Results for 'Susan Taubes'

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  1.  2
    Die Korrespondenz mit Jacob Taubes 1950-1951.Susan Taubes - 2011 - München: Wilhelm Fink. Edited by Christina Pareigis & Almut Hüfler.
  2.  1
    Die Korrespondenz mit Jacob Taubes 1952.Susan Taubes - 2014 - München: Wilhelm Fink. Edited by Jacob Taubes & Christina Pareigis.
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  3. Letter from Susan Taubes to Jacob Taubes, April 4, 1952.Susan Taubes - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 150.
     
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  4.  35
    Ethical and legal risks associated with archival research.Daniel O. Taube & Susan Burkhardt - 1997 - Ethics and Behavior 7 (1):59 – 67.
    Mental health facilities and practitioners commonly permit researchers to have direct access to patients' records for the purposes of archival research without the informed consent of patient-participants. Typically these researchers have access to all information in such records as long as they agree to maintain confidentiality and remove any identifying data from subsequent research reports. Changes in the American Psychological Association's Ethical Principles (American Psychological Association, 1992) raise ethical and legal issues that require consideration by practitioners, researchers, and facility Institutional (...)
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  5.  37
    The Nature of Tragedy.Susan Taubes - 1953 - Review of Metaphysics 7 (2):193 - 206.
    Because tragedy offers a total interpretation of life, the tragic view may be considered as an alternative to the mythical, philosophical or religious interpretation. In Greece, tragedy superseded ritual as a form of communal cultic expression. Plato defined the philosopher's task in opposition to that of the tragic poet and recognized a rival philosophy in the tragic view. The awareness of the incompatibility of tragic and pious attitudes is acute in religious thought where a tragic interpretation of theological doctrines is (...)
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  6.  6
    Pʻeministuri sakitʻxavi: debatebi kulturis, kanonisa da sekʻsualobis šesaxeb = Feminist anthology: debates about culture, law, and sexuality.Tʻamar Cʻxadaże, Etʻuna Noġaideli, Adrienne Rich, Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Nadine Taub, Susan Moller Okin, Uma Narayan & Cynthia H. Enloe (eds.) - 2018 - Tʻbilisi: Heinrich Böll Stiftung South Caucasus.
  7.  27
    Book Review:Tragedy and the Paradox of the Fortunate Fall. Herbert Weisinger. [REVIEW]Susan Taubes - 1954 - Ethics 64 (4):321-.
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  8.  35
    Letter from Susan Taubes to Jacob Taubes April 4, 1952.Christina Pareigis - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (150):111-114.
    Foreword This letter is part of a correspondence belonging to the estate of Susan Taubes. It documents the private and intellectual relations between her and Jacob Taubes, whom she married in 1949. The two spent most of the period until 1952 geographically separated from each other, a situation due to their changing work and study circumstances. Susan spent the first half of 1952 in Paris, preparing her dissertation at the Sorbonne; Jacob took up Gershom Scholem's invitation (...)
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  9.  10
    Brokenness of Being and Errancy of Ontological Untruth: Susan Taubes’s Criticism of Heidegger’s Seinsdenken.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2024 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 32 (1):83-132.
    In this study, I examine Susan Taubes’s criticism of Heidegger’s Seinsdenken that pivots around her contention that he absolutized the nothingness of being in a manner that is analogous to but yet significantly different than the role assigned to the Godhead on the part of many mystical visionaries. The common denominator is in Heidegger’s insistence on being to the neglect of fully engaging with the rhythms of life. As a consequence, there is no purchase on the chaotic, which (...)
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  10.  5
    Nocturnal seeing: hopelessness of hope and philosophical gnosis in Susan Taubes, Gillian Rose, and Edith Wyschogrod.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2024 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    In this erudite new work, Elliot R. Wolfson explores philosophical gnosis in the writings of Susan Taubes, Gillian Rose, and Edith Wyschogrod. The juxtaposition of these three extraordinary, albeit relatively neglected, philosophers provides a prism through which Wolfson scrutinizes the interplay of ethics, politics, and theology. The bond that ties together the diverse and multifaceted worldviews promulgated by Taubes, Rose, and Wyschogrod is the mutual recognition of the need to enunciate a response to the calamities of the (...)
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  11.  13
    Letter from Susan Taubes to Jacob Taubes April 4, 1952.C. Pareigis - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (150):111-114.
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  12.  16
    The Philosophical Pathos of Susan Taubes: Between Nihilism and Hope.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2023 - Stanford Studies in Jewish Mys.
    Introduction : memory and heeding the murmuring of the Israelites -- Ghosts of Judaism and the serpent devouring its own tale -- Zionism and the sacramental danger of nationalism -- Gnosis and the covert theology of antitheology : Heidegger, apocalypticism, and Gnosticism -- Tragedy, mystical atheism, and the apophaticism of Simone Weil -- Facing the faceless : poetic truth, temporal oblivion, and the silence of death.
