s recorded history. Its disappearance into a historical black hole symbolizes what seems to happen in the creation of a cultural icon. It is but one of many political statements by Einstein to have met such a fate, though his civil rights activism is most glaringly missing. One explanation for this historical amnesia is that those who shape our official memories felt that Einstein’s (...)
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  49.  41
    Stone: An Ecology of the Inhuman by Jeffrey Jerome Cohen.Paul A. Harris - 2016 - Substance 45 (2):183-189.
    In this landmark book, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen combines and culminates the two strands of his substantial scholarly work: ecology and Medieval and Early Modern studies. Stone is ambitiously synthetic and syncretic, framed not as critical exegesis but “a thought experiment, attempting to discern in the most mundane of substances a liveliness”. Rather than developing an ecological theory and applying it to particular texts, or practicing an ecocriticism that reads nature “in” texts, Cohen attempts to stage something like a symbiotic (...)
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  50. The Annual of Psychoanalysis, V. 22.Jerome A. Winer - 1994 - Routledge.
    Volume 22 of _The Annual of Psychoanalysis_ begins with the provocative reflections of Jane Flax and Robert Michels on the current status and future prospects of psychoanalysis a century after Freud. Flax believes that analysis will not survive in the postmodern West if analysts cling to the medical model and the notion of analysis as a clinical science; Michels believes analysis will be revivified in the next century by reorganizing its training institutes within universities. A section on "Psychoanalysis and the (...)
     
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