Results for 'Thérèse Malachy'

579 found
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  1.  19
    Karl Popper - The Formative Years, 1902-1945: Politics and Philosophy in Interwar Vienna.Malachi Haim Hacohen - 2000 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Karl Popper is one of this century's most influential philosophers, but his life in fin-de siècle and interwar Vienna, and his exile in New Zealand during World War II, have so far remained shrouded in mystery. This intellectual 2001 biography recovers the legacy of the young Popper; the progressive, cosmopolitan, Viennese socialist who combated fascism, revolutionized the philosophy of science, and envisioned the Open Society. Malachi Hacohen delves into his archives and draws a compelling portrait of the philosopher, the assimilated (...)
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  2. The human soul's individuation and its survival after the body's death: Avicenna on the causal relation between body and soul: Thérèse-Anne Druart.Thérèse-Anne Druart - 2000 - Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 10 (2):259-273.
    As for Avicenna the human soul is a complete substance which does not inhere in the body nor is imprinted in it, asserting its survival after the death of the body seems easy. Yet, he needs the body to explain its individuation. The paper analyzes Avicenna's arguments in the De anima sections, V, 3 & 4, of the Shifā ' in order to explore the exact causal relation there is between the human soul and its body and confronts these arguments (...)
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  3.  23
    Agassi and Popper on Nationalism – and Beyond.Malachi Hacohen - 2023 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 53 (1):60-71.
    Popper and Agassi diverged on nationalism. Popper was a trenchant critic whereas Agassi formed a theory of liberal nationalism. At the root of their disagreement was Popper’s refusal of Jewish identity and rejection of Zionism, in contrast with Agassi’s affirmation of progressive Jewishness and liberal Zionism. Both Agassi and Popper, however, rejected ethnonationalism. To hedge against it, they ignored the claims of ethnocultural communities. This essay will highlight Agassi’s liberal theory of the nation state but urge that we overcome Critical (...)
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  4. Al-Razi's Conception of the Soul: Psychological Background to His Ethics.Thérèse-Anne Druart - 1996 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 5 (2):245-264.
  5.  69
    Karl Popper, the Vienna Circle, and Red Vienna.Malachi H. Hacohen - 1998 - Journal of the History of Ideas 59 (4):711--734.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Karl Popper, the Vienna Circle, and Red ViennaMalachi H. Hacohen*A stranger in his homeland even before emigrating in 1937, the philosopher Karl Popper is rarely considered an Austrian. Although he was born in Vienna in 1902 and buried there in 1994, he is known as an Atlantic intellectual and an anti-Communist prophet of postwar liberalism. He first became famous for The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945). 1 He (...)
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  6.  23
    Avicenna's Metaphysics in Context.Thérèse Bonin - 2003 - Cornell University Press.
    The eleventh-century philosopher and physician Abu Ali ibn Sina (d. A.D. 1037) was known in the West by his Latinized name Avicenna. An analysis of the sources and evolution of Avicenna's metaphysics, this book focuses on the answers he and his predecessors gave to two fundamental pairs of questions: what is the soul and how does it cause the body; and what is God and how does He cause the world? To respond to these challenges, Avicenna invented new concepts and (...)
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  7.  23
    Al-Rāzī by Peter Adamson.Thérèse-Anne Druart - 2022 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 60 (4):692-693.
    As there are several famous al-Rāzī relevant to philosophy, I need first to specify that this remarkable book deals with Abū Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariyyā' al-Rāzī, also known as "Galen of the Arabs," and in Latin as well as in the Canterbury Tales as "al-Rhazes." He proudly presented himself as both a philosopher and a physician taking Galen as his model. Just as in Hellenistic times Galen was highly valued as a physician but demeaned as a philosopher, so often was (...)
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  8.  18
    Historicizing Deduction: Scientific Method, Critical Debate, and the Historian.Malachi Hacohen - 2004 - Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 11:17-23.
    If ever there were scientific procedures that seemed immune to history, induction and deduction would be them. Their validity seemingly unimpinged by the vicissitudes of history, they appear a proper subject of discussion for philosophers and scientists, but not for historians. Historians pride themselves on demonstrating that the internal logic of theory is historical — a response to particular conditions. Breakdowns in logic present historians with opportune moments for historicization, for showing how theoreticians’ efforts to respond to their situation made (...)
