Results for 'Red Steagall'

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  1.  6
    Born to This Land.Red Steagall & Skeeter Hagler - 2003 - Texas Tech University Press.
    Steagall and Hagler examine traditions passed from generation to generation and explore the impact of cowboying on those who choose it as a way of life. 75 photos.
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  2.  13
    responsabilidad social en los hospitales de la red sanitaria de RS.Red Sanitaria de Responsabilidad Social - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (2):1-12.
    Se presentan los resultados de un estudio que explora la gestión de la responsabilidad social en trece hospitales de la Red Sanitaria de RS. Las conclusiones revelan que estos hospitales gestionan la RS profesionalmente y con criterios de calidad, orientados al cumplimiento de los ODS, en el marco del plan estratégico de cada hospital. Aunque, todavía se detectan déficits en su implantación departamental, su planificación, y la evaluación de sus impactos. Y debilidades como la falta de recursos y de liderazgo. (...)
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  3. Analytic Philosophy and the Return of Hegelian Thought.Paul Redding - 2007 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This 2007 book examines the possibilities for the rehabilitation of Hegelian thought within analytic philosophy. From its inception, the analytic tradition has in general accepted Bertrand Russell's hostile dismissal of the idealists, based on the claim that their metaphysical views were irretrievably corrupted by the faulty logic that informed them. These assumptions are challenged by the work of such analytic philosophers as John McDowell and Robert Brandom, who, while contributing to core areas of the analytic movement, nevertheless have found in (...)
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  4.  19
    The Born-Reds Have Stood Up!Red Flag Combat Team - 2004 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 35 (4):26-28.
    We are revolutionary offspring of indomitable spirit. We are born rebels. We came to this world to rebel against the bourgeoisie and carry the great proletarian revolutionary banner. Sons will justifiably succeed the power seized by their fathers' generation. This is called passing it on from generation to generation.
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  5.  55
    Continental Idealism: Leibniz to Nietzsche.Paul Redding - 2009 - New York: Routledge.
    Standard accounts of nineteenth-century German philosophy often begin with Kant and assess philosophers after him in light of their responses to Kantian idealism. In _Continental Idealism_, Paul Redding argues that the story of German idealism begins with Leibniz. Redding begins by examining Leibniz's dispute with Newton over the nature of space, time and God, and stresses the way in which Leibniz incorporated Platonic and Aristotelian elements in his distinctive brand of idealism. Redding shows how Kant's interpretation of Leibniz's views of (...)
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  6.  83
    Hegel's Hermeneutics.Paul Redding - 1996 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    An advance on recent revisionist thinking about Hegelian philosophy, this book interprets Hegel's achievement as part of a revolutionary modernization of ...
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  7.  35
    Conceptual harmonies: the origins and relevance of Hegel's logic.Paul Redding - 2023 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Supporters of G.W.F. Hegel's philosophy have largely shied away from relating his logic to modern symbolic or mathematical approaches. While it has predominantly been the non-Greek discipline of algebra that has informed modern mathematical logic, philosopher Paul Redding argues that the approaches of Plato and Aristotle to logic were deeply shaped by the arithmetic and geometry of classical Greek culture. And by ignoring the fact that Hegel's logic also has this deep mathematical dimension, conventional Hegelians have missed some of Hegel's (...)
  8. Why Christian transhumanism?Micah Redding - 2022 - In Arvin M. Gouw, Brian Patrick Green & Ted Peters, Religious Transhumanism and Its Critics. Lanham: Lexington Books.
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  9.  67
    The Logic of Affect.Paul Redding - 1999 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    Most attempts to trace the roots of current scientific approaches to the mind have ignored the contributions of post-Kantian German idealism. Paul Redding here shows the relevance of this philosophical tradition to an understanding of the mind and its embodiment as well as the relation of feeling to cognition. Redding observes how Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel struggled with the problem of reconciling Kant's normative approach to experience and thought with the naturalistic stance of the emerging medical sciences. A century later (...)
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  10.  20
    Simultaneous visual adaptation to tilt and displacement: A test of independent processes.Gordon M. Redding - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 2 (1):41-42.
  11.  90
    Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel.Paul Redding - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  12.  52
    (1 other version)Hegel, IdealIsm and god: PHIlosoPHy as tHe self-CorreCtIng aPProPrIatIon of tHe norms of lIfe and tHougHt.Paul Redding - 2007 - Cosmos and History 3 (2-3):16-31.
    Can Hegel, a philosopher who claims that philosophy lsquo;has no other object but God and so is essentially rational theologyrsquo;, ever be taken as anything emother than/em a religious philosopher with little to say to any philosophical project that identifies itself as emsecular/em?nbsp; If the valuable substantive insights found in the detail of Hegelrsquo;s philosophy are to be rescued for a secular philosophy, then, it is commonly presupposed, some type of global reinterpretation of the enframing idealistic framework is required. In (...)
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  13. (1 other version)The analytic neo-hegelianism of John McDowell & Robert Brandom.Paul Redding - 2011 - In Michael Baur & Stephen Houlgate, The Blackwell Companion to Hegel. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
    The historical origins of the analytic style that was to become dominant within academic philosophy in the English-speaking world are often traced to the work of Bertrand Russell and G. E. Moore at the turn of the twentieth century, and portrayed as involving a radical break with the idealist philosophy that had bloomed in Britain at the end of the nineteenth. Congruent with this view, Hegel is typically taken as representing a type of philosophy that analytic philosophy assiduously avoids. Thus, (...)
     
