Results for 'Michael F. Bernard-Donals'

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  1.  5
    Responding to the sacred: an inquiry into the limits of rhetoric.Michael F. Bernard-Donals & Kyle Jensen (eds.) - 2021 - University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.
    A collection of essays examining the extent to which rhetoric's relation to the sacred is one of ineffability and how our response to the sacred integrates the divine (or the altogether other) into the human order.
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  2.  38
    Mikhail Bakhtin: between phenomenology and marxism.Michael F. Bernard-Donals - 1995 - New York: Cambridge University Pres.
    The language theory of Mikhail Bakhtin does not fall neatly under any single rubric - 'dialogism,' 'marxism,' 'prosaics,' 'authorship' - because the philosophic foundation of his writing rests ambivalently between phenomenology and Marxism. The theoretical tension of these positions creates philosophical impasses in Bakhtin's work, which have been neglected or ignored partly because these impasses are themselves mirrored by the problems of antifoundationalist and materialist tendencies in literary scholarship. In Mikhail Bakhtin: Between Phenomenology and Marxism Michael Bernard-Donals (...)
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  3.  19
    "Difficult Freedom": Levinas, Language, and Politics.Michael F. Bernard-Donals - 2005 - Diacritics 35 (3):62-77.
    Levinas proposed a "politics of suffering" that requires all political actors to be willing to engage in the quotidian world not according to the "natural law" but according to those "rules" that make themselves evident in that engagement itself. Israel, the one place such a politics might be lived, appeared to be a space occupied by a citizenry - after 1948, a large number of whom survived the Holocaust- who understood vulnerability in its most radical form. This essay examines the (...)
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  4.  30
    Review Essay.Gary Saul Morson, Caryl Emerson, Michael F. Bernard-Donals, L. A. Gogotišvili & P. S. Gurevič - 1990 - Studies in East European Thought 49 (4):305-317.
  5.  11
    Academic Freedom and Institutional Violence.Michael Bernard-Donals - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (3-4):380-387.
    ABSTRACT Academic freedom is typically understood as a means of protecting faculty rights against the violence—physical or intellectual—of the state or of the institution’s administration. This article argues that academic freedom may be seen as a form of violence, insofar as it is potentially threatening to the methodological and institutional stasis of colleges and universities.
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  6. Introduction : taking rhetoric to its limits; or, How to respond to a sacred call.Michael Bernard-Donals & Kyle Jensen - 2021 - In Michael F. Bernard-Donals & Kyle Jensen (eds.), Responding to the sacred: an inquiry into the limits of rhetoric. University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.
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  7.  18
    On Violence and Vulnerability in a Pandemic.Michael Bernard-Donals - 2020 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 53 (3):225-231.
    ABSTRACT Pandemics and plagues function rhetorically, by doing violence to the structures of discourse, sociality, hospitality, and mutual engagement that characterize ethical human interaction. They infect us, as rhetorical subjects, and reorient our capacity for engagement. The coronavirus's “novelty” renders it uncertain as to how long it will last or who will be infected next; the near-uniform response to it has been a forced distance of ourselves from others and a displacement from our itineraries and our locations. Through COVID-19 we (...)
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  8.  15
    Divine Cruelty and Rhetorical Violence.Michael Bernard-Donals - 2014 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 47 (4):400-418.
    For the philosopher Emmanuel Levinas, it is the presence of the other that obliges the human to speak. What makes the subject a subject is not only the other’s presence but the compulsion to speak, and that compulsion marks the subject as displaced, called into question. The other—the neighbor, the stranger—makes us responsible and marks the subject as always necessarily in relation, a relation that troubles the subject because while we are compelled to respond, that response inevitably fails to contain, (...)
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  9.  10
    Academic Freedom’s Rhetorical “Gray Zone”.Michael Bernard-Donals - 2022 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 55 (1):90-96.
