Search results for 'Inez Myin-Germeys' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Inez Myin-Germeys & Erik Myin (2004). Getting Real About Experience. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (6):801-802.score: 290.0
    The idea that experience is essentially subjective rather than of the real world is paradoxical and deeply flawed. The external world is, much more than a mere constraint, essential to meaningfully describe experience and neural activity. This is illustrated by an analysis of the phenomenology of veridical perception and by the study of experience in psychopathology by the Experience Sampling Method (ESM).
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  2. Ed Cooke & Erik Myin (2011). Is Trilled Smell Possible? How the Structure of Olfaction Determines the Phenomenology of Smell. Journal of Consciousness Studies 18 (11-12):59-95.score: 30.0
    Smell 'sensations' are among the most mysterious of conscious experiences, and have been cited in defense of the thesis that the character of perceptual experience is independent of the physical events that seem to give rise to it. Here we review the scientific literature on olfaction, and we argue that olfaction has a distinctive profile in relation to the other modalities, on four counts: in the physical nature of the stimulus, in the sensorimotor interactions that characterize its use, in the (...)
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  3. Erik Myin (2011). Radical Embodied Cognitive Science. Philosophical Psychology 25 (2):295 - 299.score: 30.0
    Philosophical Psychology, Volume 25, Issue 2, Page 295-299, April 2012.
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  4. J. Kevin O'Regan, Erik Myin & Alva Noë (2006). Skill, Corporality and Alerting Capacity in an Account of Sensory Consciousness. In Steven Laureys (ed.), Boundaries of Consciousness. Elsevier.score: 30.0
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  5. Axel Cleeremans & Erik Myin (1999). A Short Review of Consciousness in Action by Susan Hurley. Revue Internationale de Philosophie 3:455-458.score: 30.0
    Consider Susan Hurley's depiction of mainstream views of the mind: "The mind is a kind of sandwich, and cognition is the filling" (p. 401). This particular sandwich (with perception as the bottom loaf and action as the top loaf) tastes foul to Hurley, who devotes most of "Consciousness in Action" to a systematic and sometimes extraordinarily detailed critique of what has otherwise been dubbed "classical" models of the mind. This critique then provides the basis for her alternative proposal, in which (...)
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  6. Erik Myin & Daniel D. Hutto (2009). Enacting is Enough. Psyche 15 (1):24-30.score: 30.0
    In the action-space account of color, an emphasis is laid on implicit knowledge when it comes to experience, and explanatory ambitions are expressed. If the knowledge claims are interpreted in a strong way, the action-space account becomes a form of conservative enactivism, which is a kind of cognitivism. Only if the knowledge claims are weakly interpreted, the action space-account can be seen as a distinctive form of enactivism, but then all reductive explanatory ambitions must be abandoned.
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  7. J. Kevin O'Regan, Erik Myin & No (2005). Sensory Consciousness Explained (Better) in Terms of 'Corporality' and 'Alerting Capacity'. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (4):369-387.score: 30.0
    How could neural processes be associated with phenomenal consciousness? We present a way to answer this question by taking the counterintuitive stance that the sensory feel of an experience is not a thing that happens to us, but a thing we do: a skill we exercise. By additionally noting that sensory systems possess two important, objectively measurable properties, corporality and alerting capacity, we are able to explain why sensory experience possesses a sensory feel, but thinking and other mental processes do (...)
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  8. Johan Veldeman & E. Myin (2008). Las Meninas and the Illusion of Illusionism. Journal of Consciousness Studies 15 (9):124-130.score: 30.0
    There is a popular view on depiction which holds that convincingly realistic paintings depict their subjects through evoking in the spectator the illusion of seeing these very subjects face to face. There is, as it were, an exact 'match' between the visual experience of seeing something in a picture and the corresponding visual experience one would entertain if one were to stand in front of the real thing. This view, which we shall call 'illusionism', supports the widespread assumption that some (...)