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  14. Kantian origins : one possible path from Transcendental Idealism to a "Post Kantian" philosophical theology.Paul Redding - 2012 - In Paolo Diego Bubbio & Paul Redding, Religion after Kant: God and Culture in the Idealist Era. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    After two centuries of Kant interpretation there is still no general agreement over the nature of Kant’s most basic philosophical commitments. One issue in particular about which it is difficult to find consensus is his metaphilosophical attitude towards the very project of metaphysics itself. Recently, a type of deflationist reading of Kant has been appealed to in order to address the problems inherent in his more traditional construal as a metaphysical skeptic who denies us the capacity to have any knowledge (...)
     
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  15.  36
    Veins and Arteries Build Hierarchical Branching Patterns Differently: Bottom‐Up versus Top‐Down.Kristy Red-Horse & Arndt F. Siekmann - 2019 - Bioessays 41 (3):1800198.
    A tree‐like hierarchical branching structure is present in many biological systems, such as the kidney, lung, mammary gland, and blood vessels. Most of these organs form through branching morphogenesis, where outward growth results in smaller and smaller branches. However, the blood vasculature is unique in that it exists as two trees (arterial and venous) connected at their tips. Obtaining this organization might therefore require unique developmental mechanisms. As reviewed here, recent data indicate that arterial trees often form in reverse order. (...)
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  16. Time and modality in Hegel's account of judgment.Paul Redding - 2019 - In Brian Andrew Ball & Christoph Schuringa, The Act and Object of Judgment: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives. New York: Routledge.
  17.  75
    Findlay’s Hegel: Idealism as Modal Actualism.Paul Redding - 2017 - Critical Horizons 18 (4):359-377.
    Here, I suggest a hitherto relatively unexplored way beyond the opposed Aristotelian realist and Kantian idealist approaches that divide recent interpretations of the categories or “thought determinations” of Hegel’s Logic, by locating his idealism within the terrain of recent debates in modal metaphysics. In particular, I return to the outlook of the first philosopher to attempt to bring Hegel into the analytic conversation, John Niemeyer Findlay, and consider Hegel’s idealism as instantiating the metaphysical position that, following the work of Findlay’s (...)
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  18. Jagadguruśrīādiśaṅkarācāryāṇāṃ jīvanavr̥ttāntaḥ darśanañca =.Vi Purandara Reḍḍī (ed.) - 2012 - Tirupati: Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeetha.
     
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  19.  86
    Anthropology as ritual: Wittgenstein's reading of Frazer's the golden bough.Paul Redding - 1987 - Metaphilosophy 18 (3-4):253-269.
  20. Śrī Vēmayogīyam.Kaḍivēṭi Narasāreḍḍi - 1969 - Podduṭūru: Kaḍivēṭi Narasāreḍḍi.
    Verse treatise, with Sanskrit commentary and Telugu paraphrase, by Kānḍūru Nr̥iṃhadāsa, on Acalapūrṇa yoga, a combination of Yoga philosophy and Advaita Vedanta.
     