    ABSTRACT The tension between freedom of speech and academic freedom results from the contradiction between democracy and expertise, resulting in a rhetorical “gray zone” that stymies faculty appeals to due process and constitutional protection. It’s not so much that certain “uncivil” words and utterances cannot be said in this gray zone; it’s that such words, when said, require one’s ejection from the demos. In an examination of the case of Steven Salaita, I’ll show how the tyranny of the demos, in (...)
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  10.  19
    Rhetorical Movement, Vulnerability, and Higher Education.Michael Bernard-Donals - 2019 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 52 (1):1-23.
    In the summer of 2015 the governor of Wisconsin signed an omnibus budget bill that, among other things, removed tenure from state statute—forcing the Board of Regents to rewrite it into board policy documents—and attempted to undermine aspects of shared governance that had been part of life at the university since the founding of the system in the early 1970s. Two years later, the Wisconsin Assembly passed a bill that directed the university to "strive to remain neutral on the public (...)
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  11.  27
    What is talmud? The art of disagreement (review).Michael BernardDonals - 2009 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 44 (3):291-296.
    Is there a distinctly Jewish rhetoric? It's a worthwhile (and difficult) question to answer: with its several thousand-year-old tradition of disquisition, argument, knowledge making, and philosophy, a Jewish rhetoric, whatever it might look like, would have a longer tradition than the Greco-Roman one that has served as the underpinning of most of what we think of as Western philosophy. The Jewish and Hellenic worlds shared trade routes, cultural space, and texts beginning in the first millennium BCE, and in the thousand (...)
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  12.  11
    1. Front Matter Front Matter (pp. i-iv).David Randall, Paul Stob, Scott Aikin, Beth Innocenti & Michael BernardDonals - 2011 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 44 (3):291.
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  13.  17
    Virtual identity crisis: The phenomenology of Lockean selfhood in the “Age of Disruption”.Michael F. Deckard & Stephen Williamson - 2020 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 20 (1):e1887573.
    From the end of the seventeenth century to now well into the 21st, John Locke’s theory of personal identity has been foundational in the field of philosophy and psychology. Here we suggest that there are two fundamental threads intertwined in Lockean identity, the flux of perception-thought-action (i.e. continuity of consciousness) and memory. Using Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Paul Ricoeur, and Bernard Steigler as guides we will see that these threads constitute a phenomenological self (l’ésprit), a lived experience of our identity that (...)
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  14.  33
    Book Review Section 6. [REVIEW]Michael S. Littleford, William Hare, Dale L. Brubaker, Louise M. Berman, Lawrence M. Knolle, Raymond C. Carleton, James La Point, Edmonia W. Davidson, Joseph Michel, William H. Boyer, Carol Ann Moore, Walter Doyle, Paul Saettler, John P. Driscoll, Lane F. Birkel, Emma C. Johnson, Bernard Cleveland, Patricia J. R. Dahl, J. M. Lucas, Albert Montare & Lennart L. Kopra - 1974 - Educational Studies 5 (4):292-309.
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  15.  26
    Species are real biological entities.Michael F. Claridge - 2010 - In Francisco José Ayala & Robert Arp (eds.), Contemporary debates in philosophy of biology. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 91--109.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Early Species Concepts—Linnaeus Biological Species Concepts Phylogenetic Species Concepts Species Concepts and Speciation Conclusions Postscript: Counterpoint References.
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  16.  38
    The Dynamism of Desire: Bernard J. F. Lonergan, S. J. on The Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius of Loyola. By James L. Connor. [REVIEW]Michael McGuckian - 2009 - Heythrop Journal 50 (3):536-537.
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  17.  26
    Full-time objections to part-time objects.Michael F. Patton - 1991 - Philosophical Papers 20 (3):173-181.
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  18. Lonergan and Hegel on Some Aspects of Knowing.Michael Baur - 2014 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (3):535-558.
    Twentieth-century Canadian philosopher Bernard J. F. Lonergan and nineteenth-century German philosopher G. W. F. Hegel regarded themselves as Aristotelian thinkers. As Aristotelians, both affirmed that human knowing is essentially a matter of knowing by identity: in the act of knowing, the knower and the known are formally identical. In spite of their common Aristotelian background and their common commitment to the idea that human knowing is knowing by identity, Lonergan and Hegel also differed on a number of crucial points. (...)
