Results for 'coming-to-be'

969 found
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  1.  62
    Coming to Be.Daniel A. Dombrowski - 2012 - Philosophy and Theology 24 (2):255-273.
    What does it mean for an individual (a one) to come to be? This question has been close to the center of attention throughout the history of metaphysics. St. Thomas Aquinas’s contributions to a defensible response to this question (in terms of esse) are well documented. Not as well known are the responses to this question offered in the past decade by two learned Jesuit Thomists who have also been heavily influenced by the process thought of Alfred North Whitehead: James (...)
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  2.  13
    Coming to Be: Toward a Thomistic-Whiteheadian Metaphysics of Becoming.James W. Felt - 2000 - State University of New York Press.
    Synthesizes Thomistic and Whiteheadian metaphysics.
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  3. Coming to Be: Toward a Thomisrìc-Whiteheadian Metaphysics of Becoming.James W. Felt - 2002 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 64 (3):602-604.
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  4.  16
    The coming-to-be of Hansen’s method.William Harper & Curtis Wilson - 2014 - Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
    This article by Curtis Wilson is an account of the origin of Hansen’s powerful systematic method for finding contributions of higher order perturbations in celestial mechanics. Hansen’s method was developed in the course of improving on Laplace’s treatment of the mutual perturbations of Jupiter and Saturn. This method, an entirely new way of doing celestial mechanics when it first appeared, later made possible the successful treatment of the complicated motions of our moon (see Wilson 2010). In this paper Wilson gives (...)
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  5.  9
    Coming To Be and Passing Away.Peter Harvey - 2001 - Buddhist Studies Review 18 (2):183-215.
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  6.  27
    Coming to Be.Stanisław Ziemiański - 1970 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 10 (1):55-56.
    The fifth volume of the Universal Encyclopaedia of Philosophy [Powszechna Encyklopedia Filozofii] has been edited in September 2004 by the St. Thomas Aquinas Society in Poland under the auspices of the Department of Metaphysics at the Catholic University in Lublin. The grand volume of 934 pages contains entries beginning with the letters Iq-J-Ko. The Universal Encyclopaedia of Philosophy [UEP] has been out since 2000 in Lublin. It is the first philosophical encyclopaedia in the whole history of Polish academic activity, and (...)
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  7.  21
    Aristotle's Chemistry: On Coming to Be and Passing Away Meteorology 1.1–3, 4.1–12. Aristotle & C. D. C. Reeve - 2023 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    This new translation of _On Coming to Be and Passing Away _and_ Meteorology 1 and 4_ fits seamlessly with the other volumes in the New Hackett Aristotle Series, enabling Anglophone readers to study these works in a way previously not possible. The Introduction describes the book that lies ahead, explaining what it is about, what it is trying to do, how it goes about doing it, and what sort of audience it presupposes. Sequentially numbered, cross-referenced endnotes provide the information (...)
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  8.  47
    Whatever Comes to be has a Cause of its Coming to be: A Thomist Defense of the Principle of Sufficient Reason.Mark Nowacki - unknown
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  9. Whatever comes to be has a cause of its coming to be: A thomist defense of the principle of sufficient reason.R. Nowacki - 1998 - The Thomist 62 (2):291-302.
  10.  43
    Coming to Be. [REVIEW]W. Norris Clarke - 2002 - Process Studies 31 (1):183-185.
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  11.  42
    Knowledge in the Historical Perspective of Coming-To-Be and Passing-Away.Erdoğan Yıldırım - 2018 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 17 (50):3-16.
    Since the last decades of the 20th century the meaning and content of knowledge has dramatically changed. This necessitates adopting a historical perspective in ap­proa­ching the questions of knowledge. But so far all the efforts of putting knowledge in a historical perspective since Hegel’s historization of Spirit either suffer from the limitations of the presupposition of the One or fail to ground the historicity of knowledge on the history of coming-to-be and passing-away. Moving from Heidegger’s ‘history of Being’ toward (...)
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  12.  50
    How Did We Come to Be Such as We Are and Not Otherwise?Rocco Rubini - 2012 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 33 (2):403-436.
  13.  94
    How Nature Comes to be Thought: Schelling's Paradox and the Problem of Location.Iain Hamilton Grant - 2013 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 44 (1):25-44.
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  14. On Aristotle. On Coming-to-Be and Penshing 1.1 — 5.John Philoponus, C. Williams & Sylvia Berryman - 2001 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 63 (1):169-170.
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  15.  23
    Aristotle on the Cause of Being and of Coming to Be.Sebastian Weiner - 2017 - Journal of Philosophical Investigations at University of Tabriz 11 (21):217-232.