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  21.  26
    The Objectivity of the Actual: Hegelianism as a Metaphysics of Modal Actualism.Paul Redding - 2020 - In Dominik Finkelde & Paul M. Livingston, Idealism, Relativism, and Realism: New Essays on Objectivity Beyond the Analytic-Continental Divide. Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 275-292.
  22. Why Christian transhumanism?Micah Redding - 2022 - In Arvin M. Gouw, Brian Patrick Green & Ted Peters, Religious Transhumanism and Its Critics. Lanham: Lexington Books.
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  23. Hegel's "actualist" idealism and the modality of practical reason.Paul Redding - 2020 - In James Gledhill & Sebastian Stein, Hegel and Contemporary Practical Philosophy: Beyond Kantian Constructivism. New York: Routledge.
     
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  24. The Metaphysical and Theological Commitments of Idealism: Kant, Hegel, Hegelianism.Paul Redding - 2011 - In Douglas Moggach, Politics, Religion, and Art: Hegelian Debates. Northwestern University Press.
    It is sometimes said that changes in academic philosophy in the twentieth century reflected a process in which a discipline that had been earlier closely tied to institutional religion became increasingly laicized and secularized.1 In line with this idea, the idealist philosophy that had flowered within British philosophy at the end of the nineteenth century can look like the last and ill-fated attempt of a Victorian religious sensibility to guard itself against a post-Darwinian God-less view of the world and ourselves.2 (...)
     
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  25. (1 other version)Some Metaphysical Implications of Hegel's Theology.Paul Redding - 2012 - European Journal for the Philosophy of Religion 4 (1):139–150.
    Hegel makes claims about the relation of philosophy to religion that might raise concerns for those who want to locate his philosophy generally within the modern enlightenment tradition. For example, at the outset of his Lectures on Aesthetics he claims that philosophy “has no other object but God and so is essentially rational theology”.1 What might seem to placate worries here is that Hegel of course differentiates between the forms of religious and philosophical cognition in which such a content is (...)
     
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  26. Kantian origins: one possible path from Transcendental Idealism to a "Post Kantian" philosophical theology.Paul Redding - 2012 - In Paolo Diego Bubbio & Paul Redding, Religion after Kant: God and Culture in the Idealist Era. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    After two centuries of Kant interpretation there is still no general agreement over the nature of Kant’s most basic philosophical commitments. One issue in particular about which it is difficult to find consensus is his metaphilosophical attitude towards the very project of metaphysics itself. Recently, a type of deflationist reading of Kant has been appealed to in order to address the problems inherent in his more traditional construal as a metaphysical skeptic who denies us the capacity to have any knowledge (...)
     
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  27.  39
    If Reason is ‘in the World’, Where Exactly is it Located?Paul Redding - 2016 - European Journal of Philosophy 24 (3):712-724.
    In his recent book James Kreines argues that for Hegel reason is “in the world”, but how we are to understand the idea of reason's being so located? One answer, suggested by more traditional theocentric readings of Hegel, would be to appeal to the idea of a divine thought, coursing through the world. Another answer, more congenial to modern sensibilities, might locate reason within the rational activities of inter-subjectively connected human beings, as suggested by Terry Pinkard's idea of the “sociality (...)
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  28. Noam Chomsky interviewed by Kate Soper.Red Pepper - unknown
    CHOMSKY: Any stance we take is based on some conception of what is good for people. This conception will tacitly presuppose a certain belief as to the constitution of human nature -- human needs and human potential. You might as well bring them out as clearly as possible so that they can be discussed.
     
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  29. The Relevance of Hegel’s “Absolute Spirit” to Social Normativity.Paul Redding - 2011 - In Heikki Ikaheimo & Arto Laitinen, Recognition and Social Ontology. Leiden: Brill. pp. 212--238.
    Around the turn of the twentieth century, Wilhelm Dilthey, in his reflections on the nature of history as a “Geisteswissenschaft”—a science of “spirit” as opposed to “nature”—appealed “to Hegel’s notion of “spirit” (Geist). Attempting to extract Hegel’s concept from what he considered the unsupportable metaphysical system within which it had been developed, Dilthey, a neo-Kantian, gave it a broadly epistemological significance by correlating it with a distinct type of “understanding” (Verstehen) that was foreign to the Naturwissenschaften, concerned as they were (...)
     