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  19.  12
    Michael Servetus, Humanist and MartyrJohn F. FultonHunted Heretic. The Life and Death of Michael Servetus, 1511-1553Roland H. BaintonMichael ServetusCharles Donald O'Malley. [REVIEW]I. Bernard Cohen - 1954 - Isis 45 (3):313-314.
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  20.  6
    The Origins of Lonergan's Notion of the Dialectic of History: A Study of Lonergan's Early Writings on History.Michael Shute - 1993 - University Press of Amer.
    This study slowly spirals through a group of early manuscripts by Lonergan, returning again and again to the significant benchmarks that constitute Longergan's notion of the dialectic of history.
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  21. Knowledge and Control: New Directions for the Sociology of Education.Michael F. D. Young - 1972 - British Journal of Educational Studies 20 (2):247.
  22.  62
    Toward a heideggerean ethos for radical environmentalism.Michael F. Zimmerman - 1983 - Environmental Ethics 5 (2):99-131.
    Recently several philosophers have argued that environmental reform movements cannot halt humankind’s destruction of the biosphere because they still operate within the anthropocentric humanism that forms the root of the ecological crisis. According to “radical” environmentalists, disaster can be averted only if we adopt a nonanthropocentric understanding of reality that teaches us to live harmoniouslyon the Earth. Martin Heidegger agrees that humanism leads human beings beyond their proper limits while forcing other beings beyond their limits as weIl. The doctrine of (...)
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  23. The Origins of Lonergan's Notion of the Dialectic of History: A Study of Lonergan's Early Writings on History, 1933-1938.Michael R. Shute - 1990 - Dissertation, Regis College (Canada)
     
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  24.  80
    The enigmatic reality of time: Aristotle, Plotinus, and today.Michael F. Wagner - 2008 - Boston: Brill.
    Part I: Dimensions of time's enigma -- Is time real? -- Eleaticism, temporality, and time -- The makings of a temporal universe -- Pastness and futurity -- Synchronicity and synchronicity -- Temporal pace and measurement -- Presentness or the present -- Aristotle's real account of time -- Parmenidean time and the impossible now -- Cosmic motion and the speed of time -- Time as the motion of the cosmos -- Time as the cosmos itself -- Time as motion and all (...)
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  25.  28
    Spatial perspective-taking in conversation.Michael F. Schober - 1993 - Cognition 47 (1):1-24.
  26. Toward a Heideggerean Ethos for Radical Environmentalism.Michael F. Zimmerman - 1983 - Environmental Ethics 5 (2):99-131.
    Recently several philosophers have argued that environmental reform movements cannot halt humankind’s destruction of the biosphere because they still operate within the anthropocentric humanism that forms the root of the ecological crisis. According to “radical” environmentalists, disaster can be averted only if we adopt a nonanthropocentric understanding of reality that teaches us to live harmoniouslyon the Earth. Martin Heidegger agrees that humanism leads human beings beyond their proper limits while forcing other beings beyond their limits as weIl. The doctrine of (...)
     
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  27.  66
    Beyond free will: The embodied emergence of conscious agency.Michael F. Mascolo & Eeva Kallio - 2019 - Philosophical Psychology 32 (4):437-462.
    ABSTRACTIs it possible to reconcile the concept of conscious agency with the view that humans are biological creatures subject to material causality? The problem of conscious agency is complicated by the tendency to attribute autonomous powers of control to conscious processes. In this paper, we offer an embodied process model of conscious agency. We begin with the concept of embodied emergence – the idea that psychological processes are higher-order biological processes, albeit ones that exhibit emergent properties. Although consciousness, experience, and (...)
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  28.  16
    Curriculum Change: Limits and Possibilities.Michael F. D. Young - 1975 - Educational Studies 1 (2):129-138.
