Results for 'Leigh Pascoe'

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  1. Genetic susceptibility to a complex disease: the key role of functional redundancy.Gaëlle Debret, Camille Jung, Jean-Pierre Hugot, Leigh Pascoe, Jean-Marc Victor & Annick Lesne - 2011 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 33 (4).
    Complex diseases involve both a genetic component and a response to environmental factors or lifestyle changes. Recently, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have succeeded in identifying hundreds of polymorphisms that are statistically associated with complex diseases. However, the association is usually weak and none of the associated allelic forms is either necessary or sufficient for the disease occurrence. We argue that this promotes a network view, centred on functional redundancy. We adapted reliability theory to the concerned sub-network, modelled as a parallel (...)
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  2.  31
    Kant's Theory of Labour.Jordan Pascoe - 2022 - Cambridge University Press.
    This Element examines Kant's innovative account of labour in his political philosophy and develops an intersectional analysis of Kant. By demonstrating that Kant's analysis of slavery, citizenship, and sex developed in inter-linked ways over several decades, culminating in his development of a 'trichotomy' of Right, the author shows that Kant's normative account of independence is configured through his theory of labour, and is continuous with his anthropological accounts of race and gender, providing a systemic justification for the dependency of women (...)
  3.  65
    God and Human Freedom.Leigh C. Vicens & Simon Kittle - 2019 - Cambridge University Press.
    This Element considers the relationship between the traditional view of God as all-powerful, all-knowing and wholly good on the one hand, and the idea of human free will on the other. It focuses on the potential threats to human free will arising from two divine attributes: God's exhaustive foreknowledge and God's providential control of creation.
  4. Beyond Consent: On Setting and Sharing Sexual Ends.Jordan Pascoe - 2023 - Philosophies 8 (2):21.
    This paper formulates a response to standard accounts of Kantian sexual morality, by first clarifying why sex should be understood as a case of using a person as a thing, rather than merely as a means. The author argues that Kant’s remedy to this problem is not sexual consent, but a model of setting and sharing sexual ends. Kant’s account of sexual morality, read in this way, is a critical framework for contemporary moves to think beyond consent, and to grapple (...)
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  5. Living as god's stewards: Exploring some theological foundations.David Pascoe - 2013 - The Australasian Catholic Record 90 (1):22.
    Pascoe, David The notion of stewardship is an emerging reality in the Catholic Church,1 albeit somewhat confined to some Western localities, particularly the USA, and also developing in the Australian context. While the notion is not new to the wider Christian Church, there remain questions as to the theological foundation for stewardship as a principle of Christian living in its Catholic context. There is, for example, a question of how stewardship is a lived reality for the people who are (...)
     
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  6.  7
    Schools for Girls and Colleges for Women: A Handbook of Female Education Chiefly Designed for the Use of Persons of the Upper Middle Class.Charles Eyre Pascoe - 2013 - Cambridge University Press.
    The author of handbooks that reflected the Victorian emphasis on bettering one's prospects, Charles Eyre Pascoe addressed the topic of female education in this work of 1879, at a time when the Cambridge colleges of Girton and Newnham were in their infancy. 'Chiefly designed for the use of persons of the upper middle class', the guide aims to assist parents in making informed choices about their daughters' education. The coverage extends from kindergarten through to university, before focusing on career (...)
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  7.  22
    The Role of Narrative Practices in Embodied and Affective Change.Josephine Pascoe & Miguel Segundo Ortin - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy of Emotion 6 (1):29-36.
    Maiese and Hanna (2019) argue that social institutions shape and transform our embodied minds, and that detrimental and harmful institutions can be reverted in order to promote mentally healthy, authentic, and fulfilling lives. This commentary aims to complement this proposal by understanding the role that narratives and narrative practices play in shaping our embodied minds, by highlighting narrativity’s (1) active, deliberative, and productive functions, and (2) its strong entanglement with embodiment. We will argue that this addition to Maiese and Hanna’s (...)
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  8.  62
    Surging Solidarity: Reorienting Ethics for Pandemics.Jordan Pascoe & Mitch Stripling - 2020 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 30 (3):419-444.