    This paper considers Aristotle’s distinction between the cause of being and the cause of coming to be. It is intended to show that Aristotle is able to unify both kinds of causes on the basis of the idea that a thing’s substance is its end. He is not confused about the cause of being and of coming to be, as it might seem in several passages. The paper’s focus is on Metaphysics Zeta 17. In contrast to David Charles’ (...)
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  16.  9
    Aristotle on Coming-to-Be and Passing-Away: Some Comments.J. H. Waszink & W. J. Verdenius - 1946 - Brill.
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  17.  24
    ‘We have come to be destroyed’: The ‘extraordinary’ child in science fiction cinema in early Cold War Britain.Laura Tisdall - 2021 - History of the Human Sciences 34 (5):8-31.
    Depictions of children in British science fiction and horror films in the early 1960s introduced a new but dominant trope: the ‘extraordinary’ child. Extraordinary children, I suggest, are disturbing because they violate expected developmental norms, drawing on discourses from both the ‘psy’ sciences and early neuroscience. This post-war trope has been considered by film and literature scholars in the past five years, but this existing work tends to present the extraordinary child as an American phenomenon, and links these depictions to (...)
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  18. Aristotle’s Resolution of the Aporia about Coming-To-Be in Physics I 8.Gabriela Rossi - 2017 - Eirene 53 (1):247-271.
    In Physica I,8 Aristotle endeavors to show that a long-term Eleatic puzzle about coming-to-be can be resolved by appealing to his own ontological principles of change (substratum, privation, and form). In this paper, I posit that the key to Aristotle’s resolution lies in the introduction of aspectual distinctions within numerical unities. These distinctions within the terminus a quo and the terminus as quem of coming-to-be made it possible for Aristotle to maintain, while answering the puzzle, that there is (...)
     
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  19. Aristotle: On Coming-to-Be and Passing-Away (Dc Generatione et Corruptione). Some Comments with Reference to Byzantine Commentators.C. Niarchos - 1989 - Filosofia 19:298-340.
     
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  20. How did Locke nearly come to be a Deist?M. Dokulil - 2005 - Filosoficky Casopis 53 (1).
  21.  9
    Persons: Spiritedness and coming to be.David Treanor - 2010 - Appraisal 8 (2).
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  22.  87
    Coming to Be without a Cause.T. D. Sullivan - 1990 - Philosophy 65 (253):261 - 270.
    Quentin Smith contends that modern science provides enough evidence ‘to justify the belief that the universe began to exist without being caused to do so.’ There was a time when such a claim would have been dismissed because it conflicts with a principle absolutely fundamental to all human thought, including science itself. As Thomas Reid expressed the matter: That neither existence, nor any mode of existence, can begin without an efficient cause is a principle that appears very early in the (...)
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  23.  42
    Plato on Coming-to-Be: A Midway Path between Eleaticism and Creationism.Florian Marion - forthcoming - Plato Journal.
    The Parmenides is the locus of Plato’s theoria motus abstracti (that is, abstract kinematics) for it is here that Plato gives a mereological and locational analysis of motion (First Deduction: 138b7-139b3) and discusses the famous puzzle of the instant of change (Second Deduction: 156c1-157b5). But there is another scholarly very neglected text from this dialogue that provides us with great insights about Plato’s theory of change: the Fifth Deduction (160b3-163b6) and its answer to the Eleatic argument against coming-to-be. I (...)
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  24. Does God Exist or Does He Come to Be?Stacey Ake - 2009 - Philosophy and Theology 21 (1-2):155-164.
    The following is an examination of two possible interpretations of the meaning of the “existence” of God. By using two different Danishterms—the word existence (Existents) and the concept “coming to be” (Tilværelse)—found in Kierkegaard’s writing, I hope to show that two very different theological outcomes arise depending upon which idea or term is used. Moreover, I posit which of these twooutcomes is closer in nature to the more famously used German term Dasein.
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  25.  38
    Coordination and Coming to Be.Lisa Leininger - 2021 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 101 (1):213-227.
    ABSTRACT The following are purported to be common-sense features of the world: time’s passage, the unreality of the future, the existence of ‘genuine’ change. All of these common-sense features are accommodated by accepting the phenomenon of absolute becoming, a view of temporal passage in which the unreal future comes into existence in the present. Indeed, most philosophers who lay claim to common-sense views of time accept absolute becoming. I argue that absolute becoming has deeply unintuitive consequences. Specifically, proponents of absolute (...)
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  26.  5
    To be like children in a world come of age: Some considerations related to a christian theology of childhood.Artem Serebryakov - 2023 - Sociology of Power 35 (4):48-84.