    * This paper was originally given as one of the Doris Lee Lectures on February 20th 1975, at the University of London Institute of Education.
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  29.  12
    Hans‐Jörg Rheinberger as a Philosopher of Time.Michael F. Zimmermann - 2022 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 45 (3):434-451.
    Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Volume 45, Issue 3, Page 434-451, September 2022.
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  30.  8
    Hans‐Jörg Rheinberger as a Philosopher of Time.Michael F. Zimmermann - 2022 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 45 (3):434-451.
    Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Volume 45, Issue 3, Page 434-451, September 2022.
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  31.  5
    The Critique of Natural Rights and the Search for a Non-Anthropocentric Basis for Moral Behavior.Michael F. Zimmerman - 1985 - Journal of Value Inquiry 19 (1):43.
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  32.  5
    The cartoon introduction to philosophy.Michael F. Patton - 2015 - New York: Hill and Wang, a division of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Edited by Kevin Cannon.
    An illustrated introduction to the major subjects of Western philosophy, guided by Heraclitus.
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  33.  10
    The Question of God: An Introduction and Sourcebook.Michael F. Palmer - 2001 - New York: Routledge.
    This important textbook introduces the six great arguments for the existence of God, as found in a wealth of primary sources from classic and contemporary texts. It requires no specialist knowledge of philosophy, and is ideally suited to students and teachers at school or university level. Sections include: * The Ontological Argument * The Cosmological Argument * The Argument from Design * The Argument from Miracles * The Moral Argument * The Pragmatic Argument. Additional features include: * revision questions * (...)
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  34.  29
    The model theory of ordered differential fields.Michael F. Singer - 1978 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 43 (1):82-91.
  35.  28
    Sex or no sex: Evolutionary adaptation occurs regardless.Michael F. Seidl & Bart P. H. J. Thomma - 2014 - Bioessays 36 (4):335-345.
    All species continuously evolve to adapt to changing environments. The genetic variation that fosters such adaptation is caused by a plethora of mechanisms, including meiotic recombination that generates novel allelic combinations in the progeny of two parental lineages. However, a considerable number of eukaryotic species, including many fungi, do not have an apparent sexual cycle and are consequently thought to be limited in their evolutionary potential. As such organisms are expected to have reduced capability to eliminate deleterious mutations, they are (...)
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  36.  9
    Epidemic Inequities: Social and Racial Inequality in the History of Pandemics.Michael F. McGovern & Keith A. Wailoo - 2023 - Isis 114 (S1):206-246.
    The historiography of pandemics and inequality can be characterized by two distinct but often overlapping traditions. One centers structural and political analysis, the other a race-critical approach to the production of human difference. This bibliographic essay reviews historical scholarship in these traditions spanning the past hundred years, with a focus on Anglophone literature in the history of medicine in the United States over the past half century. Early writing on the history of epidemics celebrated the conquest of disease through the (...)
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  37.  17
    Supposition-Theory and the Problem of Universals.Michael F. Wagner - 1981 - Franciscan Studies 41 (1):385-414.
  38.  8
    Autarchy and interest.Michael F. McDonald - 1978 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 56 (2):109 – 125.
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  39.  9
    Genes go digital: Mendelian Inheritance in Man and the genealogy of electronic publishing in biomedicine.Michael F. McGovern - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-19.
    Mendelian Inheritance in Man, a computerized catalogue of human genetic disorders authored and maintained by cardiologist and medical genetics pioneer Victor A. McKusick, played a major part in demarcating between a novel biomedical science and the eugenic projects of racial betterment which existed prior to its emergence. Nonetheless, it built upon prior efforts to systematize genetic knowledge tied to individuals and institutions invested in eugenics. By unpacking the process of digitizing a homespun cataloguing project and charting its development into an (...)
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  40.  25
    A History of Modern Japanese Aesthetics.Michael F. Marra - 2001 - University of Hawaii Press.