    ABSTRACT. Public discourse about ethics in the COVID-19 pandemic has tended to focus on scarcity of resources and the protection of civil liberties. We show how these preoccupations reflect an established disaster imaginary that orients the ethics of response. In this paper, we argue that pandemic ethics should instead be oriented through a relational account of persons as vulnerable vectors embedded in existing networks of care. We argue for the creation of a new disaster imaginary to shape our own understandings (...)
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  9.  54
    Working Women and Monstrous Mothers: Kant, Marx, and the Valuation of Domestic Labour.Jordan Pascoe - 2017 - Kantian Review 22 (4):599-618.
    In this article, I compare Kant’s and Marx’s analysis of women and domestic labour in their mature political works, and argue that Kant offers more analytic tools for understanding the social and economic role of domestic labour than does Marx. While domestic labour becomes visible to Marx only as it is outsourced, Kant develops a clear account of the specific rules governing domestic labour in the emerging bourgeois household. Because of his commitment to the domestic realm as a core feature (...)
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  10.  33
    ‘I will know it when I taste it’: trust, food materialities and social media in Chinese alternative food networks.Leigh Martindale - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (2):365-380.
    Trust is often an assumed outcome of participation in Alternative Food Networks (AFNs) as they directly connect producers with consumers. It is based on this potential for trust “between producers and consumers” that AFNs have emerged as a significant field of food studies analysis as it also suggests a capacity for AFNs to foster associated embedded qualities, like ‘morality’, ‘social justice’, ‘ecology’ and ‘equity’. These positive benefits of AFNs, however, cannot be taken for granted as trust is not necessarily an (...)
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  11.  22
    Rousseau & the Eighteenth Century: Essays in Memory of R.A. Leigh.Marian Hobson, J. T. A. Leigh & Robert Wokler - 1992
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  12.  3
    The necessity of aesthetic education: The place of the arts on the curriculum.Joanna Pascoe - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    Laura and I met for this interview to review her book at the Philosophy of Education Society Australasia (PESA) Conference in Christchurch | Ōtautahi at Te Pae Convention Centre, December 2024.JP:...
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  13.  17
    Le satellite, deus ex machina des programmes scolaires.Ariane Giannoni-Pasco - 2002 - Hermes 34:151.
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  14. From losers to lovers : How It films take us to church.Leigh Hickman - 2021 - In Mark J. Boone, Rose M. Cothren, Kevin C. Neece & Jaclyn S. Parrish (eds.), The Good, the True, the Beautiful: A Multidisciplinary Tribute to Dr. David K. Naugle. Eugene, OR: Pickwick.
     
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  15.  26
    John Locke's Rhetoric: Response to the Nominal Quandaries of Legitimate Communities.Leigh H. Holmes - 1996 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 29 (1):33 - 50.
    Using rhetorical analysis as a bridge, the essay attempts to reconcile the scientific Locke with Locke the social philosopher of rights who worked a persuasion against the fruits of social passivity and the status quo; the latter are represented by ingrained institutions like legal nonage and monarchy. The consistency between the two Lockes is language as it forwards understanding in a legitimating consensus. Ironically, iteration and nominalisms bind Locke's social contract; yet the linguistic reduction inherent in nominalisms precludes the production (...)
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  16.  22
    Finding Examples at Home: Cato, Curius Dentatus, and the Origins of Roman Literary Exemplarity.Molly Pasco-Pranger - 2015 - Classical Antiquity 34 (2):296-321.
    This article explores the early history of Roman exemplary literature through the case study of the elder Cato’s account of his imitation of the parsimony and self-sufficiency of M’. Curius Dentatus. I reconstruct from Cicero, Plutarch, and other sources a Catonian prose text that unified the exemplary narrative of Curius’ refusal of a bribe from Samnite emissaries with an evocative location at the hearth of a humble Sabine farmstead, an approving “audience” in Cato himself, and a model for the replication (...)
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  17. on finding yourself in a state of nature: a kantian account of abortion and voluntary motherhood.Jordan Pascoe - 2019 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 5 (3).
    In this essay, I draw on Kant’s legal philosophy in order to defend the right to voluntary motherhood by way of abortion at any stage of pregnancy as an essential feature of women’s basic rights. By developing the distinction between innate and acquired right in Kant’s legal philosophy, I argue that the viability standard in US law (as established in Planned Parenthood v. Casey) misunderstands the nature of embodied right. Our body is the site of innate right; it is the (...)