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  30.  41
    Specular Phenomenology: Art and Art Criticism.Red Clementina - 2011 - Collingwood and British Idealism Studies 17 (2):248-260.
    This paper explores the dialogue between Collingwood and Guido de Ruggiero on art and art criticism. The sense of identity of these two activities, it will be argued, can be understood only if one considers the criticism of living art: The art of one who also creates, who through a critical process transforms an outline into a work of art. Thus understood a work of art belongs to the life of the spirit, if considered from the dimension of becoming. Only (...)
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  31. Replies to Bob Brandom and Jim Kreines.Paul Redding - unknown
    (Author’s reply at “Author-Meets-Critics” session (on Paul Redding, Analytic Philosophy and the Return of Hegelian Thought) at the Annual Meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, Vancouver, April 10, 2009. Robert Brandom’s “critic’s” contribution is available as “Hegel and Analytic Philosophy” from his website http://www.pitt.edu/~brandom/.).
     
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  32. The Role of Work within the Processes of Recognition in Hegel’s Idealism.Paul Redding - 2011 - In Nicholas Smith & Jean-Philippe Dr Deranty, New Philosophies of Labour: Work and the Social Bond. Brill.
     
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  33.  34
    East of the sun and west of the moon: The BALKans and cultural studies.Arthur Redding - 2001 - Angelaki 6 (1):173 – 183.
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  34.  36
    Macbeth and Hegel on the Historical Realization of Reason as a Power of Knowing.Paul Redding - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 25 (1):122-131.
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  35.  17
    The Lankavatara sutra: a Zen text.Red Pine (ed.) - 2012 - Berkeley: Counterpoint.
    Having translated The Diamond Sutra and The Heart Sutra, and following with The Platform Sutra, Red Pine now turns his attention to perhaps the greatest Sutra of all. The Lankavatara Sutra is the holy grail of Zen. Zen's First Patriarch, Bodhidharma, gave a copy of this text to his successor, Hui-k'o, and told him everything he needed to know was in this book. Passed down from teacher to student ever since, this is the only Zen sutra ever spoken by the (...)
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  36.  21
    Hegel’s Keplerian Revolution in Philosophy.Paul Redding - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (4):111.
    In this paper, I approach Hegel’s philosophy under the banner of a “Keplerian Revolution”, the implicit reference being, of course, to Kant’s supposed Copernican philosophical revolution. Kepler had been an early supporter of the Copernican paradigm in astronomy, but went well beyond his predecessor, and so is invoked here in an attempt to capture some of the important ways in which Hegel attempted to go beyond the philosophy of Kant. To make these issues more determinate, however, Hegel’s Keplerian orientation will (...)
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  37. Mithyātvaṃ tathā Akhaṇḍārthaśca: Advaitavedāntavibhāgīyarāṣṭriyasaṅgoṣṭhayāḥ itivr̥tam.Vi Purandara Reḍḍī (ed.) - 2012 - Tirupati: Rāṣṭriyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭham.
    Contributed papers on concept of False and Indivisibles (Philosophy) in Hindu philosophy presented at Seminar organized by Department of Advaita Vedanta, Rāṣṭrīyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭham, Tirupati from December 31, 2005 to January 01, 2006).
     
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  38. Hegel’s Anticipation of the Early History of Analytic Philosophy.Paul Redding - 2010 - The Owl of Minerva 42 (1/2):18–40.
    Putting it very crudely, it might be said that in the much discussed opening three chapters that make up the section “Consciousness” of his Phenomenology of Spirit Hegel sketches and “test-drives” various models for a consciousness able to experience and know the world.1 Kant had thought of objects of experience as necessarily having conceptual (as well as spatio-temporal) form, but non-conceptual (“intuitional”) content. But for Hegel, that objects show themselves to have a conceptual form emerges as one the first lessons (...)
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  39. Hegel and Peircean abduction.Paul Redding - 2003 - European Journal of Philosophy 11 (3):295–313.
  40. Hegel, Fichte and the pragmatic contexts of moral judgment.Paul Redding - 2007 - In Espen Hammer, German Idealism: Contemporary Perspectives. Routledge.
    Hegel’s treatment of ‘Moralität’ in both the Phenomenology of Spirit and the Philosophy of Right provides important clues as to how he conceives the recognitive dynamics of modern moral life. As ‘spirit that is certain of itself’, morality as comprehended in the Phenomenology is the final form of spirit [Geist], which, in Hegel’s exposition, follows ‘reason’ which itself had followed ‘consciousness’ and ‘self-consciousness’. Spirit had first been considered in its objective form as an ‘in itself’. This was the ‘true spirit’ (...)
     