    The article presents an analysis of the main aspects of the Christian theology of childhood based on the works of outstanding theologians of the 20th century: Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Karl Rahner, Paul Tillich, and Jurgen Moltmann. The preoccupation with understanding the figure of the child in Western Christianity is motivated by several factors: the undeniable importance of theology as a tradition of interpreting the existential constraints of the human condition, the deep influence of Christian teaching on secular (...)
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  27.  33
    Coming-to-Be Is for the Sake of Being.Thomas A. Blackson - 1991 - Modern Schoolman 69 (1):1-15.
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  28. A Critic on two models about the world coming to be.Zohre Tavaziani & Sahar Kavandi - 2008 - Journal of Philosophical Investigations at University of Tabriz 2 (203):1-29.
    This article has attempted to clarify two of the models that depict the system in which the Universe came into existence. Within the domain of Islamic thought, Avicennian and Ishraqi models are more popular than others and deserve adequate attention. Although the very relationship between God and the Universe, after the question of “God', is the next most crucial question to philosophers, specifically to divine philosophers, especially where it concerns the occurrence rather than mere manipulation of such relationship, the authors (...)
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  29.  64
    Aristotle: On Coming-to-be and Passing-away. Some Comments. By W. J. Verdenius and J. H. Waszink. (Philosophia Antiqua, volume i.) Pp. 89. Leiden: Brill, 1946. Paper. [REVIEW]A. L. Peck - 1950 - The Classical Review 64 (3-4):154-154.
  30.  30
    Aristotle, On Coming-to-be and Passing-Away. [REVIEW]Lincoln Reis - 1947 - Philosophical Review 56 (2):220-221.
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  31. Anscombe, Zygotes, and Coming‐to‐be.Guy Rohrbaugh - 2013 - Noûs 48 (4):699-717.
    In some quarters, it is held that Anscombe proved that a zygote is not a human being on the basis of an argument involving the possibility of identical twins, but there is surprisingly little agreement on what her argument is supposed to be. I criticize several extant interpretations, both as interpretations of Anscombe and as self-standing arguments, and offer a different understanding of her conclusion on which the non-specificity of creation processes and their goals is at issue.
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  32. Dreaming to be human come true: essays in honour of Paul Parathazham.Nishant Alphonse Irudayadason (ed.) - 2023 - Pune: Jnana Deepa & Christian World Imprints, Delhi.
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  33. How Did There Come To Be Two Kinds of Coercion?Scott Anderson - 2008 - In David A. Reidy & Walter J. Riker, Coercion and the State. Springer Verlag. pp. 17-29.
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  34.  35
    Women’s Power To Be Loud: The Authority of the Discourse and Authority of the Text in Mary Dorcey’s Irish Lesbian Poetic Manifesto “Come Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear”.Katarzyna Poloczek - 2011 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 1 (1):153-169.
    Women's Power To Be Loud: The Authority of the Discourse and Authority of the Text in Mary Dorcey's Irish Lesbian Poetic Manifesto "Come Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear" The following article aims to examine Mary Dorcey's poem "Come Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear," included in the 1991 volume Moving into the Space Cleared by Our Mothers. Apart from being a well-known and critically acclaimed Irish poet and fiction writer, the author of the poem has been, from its beginnings, (...)
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  35.  76
    Can Everything Come to Be Without a Cause?Quentin Smith - 1994 - Dialogue 33 (2):313.
    Lane Craig, for example, asserts, that it is "intuitively obvious." 1 This approach is not promising since this principle is not self evident. A principle p is self evident if and only if everybody who understands p believes p, but many philosophers and cosmologists not only believe it possible.
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  36.  12
    What It Means to Be an American Today: Democracy “To Come”.Katerina Reed-Tsocha - 2011 - Culture and Dialogue 1 (2):37-61.
    This essay addresses the question of what it means to be an American today. In the first half, I respond to Samuel P. Huntington’s claim that America’s national identity is fundamentally Anglo-Protestant by rehearsing Jacques Derrida’s argument that the founding of a nation whose self-understanding is based on the idea of a social contract, such as the United States, implies an “originating violence” governed by extralegal considerations. In the second half, I discuss the “melting pot” and “salad bowl” concepts of (...)
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  37. Aristotle on Coming-to-be and Passing-away. A Revised Text with Introduction and Commentary.H. H. Joachim - 1923 - Mind 32 (125):67-79.
  38. Aristotle. On coming-to-be and passing-away. Some comments.W. J. Verdenius & J. H. Waszink - 1949 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 54 (2):221-221.
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  39. How does a living animal come to be from semen? The puzzles of Aristotle's Generation of animals II 1-3.Sophia M. Connell - 2025 - In David Lefebvre, The science of life in Aristotle and the early Peripatos. Boston: Brill.