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  18.  30
    From the Little Wife to the Supermom? Maternographies of Feminism and Mothering in Australia since 1945.Pascoe Leahy - 2019 - Feminist Studies 45 (1):100-128.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:100 Feminist Studies 45, no. 1. © 2019 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Carla Pascoe Leahy From the Little Wife to the Supermom? Maternographies of Feminism and Mothering in Australia since 1945 Men didn’t do anything.... The mother did for the child. The father went out to work.... I was a very determined, modern woman, but I didn’t mind being the little wife. —Marjorie, 1950s mother1 There were competing (...)
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  19. Symposium: Are Certain Knowledge Frameworks More Congenial to the Aims of Cross-Cultural Philosophy?Leigh Jenco, Steve Fuller, David H. Kim, Thaddeus Metz & Miljana Milojevic - 2017 - Journal of World Philosophies 2 (2):99-107.
    In “Global Knowledge Frameworks and the Tasks of Cross-Cultural Philosophy,” Leigh Jenco searches for the conception of knowledge that best justifies the judgment that one can learn from non-local traditions of philosophy. Jenco considers four conceptions of knowledge, namely, in catchwords, the esoteric, Enlightenment, hermeneutic, and self- transformative conceptions of knowledge, and she defends the latter as more plausible than the former three. In this critical discussion of Jenco’s article, I provide reason to doubt the self-transformative conception, and also (...)
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  20. Modeling economic systems as locally-constructive sequential games.Leigh Tesfatsion - 2017 - Journal of Economic Methodology 24 (4):1-26.
    Real-world economies are open-ended dynamic systems consisting of heterogeneous interacting participants. Human participants are decision-makers who strategically take into account the past actions and potential future actions of other participants. All participants are forced to be locally constructive, meaning their actions at any given time must be based on their local states; and participant actions at any given time affect future local states. Taken together, these essential properties imply real-world economies are locally-constructive sequential games. This paper discusses a modeling approach, (...)
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  21.  75
    Bioethics and Social Studies of Medicine: Overlapping Concerns.Leigh Turner - 2009 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18 (1):36.
    Polemicists and disciplinary puritans commonly make a sharp distinction between the normative, “prescriptive,” philosophical work of bioethicists and the empirical, “descriptive” work of anthropologists and sociologists studying medicine, healthcare, and illness. Though few contemporary medical anthropologists and sociologists of health and illness subscribe to positivism, the legacy of positivist thought persists in some areas of the social sciences. It is still quite common for social scientists to insist that their work does not contain explicit normative analysis, offers no practical recommendations (...)
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  22.  83
    Anthropological and sociological critiques of bioethics.Leigh Turner - 2009 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 6 (1):83-98.
    Anthropologists and sociologists offer numerous critiques of bioethics. Social scientists criticize bioethicists for their arm-chair philosophizing and socially ungrounded pontificating, offering philosophical abstractions in response to particular instances of suffering, making all-encompassing universalistic claims that fail to acknowledge cultural differences, fostering individualism and neglecting the importance of families and communities, and insinuating themselves within the “belly” of biomedicine. Although numerous aspects of bioethics warrant critique and reform, all too frequently social scientists offer ungrounded, exaggerated criticisms of bioethics. Anthropological and sociological (...)
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  23. Domestic Labor, Citizenship, and Exceptionalism: Rethinking Kant's “Woman Problem”.Jordan Pascoe - 2015 - Journal of Social Philosophy 46 (3):340-356.
    There is no doubt that Immanuel Kant has a woman problem. His anthropo-logical studies of women are full of cutting remarks, and despite a generation offeminist Kantian scholarship, it is an open question whether he meant to include women as full, equal agents in either his moral or political philosophy. Those who engage this question within Kant’s political philosophy ask whether or not women can “work their way up” to full, active citizenship. If women can achieve equality in this way, (...)
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  24.  49
    Bioethics in pluralistic societies.Leigh Turner - 2004 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 7 (2):201-208.