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  9. Erik Myin, Towards an Analytic Phenomenology: The Concepts Of.score: 30.0
    In this paper, we present an account of phenomenal consciousness. Phenomenal consciousness is experience, and the problem of phenomenal consciousness is to explain how physical processes?behavioral, neural, computational?can produce experience. Numerous thinkers have argued that phenomenal consciousness cannot be explained in functional, neural or information-processing terms (e.g. Block 1990, 1994; Chalmers 1996). Different arguments have been put forward. For example, it has been argued that two individuals could be exactly alike in functional/computational/behavioral measures, but differ in the character of their (...)
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  10. Kevin J. O'Regan, Erik Myin & No (2001). Toward an Analytic Phenomenology: The Concepts of "Bodiliness" and "Grabbiness". In A. Carsetti (ed.), Seeing and Thinking. Reflections on Kanizsa's Studies in Visual Cognition. Kluwer.score: 30.0
    In this paper, we present an account of phenomenal con- sciousness. Phenomenal consciousness is experience, and the _problem _of phenomenal consciousness is to explain how physical processes.
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  11. J. Kevin O'Regan, Erik Myin & No (2005). Sensory Consciousness Explained (Better) in Terms of "Corporality" and "Alerting Capacity". Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4:369-385.score: 30.0
    How could neural processes be associated with phenomenal consciousness? We present a way to answer this question by taking the counterintuitive stance that the sensory feel of an experience is not a thing that happens to us, but a thing we do: a skill we exercise. By additionally noting that sensory systems possess two important, objectively measurable properties, corporality and alerting capacity, we are able to explain why sensory experience possesses a sensory feel, but thinking and other mental processes do (...)
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  12. Malika Auvray & Erik Myin (2009). Perception With Compensatory Devices: From Sensory Substitution to Sensorimotor Extension. Cognitive Science 33:1036–1058.score: 30.0
    Sensory substitution devices provide through an unusual sensory modality (the substituting modality, e.g., audition) access to features of the world that are normally accessed through another sensory modality (the substituted modality, e.g., vision). In this article, we address the question of which sensory modality the acquired perception belongs to. We have recourse to the four traditional criteria that have been used to define sensory modalities: sensory organ, stimuli, properties, and qualitative experience (Grice, 1962), to which we have added the criteria (...)
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  13. Erik Myin (2001). Color and the Duplication Assumption. Synthese 129 (1):61-77.score: 30.0
    Susan Hurley has attacked the ''Duplication Assumption'', the assumption thatcreatures with exactly the same internal states could function exactly alike inenvironments that are systematically distorted. She argues that the dynamicalinterdependence of action and perception is highly problematic for the DuplicationAssumption when it involves spatial states and capacities, whereas no such problemsarise when it involves color states and capacities. I will try to establish that theDuplication Assumption makes even less sense for lightness than for some ofthe spatial cases. This is due (...)
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  14. Erik Myin, Sensory Consciousness Explained (Better) in Terms of 'Corporality' and 'Alerting Capacity'.score: 30.0
    How could neural processes be associated with phenomenal consciousness? We present a way to answer this question by taking the counterintuitive stance that the sensory feel of an experience is not a thing that happens to us, but a thing we do: a skill we exercise. By additionally noting that sensory systems possess two important, objectively measurable properties, corporality and alerting capacity, we are able to explain why sensory experience possesses a sensory feel, but thinking and other mental processes do (...)
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  15. Erik Myin & Sonja Smets (2002). Could Dancing Be Coupled Oscillation? – The Interactive Approach to Linguistic Communication and Dynamical Systems Theory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (5):634-635.score: 30.0
    Although we applaud the interactivist approach to language and communication taken in the target article, we notice that Shanker & King (S&K) give little attention to the theoretical frameworks developed by dynamical system theorists. We point out how the dynamical idea of causality, viewed as multidirectional across multiple scales of organization, could further strengthen the position taken in the target article.
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  16. Erik Myin (2000). Direct Self-Consciousness. [REVIEW] Psycoloquy.score: 30.0
    One can distinguish the descriptive view of self-consciousness from the philosophical framework of the theory of nonconceptual content. Propositional attitudes can be ascribed without commitment to the existence of internal states that bear different species of content. The descriptive view can be coupled to this alternative view.