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  13.  54
    Susan Taubes: Die Korrespondenz mit Jacob Taubes 1950-1951, hg. und komm. v. Christina Pareigis, unter Mitarb. v. Almut Hüfler , München: Fink 2011. [REVIEW]Helen Thein - 2014 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 66 (2):205-207.
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  14.  64
    Searching for the Absent God: Susan Taubes's Negative Theology.Christina Pareigis - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (150):97-110.
    “I love you dear child and it is very hard to be reduced to a reines Bewusstsein [pure consciousness].”1 Susan Taubes wrote this sentence in Paris on February 18, 1952, to her husband Jacob Taubes in Jerusalem. Following ten months together with him in the holy city, she had been living for six weeks in one of the most prominent centers of secular modernism. From now on she would live alone. Her arrival in Paris formed the sequel (...)
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  15.  34
    Das Rätsel um Susan Taubes – eine Spurensuche.Helen Thein - 2007 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 59 (4):371-380.
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  16.  72
    Between the Philosophy of Religion and Cultural History: Susan Taubes on the Birth of Tragedy and the Negative Theology of Modernity.Sigrid Weigel - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (150):115-135.
    The caesura of tragedy, more precisely tragedy as the scene of a caesura upon which an interruption occurs in the relation between divine grounds and human will, stands at the center of Susan Taubes's confrontation with tragedy. Moving beyond an explication of generic history, she analyzed the “Nature of Tragedy” (1953) as a phenomenon emerging from a cultural-historical threshold situation, illuminating tragedy's origins in the framework of her approach to ritual, religion, and philosophy. In respect to the history (...)
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  17.  9
    Searching for the Absent God: Susan Taubes's Negative Theology.C. Pareigis - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (150):97-110.
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  18.  6
    Between the Philosophy of Religion and Cultural History: Susan Taubes on the Birth of Tragedy and the Negative Theology of Modernity.S. Weigel - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (150):115-135.
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  19.  7
    History of Error: Jacob Taubes’s Apocalyptic Interpretation of Martin Heidegger’s Vom Wesen der Wahrheit.Willem Styfhals - 2024 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 32 (1):60-82.
    Through a close reading of the opening pages of Occidental Eschatology, this paper analyzes how Jacob Taubes relied on Martin Heidegger’s philosophy to understand the nature of eschatology. Taubes implemented Heidegger’s notions of truth, error, and history from his seminal essay “On the Essence of Truth,” (mis)interpreting the essay by ascribing an eschatological meaning to it. This surprisingly allowed him to find in Heidegger a model to come to terms with the Jewish experience of history. In order to (...)
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  20. Gnosis and the Covert Theology of Antitheology : Heidegger, Apocalypticism, and Gnosticism in Susan and Jacob Taubes.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2022 - In Herbert Kopp-Oberstebrink & Hartmut von Sass (eds.), Depeche mode: Jacob Taubes between politics, philosophy, and religion. Boston: Brill.
     
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  21. Moral saints.Susan Wolf - 1982 - Journal of Philosophy 79 (8):419-439.
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  22.  8
    The Logika of the Judaizers: a fifteenth-century Ruthenian translation from Hebrew: critical edition of the Slavic texts presented alongside their Hebrew sources = ha-Logiḳah shel ha-mityahadim: targum Ruteni ben ha-meʼah ha-15 min ha-ʻIvrit: mahadurah biḳortit shel ha-ṭeḳsṭim ha-Slaviyim be-liṿui meḳorotehem ha-ʻIvriyim.Moshe Taube (ed.) - 2016 - Jerusalem: Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.
    In the latter part of the fifteenth century, a Jewish translator, working together with a Slavic amanuensis, translated into the East Slavic language of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania three medieval Hebrew translations of Arabic philosophical texts: the Logical Terminology, a short work on logic attributed to Maimonides (but probably by a different medieval Jewish author); and two sections of the Muslim theologian Al-Ghazali's famous Intentions of the Philosophers. Highlighting the unexpected role played by Jewish translators as agents of cultural (...)
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  23.  8
    La palabra y la errancia: (para una filosofía de la in-existencia).Emmanuel Taub - 2021 - C.A.B.A.: Paidós.
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  24.  3
    Ancient Greek and Roman science: a very short introduction.Liba Taub - 2023 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Very Short Introductions: Brilliant, Sharp, Inspiring Ancient Greece is often considered to be the birthplace of science and medicine, and the explanation of natural phenomena without recourse to supernatural causes. These early natural philosophers - lovers of wisdom concerning nature - sought to explain the order and composition of the world, and how we come to know it. They were particularly interested in what exists and how it is ordered: ontology and cosmology. They were also concerned with how we come (...)