    This collection of essays constitutes the first history of modern Japanese aesthetics in any language. It introduces readers through lucid and readable translations to works on the philosophy of art written by major Japanese thinkers from the late nineteenth century to the present. Selected from a variety of sources (monographs, journals, catalogues), the essays cover topics related to the study of beauty in art and nature. The translations are organized into four parts. The first, "The Introduction of Aesthetics," traces the (...)
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  41.  29
    Jazz improvisers' shared understanding: a case study.Michael F. Schober & Neta Spiro - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
  42.  8
    Bridging the Fact/Value Divide in Wisdom Research: The Development of Expertise in Wise Decision-Making.Michael F. Mascolo & Iris Stammberger - forthcoming - Topoi:1-13.
    What are the relations among wisdom, virtue, and expertise? Wisdom can be defined broadly as knowledge about how to live well. At the least, the task of living well requires some conception of what it means for a life to be _good_ as well as the knowledge and skill needed to actualize the good in one’s spheres of life. While this idea is easy to assert, it is difficult to examine empirically. This is because the scientific study of wisdom immediately (...)
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  43.  13
    Nietzsche's Attitudes Toward the Jews.Michael F. Duffy - 1988 - Journal of the History of Ideas 49 (2):301.
  44.  99
    An Interview with Michael Walzer.Michael F. Shaughnessy & Mitja Sardoc - 2002 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 21 (1):65-75.
    Michael Walzer is currently at the School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, in Princeton, New Jersey. Professor Walzer has written Just and Unjust Wars; The Revolution of the Saints and has edited Toward A Global Civil Society. In this interview, he discusses some of the current concerns about education, political theory and the current state of the art of toleration, and acceptance and accommodation of different racial, ethnic, social and minority groups. He has published extensively and his (...)
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  45. On japanese things and words: An answer to Heidegger's question.Michael F. Marra - 2004 - Philosophy East and West 54 (4):555-568.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:On Japanese Things and Words:An Answer to Heidegger's QuestionMichael F. MarraIt has been over thirty years since my high school teacher of philosophy, Professor Dino Dezzani, recommended a book from which to begin my study of philosophy: Martin Heidegger's (1889-1976) Unterwegs zur Sprache (On the way to language [1959]). Evidently he was aware of my interest in literature and thought that Heidegger's discussion of words, things, and poetic language (...)
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  46.  10
    Professional Ethics in Three Professions during the Holocaust.Michael F. Polgar - 2019 - Conatus 4 (2):207.
    Modern scholars and bioethicists continue to learn from the Holocaust. Scholarship and history show that the authoritarian Nazi state limited and steered the development and power of professions and professional ethics during the Holocaust. Eliminationist anti-Semitism drove German professions and many professionals to join in policies and programs of mass deportation and ultimately genocidal mass murder, while also excluding many professionals from paid work. For many physicians and other medical professionals, humane and truly ethical practices were limited by constrained professional (...)
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  47.  19
    When Do Misunderstandings Matter? Evidence From Survey Interviews About Smoking.Michael F. Schober, Anna L. Suessbrick & Frederick G. Conrad - 2018 - Topics in Cognitive Science 10 (2):452-484.
    Schober et al. describe two studies on how survey interview respondents misunderstand interview questions. After answering a survey, participants are given standardized definitions of the questions they have just answered. Even apparently simple questions such as “Have you smoked more than 100 cigarettes?” are interpreted very differently by participants. Moreover, clarifying the meaning of the definitions with the interviewer does not always help resolve the miscommunication.
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  48. Adventure beyond knowledge.Michael F. Andrews - 1974 - New York,: J. Norton Publishers.
     
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  49.  36
    Edith Stein and Max Scheler: Ethics, Empathy, and the Constitution of the Acting Person.Michael F. Andrews - 2012 - Quaestiones Disputatae 3 (1):33-47.
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  50.  3
    How (not) to find God in all things: Derrida, Levinas, and st. Ignatius of loyola on learning how to pray for the impossible.Michael F. Andrews - 2005 - In Bruce Ellis Benson & Norman Wirzba (eds.), The phenomenology of prayer. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 195-208.
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