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  17. Erik Myin & Johan Veldeman (2007). Yesterday Life, Tomorrow Consciousness?: The Quest for Consciousness: A Neurobiological Approach, Christof Koch . Englewood, CO: Roberts, 2004, (429 Pp; $45.00 Hbk; ISBN 0974707708). [REVIEW] Biological Theory 2 (4):424-427.score: 30.0
  18. Erik Myin (1999). Beyond Intrinsicness and Dazzling Blacks. Brain and Behavioral Sciences 22 (6):964-965.score: 30.0
    Palmer's target article is surely one of the most scientifically detailed and knowledgeable treatments of spectrum inversion ever. Unfortunately, it is built on a very shaky philosophical foundation, the notion of the "intrinsic". In the article's ontology, there are two kinds of properties of mental states, intrinsic properties and relational properties. The whole point of the article is that these aspects of experience are mutually exclusive: the intrinsic is nonrelational and the relational is nonintrinsic.
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  19. Erik Myin (1998). Trading in Form for Content and Taking the Sting Out of the Mind-Body Problem. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (6):766-766.score: 30.0
    Analytical isomorphism is an instance of the demand for a transparent relation between vehicle and content, which is central to the mind-body problem. One can abandon transparency without begging the question with regard to the mind-body problem.
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  20. Erik Myin (2001). Fragmentation, Coherence, and the Perception/Action Divide. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (2):231-231.score: 30.0
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  21. Erik Myin (2003). An Account of Color Without a Subject? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (1):42-43.score: 30.0
    While color realism is endorsed, Byrne & Hilbert's (B&H's) case for it stretches the notion of “physical property” beyond acceptable bounds. It is argued that a satisfactory account of color should do much more to respond to antirealist intuitions that flow from the specificity of color experience, and a pointer to an approach that does so is provided.
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  22. Jan Degenaar & Erik Myin (forthcoming). The Structure of Color Experience and the Existence of Surface Colors. Philosophical Psychology:1-17.score: 30.0
    Color experience is structured. Some ?unique? colors (red, green, yellow, and blue) appear as ?pure,? or containing no trace of any other color. Others can be considered as a mixture of these colors, or as ?binary colors.? According to a widespread assumption, this unique/binary structure of color experience is to be explained in terms of neurophysiological structuring (e.g., by opponent processes) and has no genuine explanatory basis in the physical stimulus. The argument from structure builds on these assumptions to argue (...)
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  23. Erik Myin (2001). Editorial Introduction. Synthese 129 (1).score: 30.0
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  24. Peter De Graef & Filip Germeys (2003). Reading the Scene: Application of E-Z Reader to Object and Scene Perception. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (4):479-480.score: 30.0
    We discuss five basic principles of E-Z Reader in terms of their potential for models of eye-movement control in object and scene perception. We identify several obstacles which may hinder the extrapolation of the E-Z Reader principles to nonreading tasks, yet find that sufficient similarities remain to justify using E-Z Reader as a guide for modeling eye-movement control in object and scene perception.
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  25. Peter De Graef, Karl Verfaillie, Filip Germeys, Veerle Gysen & Caroline Van Eccelpoel (2001). Trans-Saccadic Representation Makes Your Porsche Go Places. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (5):981-982.score: 30.0
    To eliminate the leap of faith required to explain how visual consciousness arises from visual representation, O'Regan & Noë focus on the sensorimotor interaction with the outside world and ban internal representations from their account of vision. We argue that evidence for transsaccadic representations necessitates a central position for an internal, on-line stimulus rendition in any adequate theory of vision.
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  26. Erik Myin (2001). Constrained Inversions of Sensations. Philosophica (Belgium) 68 (2):31-40.score: 30.0
    Inverted sensation arguments such as the inverted spectrum thought experiment are often criticized for relying on an unconstrained notion of 'qualia'. In reply to this criticism, 'qualia-free' arguments for inversion have been proposed, in which only physical changes happen: inversions in the world, such as the replacement of surface colors by their complements, and a rewiring of peripheral input cables to more central areas in the nervous system. I show why such constrained inversion arguments won't work. The first problem is (...)