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  9.  10
    Religion and Nationalism: A Homage to Hans Albert.Malachi Hacohen - 2018 - In Giuseppe Franco (ed.), Begegnungen Mit Hans Albert: Eine Hommage. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden. pp. 151-153.
    I met Hans Albert twice, in Vienna in 2002 at the Popper Centennial Congress, and, a few months later, in Alpbach, where he was an old timer who had seen the institution develop over half a century and took pride in belonging in its history. I found Albert charming, jolly and generous, very different from my image of the German mandarin. As a Popper scholar, I had, of course, heard of him before.
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  10.  48
    Christian and Jewish Liturgical Poetry.Zvi Malachi - 1988 - Augustinianum 28 (1-2):237-248.
  11.  25
    New technologies and human rights.Thérèse Murphy (ed.) - 2009 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The first IVF baby was born in the 1970s. Less than 20 years later, we had cloning and GM food, and information and communication technologies had transformed everyday life. In 2000, the human genome was sequenced. More recently, there has been much discussion of the economic and social benefits of nanotechnology, and synthetic biology has also been generating controversy. This important volume is a timely contribution to increasing calls for regulation - or better regulation - of these and other new (...)
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  12.  18
    Wisdom Calls: The Moral Story of the Hebrew Bible by Paul Lewis.Therese Lysaught - 2018 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 38 (2):204-205.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Wisdom Calls: The Moral Story of the Hebrew Bible by Paul LewisTherese LysaughtWisdom Calls: The Moral Story of the Hebrew Bible Paul Lewis MACON, GA: NURTURING FAITH, 2017. 99 pp. $18.00Paul Lewis invites us into a thought experiment: What can we discern about moral development from a "naive" reading of the Hebrew Scriptures as narrative, starting at Genesis and working our way through to Chronicles? If we remove (...)
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  13.  34
    The culture of viennese science and the Riddle of austrian liberalism.Malachi Haim Hacohen - 2009 - Modern Intellectual History 6 (2):369-396.
    Vienna's scientific culture has long attracted historians' attention. Impressive though the scientific accomplishments of Viennese scientists were, and recognized by numerous Nobel prizes, they alone do not account for the historians' interest. Rather, Vienna's culture of science was imbedded in broader humanistic visions and invested in political and educational projects of major historical significance. Viennese philosophy placed humanity's hopes in science and articulated its historical ramifications to the public, drawing out the political implications of competing scientific methodologies and tying them (...)
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  14.  34
    Linguistics as an Indiscipline: Deleuze and Guattari's Pragmatics.Therese Grisham - 1991 - Substance 20 (3):36.
  15.  10
    Violence as Institution in African Religious Experience: A Case Study of Rwanda.Malachie Munyaneza - 2001 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 8 (1):39-68.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:VIOLENCE AS INSTITUTION IN AFRICAN RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE: A CASE STUDY OF RWANDA Malachie Munyaneza UnitedReform Church, London I. Introduction Violence is a phenomenon. It is multidimensional and multifarious. It is physical, geographical, spiritual, psychological, sudden or latent. It is metaphysical, because for some religious beliefs, it involves the deed-consequences scheme in terms of rewards and punishments, even beyond this world into the otherworldly life. It is an instrument used (...)
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  16. Death and displacement: Catholic missionaries in New Guinea in World War 2.Malachy J. Nolan - 2017 - The Australasian Catholic Record 94 (1):45.
    Nolan, Malachy J When Japanese forces invaded New Guinea during the Second World War, there was a large missionary presence in the territory that had been built up in the preceding fifty years. The territory was previously a German possession but had been administered as a trust territory of Australia under a League of Nations mandate after the First World War. Geographically, it consisted of the northern part of the eastern half of the New Guinea mainland; the large islands (...)
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  17.  77
    Karl Popper in Exile.Malachi Haim Hacohen - 1996 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 26 (4):452-492.