    Contemporary liberal democracies contain multiple cultural, religious, and philosophical traditions. Within these societies, different interpretive communities provide divergent models for understanding health, illness, and moral obligations. Bioethicists commonly draw upon models of moral reasoning that presume the existence of shared moral intuitions. Principlist bioethics, case-based models of moral deliberation, intuitionist frameworks, and cost-benefit analyses all emphasise the uniformity of moral reasoning. However, religious and cultural differences challenge assumptions about common modes of moral deliberation. Too often, bioethicists minimize or ignore the (...)
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  25.  88
    Psychosocial Interventions for Depressive and Anxiety Symptoms in Individuals with Chronic Kidney Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.Michaela C. Pascoe, David R. Thompson, David J. Castle, Samantha M. McEvedy & Chantal F. Ski - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  26. Literature, imagination, and the study of ultimate reality.D. J. Leigh - 1995 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 18 (3):222-245.
     
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  27.  9
    Rousseau after two hundred years: proceedings of the Cambridge Bicentennial Colloquium.R. A. Leigh (ed.) - 1982 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    J.-J. Rousseau is the most original, most profound and most controversial of all the great eighteenth-century writers. The problems he raised have since become even more acute and the search for a solution increasingly desirable. His voice was a dissonant one in an age which found satisfaction in material progress, correlates the well-being of humanity with the advancement of knowledge, and displayed a form of complacency which Rousseau sets out to shatter. His message falls uneasily on the ears of the (...)
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  28.  26
    Duplicitous simplicity in ovid, amores 1.Molly Pasco-Pranger - 2012 - Classical Quarterly 62 (2):721-730.
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  29.  24
    Risking the Church: Challenges of Catholic Faith [Book Review].David Pascoe - 2005 - The Australasian Catholic Record 82 (2):242.
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  30.  18
    The proximity of the past: Eugenics in american culture.Peggy Pascoe, Jonathan P. Spiro & Tamsen Wolff - 2010 - Modern Intellectual History 7 (3):667-678.
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  31. What sort of church for what sort of world?: an interpretation of Ecclesia in Oceania for the Australian context.David Pascoe - 2002 - The Australasian Catholic Record 79 (4):428.
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  32.  27
    Authenticity.Leigh Roche - 2012 - Philosophy Now 92:31-32.
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  33. Comedy and the Rise of Rome (Amy Richlin).M. Leigh - 2005 - American Journal of Philology 126 (3):464.
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  34.  10
    Ethical leadership: creating and sustaining an ethical business culture.Andrew Leigh - 2013 - London: Kogan Page.
    The demand from society for organizations to be ethical and responsible is growing, and the cost of irresponsible behavior is often huge. Unethical action can dramatically affect the future of a company or destroy it all together.Ethical Leadership shines a light on the role of both culture and ethics in organizations by making the issues more transparent, accessible and above all, connected. Business leaders are now accountable for showing that they have the correct ethical policies and culture in place. Cultural (...)
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  35.  71
    Theological Determinism: New Perspectives.Leigh Vicens & Peter Furlong (eds.) - 2022 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    This volume unites established authors and rising young voices in philosophical theology and philosophy of religion to offer the single most wide-ranging examination of theological determinism-in terms of both authors represented and issues investigated-published to date. Fifteen contributors present discussions about theological determinism, the view that God determines everything that occurs in the world. Some authors provide arguments in favor of this position, while others provide considerations against it. Many contributors investigate the relationship between theological determinism and other philosophical issues, (...)
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  36.  36
    Free Will and Theological Determinism.Leigh Vicens - 2016 - In Kevin Timpe, Meghan Griffith & Neil Levy (eds.), Routledge Companion to Free Will. New York: Routledge.
  37.  35
    Response to Critics: Kant’s Theory of Labour.Jordan Pascoe - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2).
    Elvira Basevich, Martin Sticker, and Helga Varden offered generative criticism of my monograph, Kant’s Theory of Labour. In this response, I explore how the resources they offer for thinking about gender, labour, and the state’s responsibility to ensure the material conditions of freedom can deepen both our attentiveness to patterns of systemic injustice in Kant’s political philosophy, and the resources Kant offers for addressing contemporary patterns of intersectional and material injustice.