     
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  40.  9
    Coming to Our Senses: Affect and an Order of Things for Global Culture.Dierdra Reber - 2016 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    _Coming to Our Senses_ positions affect, or feeling, as our new cultural compass, ordering the parameters and possibilities of what can be known. From Facebook "likes" to Coca-Cola "loves," from "emotional intelligence" in business to "emotional contagion" in social media, affect has become the primary catalyst of global culture, displacing reason as the dominant force guiding global culture. Through examples of feeling in the books, film, music, advertising, cultural criticism, and political discourse of the United States and Latin America, Reber (...)
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  41. Coming-to-Know as a Way of Coming-to-Be: Aristotle’s De Anima III.5.Michael Baur - 2011 - In Michael Bauer & Robert Wood, Person, Being, and History: Essays in Honor of Kenneth L. Schmitz. pp. 77-102.
    This chapter argues that it is possible to identify, in the coming to be of knowledge, the three elements that Aristotle says are involved in any kind of coming to be whatsoever (viz., matter, form, and the generated composite object). Specifically, it is argued that in this schema the passive intellect (pathetikos nous) corresponds to the matter, the active intellect (poetikos nous) corresponds to the form, and the composite object corresponds to the mind as actually knowing.
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  42.  36
    Coming to Our Senses: A Naturalistic Program for Semantic Localism.Heather J. Gert - 1998 - Philosophical Review 107 (1):123.
    In Coming to Our Senses, Michael Devitt insists that if we are going to argue about what meanings are, we should know why we care. He reasonably observes that unless we agree about this, we are likely to be arguing past one another. The meanings Devitt discusses are token meanings of individual thoughts and utterances. He holds that these meanings are properties, and that we have two purposes for attributing them to thoughts and utterances: to predict and explain a (...)
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  43.  43
    The Loeb Aristotle - Aristotle: On Sophistical Refutations, On Coming-to-be and Passing Away, with an English translation by E. S. Forster; On the Cosmos, with an English translation by D. J. Furley. (Loeb Classical Library.) Pp. viii + 430. London: Heinemann, 1955. Cloth, 15 s. net. [REVIEW]D. A. Russell - 1958 - The Classical Review 8 (01):37-38.
  44.  25
    Curtis Wilson. The Hill-Brown Theory of the Moon's Motion: Its Coming-to-Be and Short-Lived Ascendancy . xiv + 323 pp., illus. New York: Springer, 2010. $149. [REVIEW]Myles Standish - 2011 - Isis 102 (3):547-548.
  45.  19
    Change and contrariety in Aristotle, James Bogen Aristotle says that in all coming to be and passing away things arise from or perish into contraries or into intermediates which lie in between and are derived from contraries (physics 188b21-26, and elsewhere). This paper takes up two questions about this:(1) does Aristotle say enough. [REVIEW]Craven Nussbaum & Rene Lefebvre - 1992 - Phronesis 37 (1).
  46. W. J. Verdenius and J. H. Waszink: "Aristotle. On Coming-To-Be and Passing-Arvay". [REVIEW]M. Soreth - 1951 - Archiv für Philosophie 4 (2):179.
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  47. Aristotle and the Ancient Puzzle about Coming to Be.Timothy Clarke - 2015 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 49:129-150.
  48.  97
    Coming to Our Senses: A Naturalistic Program for Semantic Localism.Michael Devitt - 1995 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Michael Devitt is a distinguished philosopher of language. In this book he takes up one of the most important difficulties that must be faced by philosophical semantics: namely, the threat posed by holism. Three important questions lie at the core of this book: what are the main objectives of semantics; why are they worthwhile; how should we accomplish them? Devitt answers these 'methodological' questions naturalistically and explores what semantic programme arises from the answers. The approach is anti-Cartesian, rejecting the idea (...)
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  49. Deciding to trust, coming to believe.Richard Holton - 1994 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 72 (1):63 – 76.
    Can we decide to trust? Sometimes, yes. And when we do, we need not believe that our trust will be vindicated. This paper is motivated by the need to incorporate these facts into an account of trust. Trust involves reliance; and in addition it requires the taking of a reactive attitude to that reliance. I explain how the states involved here differ from belief. And I explore the limits of our ability to trust. I then turn to the idea of (...)
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  50.  18
    Socrates comes to Wall Street.Thomas White - 2015 - Boston: Pearson.
    For courses in Business Ethics A fresh approach to the assumptions that underlie business practices Two recent events — the 2008 economic meltdown and the ongoing concentration of the nation's wealth in the hands of a very small percentage of the population — have led many people to question a number of basic assumptions about business, corporations, and the workings of contemporary free-market capitalism in a global economy. Written as a dialogue between Socrates and a hypothetical contemporary CEO,Socrates Comes to (...)
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