    This article explores the impact of Popper's exile on the formation of The Open Society. It proposes homelessness as a major motif in Popper's life and work. His emigration from clerical-fascist Austria, sojourn in New Zealand during World War II, and social isolation in postwar England constituted a permanent exile. In cosmopolitan philosophy, he searched for a new home. His unended quest issued in a liberal cosmopolitan vision of scientific and political communities pursuing truth and reform. The Open Society was (...)
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  18.  19
    Health Humanities Reader.Therese Jones, Delese Wear & Lester D. Friedman (eds.) - 2014 - Rutgers University Press.
    Over the past forty years, the health humanities, previously called the medical humanities, has emerged as one of the most exciting fields for interdisciplinary scholarship, advancing humanistic inquiry into bioethics, human rights, health care, and the uses of technology. It has also helped inspire medical practitioners to engage in deeper reflection about the human elements of their practice. In _Health Humanities Reader_, editors Therese Jones, Delese Wear, and Lester D. Friedman have assembled fifty-four leading scholars, educators, artists, and clinicians to (...)
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  19.  57
    Aquinas on Human Self-Knowledge.Therese Scarpelli Cory - 2013 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Self-knowledge is commonly thought to have become a topic of serious philosophical inquiry during the early modern period. Already in the thirteenth century, however, the medieval thinker Thomas Aquinas developed a sophisticated theory of self-knowledge, which Therese Scarpelli Cory presents as a project of reconciling the conflicting phenomena of self-opacity and privileged self-access. Situating Aquinas's theory within the mid-thirteenth-century debate and his own maturing thought on human nature, Cory investigates the kinds of self-knowledge that Aquinas describes and the questions they (...)
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  20.  20
    Critical Rationalism, Logical Positivism, and the Poststructuralist Conundrum: Reconsidering the Neurath-Popper Debate.Malachi Hacohen - 2002 - Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 9:307-324.
    “Science does not rest on a rockbed. Its towering edifice, an amazingly bold structure of theories, rises over a swamp,” wrote Karl Popper in the fall of 1932. “The foundations are piers going down into the swamp from above. They do not reach a natural base, but ... one resolves to be satisfied with their firmness, hoping they will carry the structure. ... The objectivity of science can be bought only at the cost of relativity.1 The tower over the swamp (...)
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  21.  20
    The COVID Pandemic: Selected Work.Therese Jones & Kathleen Pachucki - 2021 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (1):1-1.
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  22.  37
    Jewish Parallels to Visions and Revelations in the Nag Hammadi Texts.Zvi Malachi - 1989 - Augustinianum 29 (1-3):147-155.
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  23.  79
    Charlotte fait de la tête de veau.Thérèse Moreau - 2001 - Clio 14:189-193.
    « Charlotte, fais donc un gâteau! » avait murmuré nuitamment sa mère. Mais cela n’avait pu être, puisque madame de Corday d’Armont était partie en quatre-vingt-deux avec petite sœur, abandonnant Charlotte et Jacqueline-Éléonore. Robes noires et longs silences, l’hiver à Mesnil-Imbert avait paru trop long. Puis, le procès paternel perdu, toute la famille était revenue de Caen, ville maudite où une femme avait mangé cru le cœur du major Belzunce. Alors le manoir avait presque retrouvé ses sen...
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  24.  20
    Ethics.Malachy R. Sullivan - 1956 - New Scholasticism 30 (2):240-242.
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  25.  61
    Experimental Psychology and Propaganda.Malachy R. Sullivan - 1939 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 15:203-209.
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  26.  30
    Links between an Owner’s Adult Attachment Style and the Support-Seeking Behavior of Their Dog.Therese Rehn, Andrea Beetz & Linda J. Keeling - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  27. Gaudium et Spes and marriage: A conjugal covenant.Therese Buck - 2012 - The Australasian Catholic Record 89 (4):444.
    Buck, Therese This article explores some of the factors that led to Vatican II's teaching that marriage is a covenant [foedus] in Gaudium et spes when, in the 1917 Code of Canon Law marriage is referred to as a contract [contractus]. As a background to the developments in Gaudium et spes, I will first outline the teaching on marriage in the 1917 Code and in Pius XI's 1930 encyclical Casti connubii. This will be followed by the inclusion of marriage as (...)
