Review of Karen S. Feldman, Binding Words: Conscience and Rhetoric in Hobbes, Hegel, and Heidegger
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (2) (2007)
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Keith C. Pepperell (1989). Religious Conscience and Civic Conscience in Thomas Hobbes's Civic Philosophy. Educational Theory 39 (1):17-25.
Richard F. Flathman (1998). Quentin Skinner, Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes:Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes. Ethics 108 (4):820-823.
Gabriella Slomp (2007). Kant Against Hobbes: Reasoning and Rhetoric. Journal of Moral Philosophy 4 (2):207-222.
John E. Russon (1991). Selfhood, Conscience, and Dialectic in Hegel'sphenomenology of Spirit. Southern Journal of Philosophy 29 (4):533-550.
Stewart Duncan (2011). Hobbes, Signification, and Insignificant Names. Hobbes Studies 24 (2):158-178.
Tzachi Zamir (2004). The Sense of Smell: Morality and Rhetoric in the Bramhall-Hobbes Controversy. Sophia 43 (2):49-61.
Dominique Weber (2010). Thomas Hobbes's Doctrine of Conscience and Theories of Synderesis in Renaissance England. Hobbes Studies 23 (1):54-71.
Karen S. Feldman (2001). Conscience and the Concealment of Metaphor in Hobbes's Leviathan. Philosophy and Rhetoric 34 (1):21-37.
Karen S. Feldman (2001). Conscience and the Concealment of Metaphor in Hobbes's. Philosophy and Rhetoric 34 (1).
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