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  41. Hermeneutic or Metaphysical Hegelianism? Kojève’s Dilemma.Paul Redding - 1991 - The Owl of Minerva 22 (2):175-189.
    Between 1933 and 1939 Alexandre Kojève gave his series of celebrated lectures on Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. Importantly, Kojève claimed to be reading Hegel in the wake of a philosopher whom he considered to be, along with Marx, the only important philosopher since Hegel - Martin Heidegger, whose Being and Time had appeared in 1927. Indeed, Kojève went so far as to claim that Hegel’s Phenomenology “would probably never have been understood (...)
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  42. What Is an Epistemic Perspective?Paul Redding - 2003 - Journal of Philosophical Research 28:371-390.
  43.  49
    Hegel’s Subjective Logic as a Logic for (Hegel’s) Philosophy of Mind.Paul Redding - 2018 - Hegel Bulletin 39 (1):1-22.
    In the 1930s, C. I. Lewis, who was responsible for the revival of modal logic in the era of modern symbolic logic, characterized ‘intensional’ approaches to logic as typical of post-Leibnizian ‘continental philosophy’, in contrast to the ‘extensionalist’ approaches dominant in the British tradition. Indeed Lewis’s own work in this area had been inspired by the logic of his teacher, the American ‘Absolute Idealist’, Josiah Royce. Hegel’s ‘Subjective Logic’ in Book III of hisScience of Logic, can, I suggest, be considered (...)
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  44.  13
    Being the rope in a tug of war: Márkus and Rorty as readers of Hegel in the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s.Paul Redding - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 160 (1):22-33.
    This paper gives a brief sketch of György Márkus’s philosophical style as manifest in the context of his role within the revival of Hegelian philosophy in Sydney in the last decades of the 20th century. Written from the perspective of one of his students, this style is sharpened by the contrast with that of another philosopher who was influential in the Hegel revival around that time, Richard Rorty. It is suggested that the stark antithesis between Márkusian and Rortarian philosophical and (...)
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  45.  41
    German Idealism.Paul Redding - 2011 - In George Klosko, The Oxford Handbook of the History of Political Philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 348.
  46.  65
    Hegel’s Logic of Being and the Polarities of Presocratic Thought.Paul Redding - 1991 - The Monist 74 (3):438-456.
    Recently a view of Hegel’s “idealism” which hitherto had seemed unquestionable—the view that it is fundamentally a metaphysical doctrine—has been seriously challenged. Thus yesterday’s metaphysical Hegel, complete with his cosmic megasubject hidden behind the events of nature and history, has been joined by today’s “nonmetaphysical Hegel,” the postkantian categorial “genealogist.” According to the nonmetaphysical Hegelians, a century and a half of misunderstanding has been based on the confusion of two distinct philosophical projects: on the one hand, that originating in the (...)
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  47. Self-Surpassing Beauty: Plato's Ambiguous Legacy.Paul Redding - 1997 - Literature & Aesthetics 7:94-108.
     
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  48. Spectatorship, Sympathy and the Self.Paul Redding - 1992 - Literature & Aesthetics 2:82-95.
     
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  49.  10
    Thoughts, deeds, words, and world: Hegel's idealist response to the linguistic "metacritical invasion".Paul Redding - 2016 - Aurora, Colorado: Davies Group, Publishers.
  50. An Hegelian Solution to a Tangle of Problems Facing Brandom'S Analytic Pragmatism.Paul Redding - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (4):657-680.
    In his program of analytic pragmatism, Robert Brandom has presented a thoroughgoing reinterpretation of the place of analytic philosophy in the history of philosophy by linking his own non-representational ‘inferentialist’ approach to semantics to the rationalist – idealist tradition, and in particular, to Hegel. Brandom, however, has not been without his critics in regard to both his approach to semantics and his interpretation of Hegel. Here I single out four interlinked problematic areas facing Brandom's inferentialist semantics – his approach of (...)
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