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  25.  28
    Philosophical Essays: Ancient, Mediaeval and Modern.Jacob Taubes - 1954 - Philosophy 29 (110):272-274.
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  26.  15
    Philosophical Essays: Ancient, Mediaeval and Modern.Jacob Taubes - 1953 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 14 (2):267-270.
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    The Less Visible Side of Transhumanism Is Dangerously Un-radical.Susan B. Levin - 2024 - Techné Research in Philosophy and Technology 28 (1):99-131.
    According to transhumanists who urge the radical enhancement of human beings, humanity’s top priority should be engineering “posthumans,” whose features would include agelessness. Increasingly, transhumanism is critiqued on foundational grounds rather than based largely on anticipated results of its implementation, such as rising social inequality. This expansion is crucial but insufficient because, despite its radical aim, transhumanism reflects beliefs and attitudes that are evident in the broader culture. With a focus on the yearning to eliminate aging, I consider four of (...)
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  28.  10
    Semantics for counting and measuring.Susan Deborah Rothstein - 2017 - New York: University of Cambridge Press.
    The book is an investigation of the semantics of numericals, counting and measuring, and its connection to the mass/count distinction from a theoretical and crosslinguistic perspective. It reviews some recent major linguistic results in these topics, and presents the author's new research including in-depth case studies of a number of typologically unrelated languages.
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  29.  4
    The Urban Waterscape of Early Modern Palermo.Elizabeth Kassler-Taub - 2023 - Convivium 10 (1):26-45.
    This article considers the design and ideation of early modern Palermo’s urban waterscape, which traced the contours of a hybrid fluvial-maritime system surviving from antiquity. Framing the city’s port as a repository of collective memory and a site of self-construction, it questions how interventions undertaken between the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries - culminating in the ill-fated construction of the Molo Nuovo - recalibrated the interface between city and sea, and with it, Palermo’s identity. The port anchored the city’s cultural and (...)
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  30. Sefer ha-Haḳdamot mi-sifre Ḳol Menaḥem.Menaḥem Mendel Taub - 1985 - Bene Beraḳ: Bet Ḳaliv.
     
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  31. How good is the linguistic analogy?Susan Dwyer - 2005 - In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence & Stephen P. Stich (eds.), The Innate Mind: Structure and Contents. New York, US: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 145--167.
    A nativist moral psychology, modeled on the successes of theoretical linguistics, provides the best framework for explaining the acquisition of moral capacities and the diversity of moral judgment across the species. After a brief presentation of a poverty of the moral stimulus argument, this chapter sketches a view according to which a so-called Universal Moral Grammar provides a set of parameterizable principles whose specific values are set by the child's environment, resulting in the acquisition of a moral idiolect. The principles (...)
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  32.  6
    Spinoza on the Constitution of Animal Species.Susan James - 2021 - In Yitzhak Y. Melamed (ed.), A Companion to Spinoza. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. pp. 365–374.
    Nature, as Spinoza conceives of it, contains individual things or finite modes, each with its own essence. Although we humans classify individuals into kinds, Spinoza is adamant that the resulting types or species “are nothing”. Despite Spinoza's nominalism, his mature works posit differences between animal kinds that are discoverable by reasoning and available to philosophical understanding. Spinoza's world is fluid in the sense that the powers of individuals are in flux, changing as they interact with one another. In Spinoza's view, (...)
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  33.  28
    Preserving nature? Ecology, tourism and other themes in the national parks.Liba Taub - 2006 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 37 (3):602-611.
  34.  8
    Left is not woke.Susan Neiman - 2023 - Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
    If you're woke, you're left. If you're left, you're woke. We blur the terms, assuming that if you're one you must be the other. That, Susan Neiman argues, is a dangerous mistake. The intellectual roots and resources of wokeism conflict with ideas that have guided the left for more than 200 years: a commitment to universalism, a firm distinction between justice and power, and a belief in the possibility of progress. Without these ideas, Neiman argues, they will continue to (...)
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  35.  80
    Understanding Love: Philosophy, Film, and Fiction.Susan R. Wolf & Christopher Grau (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    A unique and interdisciplinary collection in which scholars from Philosophy join those from Film Studies, English, and Comparative Literature to explore the nature and limits of love through in-depth reflection on particular works of literature and film.
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  36.  32
    Memetics does provide a useful way of understanding cultural evolution.Susan Blackmore - 2010 - In Francisco José Ayala & Robert Arp (eds.), Contemporary debates in philosophy of biology. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 255--272.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Origins of the Meme Meme Do Memes Exist? Trouble with Analogies and Units What is a Meme? A New Replicator or Culture on a Leash? Do Memes have Memotypes? Old Genes, New Memes Religions, Cults, and Viral Information Human Evolution Consciousness, Creativity, and the Nature of Self Conclusion Postscript: Counterpoint References.