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  38. Rethinking Race and Gender in Kant: Towards a Non-Ideal, Intersectional Kant.Jordan Pascoe - 2019 - SGIR Review 2 (2).
    In “Rethinking Race and Gender in Kant: Toward a Non-Ideal, Intersectional Kant,” Jordan Pascoe argues that Kant’s moral philosophy is productively read through the “non-ideal” lens of the sociopolitical concerns he faced and espoused. This lens in turn offers possibilities for thinking differently about the particular articulation that his formal principles take. She defends a non-ideal, modified methodological approach in which Kant’s problematic conception of race and gender are opportunities for expanding our reflection on Kant’s moral philosophy as a (...)
     
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  39. Triangulating Clinical and Basic Research: British Localizationists, 1870–1906.Susan Leigh Star - 1986 - History of Science 24 (1):29-48.
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  40.  60
    Introduction to the special issue: applied critical realism in the social sciences.Leigh Price & Lee Martin - 2018 - Journal of Critical Realism 17 (2):89-96.
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  41.  65
    Critical Realist versus Mainstream Interdisciplinarity.Leigh Price - 2014 - Journal of Critical Realism 13 (1):52-76.
    In this paper I argue for the superiority of a critical realist understanding of interdisciplinarity over a mainstream understanding of it. I begin by exploring the reasons for the failure of mainstream researchers to achieve interdisciplinarity. My main argument is that mainstream interdisciplinary researchers tend to hypostatize facts, fetishize constant conjunctions of events and apply to open systems an epistemology designed for closed systems. I also explain how mainstream interdisciplinarity supports oppression and gross inequality. I argue that mainstream interdisciplinarity is (...)
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  42.  18
    Love and Resentment.Leigh Vicens - 2019 - In James M. Arcadi, Oliver D. Crisp & Jordan Wessling (eds.), Love, Divine and Human: Contemporary Essays in Systematic and Philosophical Theology. T&T Clark. pp. 187-198.
  43. From the Director.Leigh Ford - 1999 - Chisholm Health Ethics Bulletin 4 (4):9.
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  44.  28
    Steffanie Scott, Zhenzhong Si, Theresa Schumilas, Aijuan Chen : Organic food and farming in China: top-down and bottom-up ecological initiatives: Routledge, New York, NY, 2018, 223 pp, ISBN: 9781138573000.Leigh Martindale - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (1):253-254.
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  45.  16
    Facilitating Science Literacy in a Rural School.Leigh Monhardt & Rebecca M. Monhardt - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (1):47-53.
    This study examined the effects of an issue-based science teaching strategy on middle school students in a rural Idaho school. Two eighth-grade classes investigated an issue of local significance—the use of the Bear River. Using the Jurisprudential Inquiry Model of Science, Technology and Society (STS) as a guide, students researched and debated the issue. They attempted to create a Worldwide Web site to share the information collected and ideas generated with other students and interested adults. This article describes the challenges (...)
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  46.  43
    Sustaining desire: Catullus 50, gallus and propertius 1.10.Molly Pasco-Pranger - 2009 - Classical Quarterly 59 (1):142-.
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  47.  19
    Signs Taken for Wonders: Essays in the Sociology of Literary Forms (review).Allan H. Pasco - 1984 - Philosophy and Literature 8 (2):298-299.
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  48.  15
    Towards the role of working memory in pitch processing in language and music.Leigh VanHandel, Jennie Wakefield & Wendy K. Wilkins - 2011 - In Patrick Rebuschat, Martin Rohrmeier, John A. Hawkins & Ian Cross (eds.), Language and Music as Cognitive Systems. Oxford University Press. pp. 302.
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  49. Seeing Knowledge Plain: How to Make Knowledge Visible.Leigh Weiss & Laurence Prusak - 2006 - In Laurence Prusak & Eric Matson (eds.), Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning: A Reader. Oxford University Press.
  50. Theological Determinism.Leigh Vicens - 2014 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Theological Determinism Theological determinism is the view that God determines every event that occurs in the history of the world. While there is much debate about which prominent historical figures were theological determinists, St. Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin, and Gottfried Leibniz all seemed to espouse the view at least at certain points in their … Continue reading Theological Determinism →.
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