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  27. Erik Myin & Lars De Nul (2006). Feelings and Objects. In Richard Menary (ed.), Radical Enactivism: Intentionality, Phenomenology and Narrative: Focus on the Philosophy of Daniel D. Hutto.score: 30.0
  28. Erik Myin (1998). Holism, Functionalism and Visual Awareness. Communication and Cognition 31 (1):3-19.score: 30.0
     
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  29. Erik Myin & J. Kevin O'Regan (2002). Perceptual Consciousness, Access to Modality and Skill Theories: A Way to Naturalize Phenomenology? Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (1):27-45.score: 30.0
  30. Erik Myin (2004). Peer Commentary on Are There Neural Correlates of Consciousness: Quining Kinds of Content: The Primacy of Experience. Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (1):72-77.score: 30.0
  31. Erik Myin (1993). Some Problems for Fodor's Theory of Content. Philosophica 50 (2):101-122.score: 30.0
  32. Jonathan Webber (2011). There Is Something About Inez. Think (27).score: 9.0
    Hell is other people. This miserable-sounding soundbite, the moment of revelation in Jean- Paul Sartre’s shortest play, must be the most quoted line of twentieth-century philosophy. Not even Jacques Derrida’s claim that ‘there is nothing beyond the text’, fondly cherished in some regions of academia, has anything like the cultural reach of what is often taken to be the quintessential Sartrean slogan. And the analytic tradition hardly abounds in snappy lines: meaning just ain’t in the head, to be is to (...)
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  33. H. J. Easterling (1970). A Festschrift for Ernst Kapp Ernst Kapp: Ausgewählte Schriften. Herausgegeben von Hans Und Inez Diller. Pp. 337. Berlin: De Gruyter, 1968. Cloth, DM. 78. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 20 (02):160-161.score: 9.0
  34. J. M. C. Toynbee (1957). Romane … Dis Te Minorem Quod Geris, Imperas Inez Scott Ryberg: Rites of the State Religion in Roman Art. Pp. Xvi+227; 67 Plates. Rome: American Academy in Rome, 1955. Paper. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 7 (01):52-54.score: 9.0
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  35. W. B. Anderson (1928). The Grand Style in the Satires of Juvenal. By Inez Gertrude Scott. Smith College Classical Studies, No. 8. Pp. Ii + 118. Northampton, Mass., 1927. 75 Cents. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 42 (01):43-.score: 9.0
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  36. O. L. Richmond (1941). Ware Surviving From Early Rome Inez Scott Ryberg: An Archaeological Record of Rome From the Seventh to the Second Century B.C. Part I: Pp. Xiv+222. Part II: Map, 54 Plates, and Pp. 223–247 (General Index). (Studies and Documents, Edited by K. And S. Lake, XIII.) London: Christophers (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press), 1940. Cloth, 35s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 55 (02):95-96.score: 9.0
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  37. T. A. Sinclair (1935). Hesiod Inez Sellschopp: Stilistische Untersuchungen Zu Hesiod. Pp. 125. Hamburg (Printed by O. Schneider of Mainz), 1934. Paper. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 49 (02):60-61.score: 9.0
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  38. Jose Luis Bermudez (2000). The Cognitive Neuroscience of Primitive Self-Consciousness. Psycoloquy 11 (35).score: 3.0
    Myin, Erik (2000) Direct Self-Consciousness (2)Bermúdez, José Luis (2000) Concepts and the Priority Principle (10)Bermúdez, José Luis (2000) Circularity, "I"-Thoughts and the Linguistic Requirement for Concept Possession (11)Meeks, Roblin R. (2000) Withholding Immunity: Misidentification, Misrepresentation, and Autonomous Nonconceptual Proprioceptive First-Person Content (12)Newen, Albert (2001) Kinds of Self-Consciousness (13)Bermudez, Jose Luis (2000) Direct Self-Consciousness (4)Bermudez, Jose Luis (2000) Prelinguistic Self-Consciousness (5)Gallese, Vittorio (2000) The Brain and the Self: Reviewing the Neuroscientific Evidence (6)Bermudez, Jose Luis (2000) The Cognitive Neuroscience of Primitive Self-Consciousness (...)
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  39. Mirko Farina (forthcoming). Neither Touch nor Vision: Sensory Substitution as Artificial Synaesthesia? Biology and Philosophy:1-17.score: 3.0
    Block (2003) and Prinz (2006) have defended the idea that SSD perception remains in the substituting modality (auditory or tactile). Hurley and Noë (2003) instead argued that after substantial training with the device, the perceptual experience that the SSD user enjoys undergoes a change, switching from tactile/auditory to visual. This debate has unfolded in something like a stalemate where, I will argue, it has become difficult to determine whether the perception acquired through the coupling with an SSD remains in the (...)