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  37.  9
    6 Roads to Hell.Susan Neiman - 2005 - In Predrag Cicovacki (ed.), Destined for evil?: the twentieth-century responses. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press. pp. 91-110.
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  38.  11
    Research handbook on law and emotion.Susan A. Bandes, Jody Lyneé Madeira, Kathryn Temple & Emily Kidd White (eds.) - 2021 - Northampton, Massachusetts, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing.
    This illuminating Research Handbook analyses the role that emotions play and ought to play in legal reasoning and practice, rejecting the simplistic distinction between reason and emotion. International expert contributors take multidisciplinary approaches, drawing on neuroscience, philosophy, literary theory, psychology, history, and sociology to examine the role of a wide range of emotions across a variety of legal contexts. Chapters consider how the rich tapestry of human emotion impacts legal actors, influences legal doctrine, and shapes the dynamics of legal institutions. (...)
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  39.  8
    A Poetics of Editing.Susan L. Greenberg - 2018 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This original and authoritative book offers a first-ever attempt to define a poetics of the editing arts. It proposes a new field of editing studies, in which the 'ideal editor' can be understood in relation to the long-theorised author and reader. The book's premise is that editing, like other forms of 'making', is mostly invisible and can only be brought into full view through a comparative analysis that includes the insights of practitioners. The argument, laid down in careful layers, is (...)
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  40. The relationship between philosophy and its history.Susan James - 2023 - In Richard Bourke & Quentin Skinner (eds.), History in the humanities and social sciences. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  41. Jung's "living mystery" of creativity, symbols and the unconscious in writing.Susan Rowland - 2016 - In Kathryn Wood Madden (ed.), The unconscious roots of creativity. Asheville, North Carolina: Chiron Publications.
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  42.  13
    10 Boundaries and (Constructive) Interaction.Susan Oyama - 2006 - In Eva M. Neumann-Held, Christoph Rehmann-Sutter, Barbara Herrnstein Smith & E. Roy Weintraub (eds.), Genes in Development: Re-reading the Molecular Paradigm. Duke University Press. pp. 272-289.
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  43. Banality Reconsidered.Susan Neiman - 2010 - In Seyla Benhabib (ed.), Politics in dark times: encounters with Hannah Arendt. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 305--315.
  44. The language of thought.Susan Schneider - 2009 - In Sarah Robins, John Francis Symons & Paco Calvo (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Psychology. New York, NY: Routledge.
  45.  15
    Antisthenes of Athens: texts, translations, and commentary.Susan H. Prince - 2015 - Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Edited by Antisthenes.
    Antisthenes was famous in antiquity for his studies of Homer's poems, his affiliation with Gorgias and the sophistic movement, his pure Attic writing style, and his inspiration of Diogenes of Sinope, who founded the Cynic philosophical movement. Antisthenes stands at two of the greatest turning points in ancient intellectual history: from pre-Socraticism to Socraticism, and from classical Athens to the Hellenistic period. Antisthenes' works form the path to a better understanding of the intellectual culture of Athens that shaped Plato and (...)
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  46.  16
    The Levinasian teacher.Susan Bailey - 2023 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Recent years have seen educationalists turning to Emmanuel Levinas when considering the relationship between ethics and education. While it is true that Levinas never speaks of ethics in relation to the practice of classroom education, nonetheless, for Levinas, ethics is a teaching, and learning can only take place in the presence of the Other. This book considers how, within the constraints of the Irish primary school education system, teachers can develop a Levinasian approach to teaching, that affords both them and (...)
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  47. Ignorance is power, as well as joy" : trying to manage information in turn-of-the century America.Susan J. Matt & Luke Fernandez - 2022 - In Renate Dürr (ed.), Threatened knowledge: practices of knowing and ignoring from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  48.  10
    Experimentum Medietatis.Jacob Taubes - 1953 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 13 (3):432-433.
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  49. Protective cloaks, enveloping baby carriers : embodiment and ritual practice in Angkola Batak Ulos textiles.Susan Rodgers - 2023 - In Urmila Mohan (ed.), The efficacy of intimacy and belief in worldmaking practices. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York: Routledge.
     
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  50.  7
    Quantification and precision: a brief look at some ancient accounts.Arthur Harris & Liba Taub - 2024 - Annals of Science 81 (1):10-29.
    We explore the extent to which ancient Greek authors formulated concepts that approximate or encompass our modern notions of precision and accuracy. First, we focus on estimates and measurements of geographic features, astronomical times and positions, and weight. These raise further questions about whether the quantities reported were measured, estimated, or rounded. While ancient sources discuss the use of instruments, it is not always clear that the aim was to achieve what we would today regard as ‘precision’. Next, we briefly (...)
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