     
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  28.  32
    (2 other versions)Disability disclosure: A case of understatement?Thérèse Woodward & Robert Day - 2005 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 15 (1):86–94.
  29.  41
    Action goal selection and motor planning can be dissociated by tool use.Thérèse Collins, Tobias Schicke & Brigitte Röder - 2008 - Cognition 109 (3):363-371.
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  30.  11
    Creation as Emanation: The Origin of Diversity in Albert the Great’s “On the Causes and the Procession of the Universe”.Therese Bonin - 2001 - Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA: University of Notre Dame Press.
    The Liber de causis, a monotheistic reworking of Proclus' Elements of Theology, was translated from Arabic into Latin in the twelfth century, with an attribution to Aristotle. Considering this Neoplatonic text a product of Aristotle's school and even the completion of Aristotle's Metaphysics, Albert the Great concluded his series of Aristotelian paraphrases by commenting on it. To do so was to invite controversy, since accidents of translation had made many readers think that the Liber de causis taught that God made (...)
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  31.  14
    Positif.Therese Budniakiewicz - 1974 - Substance 3 (9):159.
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  32.  38
    A Brief Defense of the Third Person Perspective in Moral Philosophy.Therese Scarpelli Cory - 2017 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 9 (3):279-283.
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  33. Axel Gosseries.Thérèse Davio - 2013 - Ethical Perspectives 20 (1):109-17.
  34.  18
    Night and days in Cassiciacum: The anti-Manichaean theodicy of Augustine’s De ordine.Therese Fuhrer - 2013 - HTS Theological Studies 69 (1).
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  35.  35
    Jacob Talmon between Zionism and Cold War Liberalism.Malachi H. Hacohen - 2008 - History of European Ideas 34 (2):146-157.
    The paper focuses on the problematic relationship between Talmon's liberalism and Zionism. My argument is that Talmon's nationalism (Zionism included)—historicist, romantic, visionary—lived in permanent tension with his liberalism—empiricist, pluralist, pragmatic. His critique of totalitarian democracy, reflecting his British experience, emerged independently from his Zionism, grounded in Central European nationalism. The two represented different worlds. Talmon lived in both, serving as an ambassador in-between them, without ever bringing them together. The essay's first section describes the political education of the young Jacob (...)
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  36.  65
    The Art of a Reigning Queen as Dynastic Propaganda in Twelfth-Century Spain.Therese Martin - 2005 - Speculum 80 (4):1134-1171.
  37. Henry Backhaus - a Different Type of Pioneer Priest.Malachy J. Nolan - 2008 - The Australasian Catholic Record 85 (1):56.
  38.  14
    Dieu et ses appellations en vieux-saxon et en vieil-anglais.Thérèse Robin - forthcoming - Corela. Cognition, Représentation, Langage.
    La comparaison entre vieux-saxon (vsax), et vieil-anglais (va), deux langues germaniques historiquement et linguistiquement proches, concerne dans cet article le groupe nominal au sens de Jean Fourquet (1966, publié 2000 et 201), avec une détermination ∅ ou autre que ∅, ayant trait à Dieu. Les deux textes comparés datent du IXème siècle, le poème en vieil-anglais étant la traduction de la Genèse en vieux-saxon. De ces poèmes il ne reste que certains fragments, avec une partie commune de 25 vers allitérés. (...)
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  39.  29
    As the World Turns on the Sick and the Restless, So Go the Days of Our Lives: Family and Illness in Daytime Drama.Therese Jones - 1997 - Journal of Medical Humanities 18 (1):5-20.
    This essay begins with a discussion of the primacy of the nuclear family in American drama. Our best playwrights have been strikingly preoccupied with domestic life, consistently portraying the family as a dream of solidarity and a nightmare of enmeshment. Daytime serial dramas are also stories about American domestic life, privileging a conservatively defined nuclear family and imaging conflicting hopes and fears around it. In serious as well as popular drama, illness is frequently the catalyst for familial destruction and restoration. (...)
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  40.  30
    Performing AIDS: Introduction to the Special Issue.Therese Jones - 1998 - Journal of Medical Humanities 19 (2/3):81-89.
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  41.  63
    Freethinkers of Medieval Islam: Ibn al-Rāwandī, Abū Bakr al-Rāzī, and Their Impact on Islamic Thought.Thérèse-Anne Druart & Sarah Stroumsa - 2001 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (1):99.
  42.  15
    Ethics and professional responsibility for legal assistants.Therese A. Cannon - 1996 - Boston: Little, Brown and Co..
    In this Second Edition of her best-selling ethics paperback text, renowned paralegal educator Therese Cannon clearly addresses pertinent case law, rules changes, and other developments involving this important area of the law. Organized in 10 concise chapters, Ethics and Professional Responsibility for Legal Assistants, Second Edition, covers key concepts, including unauthorized practice of law; confidentiality; conflicts of interest; fees; trends in legal malpractice; discovery abuse and other advocacy issues; pro bono work; and more. to help your students grasp the material, (...)
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  43. A test of central coherence theory: linguistic processing in high-functioning adults with autism or Asperger syndrome: is local coherence impaired?Therese Jolliffe & Simon Baron-Cohen - 1999 - Cognition 71 (2):149-185.
  44.  33
    Animal Ethical Evaluation: An Observational Study of Canadian IACUCs.Thérèse Leroux, Claude Dumas & Lise Houde - 2003 - Ethics and Behavior 13 (4):333-350.
    Three Canadian institutional animal care and use committees were observed over a 1-year period to investigate animal ethical evaluation. While each protocol was evaluated, the observer collected information about the final decision, the type of protocol, and the category of invasiveness. The observer also wrote down verbatim all verbal interventions, which were coded according to the following categories: scientific, technical, politics, human analog, reduction, refinement, and replacement. The data revealed that only 16% of the comments were devoted to the 3 (...)
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  45.  16
    Der Götterhymnus als Prahlrede:: Zum Spiel mit einer literarischen Form in Ovids "Metamorphosen".Therese Fuhrer - 1999 - Hermes 127 (3):356-367.
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  46.  33
    The bridge.Therese Jones - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (3):51 – 53.
  47.  95
    The neglected canon: nine women philosophers: first to the twentieth century.Therese Boos Dykeman (ed.) - 1999 - Boston: Kluwer Academic.
    The outstanding points of The Neglected Canon are that it provides a multicultural anthology of women philosophers: Chinese, European, North and Central American, that it provides a history of women philosophers through selected works from the first century to the beginning of the twentieth century, and that it provides unusual comprehensiveness in its bibliographies, biographies, and introductions to the works. In these three points it offers a more complete text than any yet on the market in this field. Designed for (...)
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  48. Rethinking Abstractionism: Aquinas’s Intellectual Light and Some Arabic Sources.Therese Scarpelli Cory - 2015 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 53 (4):607-646.
    The thesis of this paper is that Thomas Aquinas offers an alternative model of abstraction (the Active Principle Model) that overcomes the standard objections to abstractionism and expands our view of what an abstractionist theory might look like. I contend that this alternative model of abstraction has been invisible in plain sight, in Aquinas’s references to the mind’s abstractive mechanism as an “intellectual light.” Such language is not metaphorical but rather technical, signaling that intellectual abstraction is to be modeled on (...)
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  49. Imagination and the Soul - Body Problem in Arabic Philosophy.Thérèse-Anne Druart - 1983 - Analecta Husserliana 16:327.
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  50.  89
    Parry in Paris: Structuralism, Historical Linguistics, and the Oral Theory.Thérèse Vedet - 2005 - Classical Antiquity 24 (2):257-284.
    This paper investigates the origins of the Oral Theory as formulated by Milman Parry in Paris during the late 1920s by reexamining the scholarship on which it rests. Parry's Oral Theory compared the texts of oral performances in Yugoslavia with the Homeric texts in order to shed light on the presumed oral origins of the latter. His work integrated the work of the linguist and Indo-Europeanist Antoine Meillet, the linguist and scholar of oral poetics Matthias Murko, and the anthropologists Lucien (...)
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