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  40. Evan Thompson (2005). Sensorimotor Subjectivity and the Enactive Approach to Experience. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (4):407-427.score: 3.0
    The enactive approach offers a distinctive view of how mental life relates to bodily activity at three levels: bodily self-regulation, sensorimotor coupling, and intersubjective in- teraction. This paper concentrates on the second level of sensorimotor coupling. An account is given of how the subjectively lived body and the living body of the organism are related (the body-body problem) via dynamic sensorimotor activity, and it is shown how this account helps to bridge the explanatory gap between consciousness and the brain. Arguments (...)
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  41. Z. E. E. der & Inez de Beaufort (2011). Preconception Care: A Parenting Protocol. A Moral Inquiry Into the Responsibilities of Future Parents Towards Their Future Children. Bioethics 25 (8):451-457.score: 3.0
    In the Netherlands fertility doctors increasingly formulate protocols, which oblige patients to quit their unhealthy lifestyle before they are admitted to IVF procedures. We argue that moral arguments could justify parenting protocols that concern all future parents. In the first part we argue that want-to-be parents have moral responsibilities towards their future children to prevent them from harm by diminishing or eliminating risk factors before as well as during the pregnancy. This is because of the future children's potential to become (...)
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  42. Inez de Beaufort (2007). The View From Before. American Journal of Bioethics 7 (4):57 – 58.score: 3.0
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  43. Wim Dekkers, Inez Uerz & Jean-Pierre Wils (2005). Living Well with End Stage Renal Disease: Patients' Narratives Interpreted From a Virtue Perspective. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 8 (5):485 - 506.score: 3.0
    Over the last few decades there has been a revival of interest in virtue ethics, with the emphasis on the virtuous caregiver. This paper deals with the ‘virtuous patient’, specifically the patient with End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD). We believe that a virtue approach provides insights not available to current methods of studying coping styles and coping strategies. Data are derived from seven semi-structured in-depth interviews. The transcripts of the interviews were subjected to an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). The focus (...)
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  44. Nate McCaughtry & Inez Rovegno (2001). Meaning and Movement: Exploring the Deep Connections to Education. Studies in Philosophy and Education 20 (6):489-505.score: 3.0
    Many in education suggest that to have studentsadopt healthy and active lifestyles, then theymust be offered meaning rich physical activityexperiences. This paper adds to thisconversation in two ways. First, this paperadds depth and richness to traditionalconceptualizations of the meaning in movement.In doing so, we interrogate the physical,cognitive and affective meaning that studentsmay derive from participation in movement.Second, this paper examines the role ofphysical activity in theme-based, integratedcurriculum. We highlight how physical activitycan be incorporated into theme-based units insubstantial and non-trivial ways.
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  45. Anna E. Westra, Jan M. Wit, Rám N. Sukhai & Inez D. de Beaufort (2011). Regulating “Higher Risk, No Direct Benefit” Studies in Minors. American Journal of Bioethics 11 (6):29 - 31.score: 3.0
    The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 6, Page 29-31, June 2011.
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  46. Jennie Stuart (2012). Hands Off Not an Option! [Book Review]. Australian Humanist, The (105):17.score: 3.0
    Stuart, Jennie Review(s) of: Hands off not an option! The reminiscence museum mirror of a humanistic care philosophy, by Professor Dr Hans Marcel Becker assisted by Inez van den Dobbelsteen- Becker and Topsy Ros. Eburon Academic Publishers, Delft, 2011 272 pp.
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  47. Laura Inez Deavenport Barge (2009). Exploring Worldviews in Literature: From William Wordsworth to Edward Albee. Abilene Christian University Press.score: 3.0
    Numinous spaces in British literature from William Wordsworth to Samuel Beckett -- Jesus figures in American literature from Ralph Waldo Emerson to Edward Albee -- Using Bakhtin's definitions to discover ethical voices in Solzhenitsyn and Tolstoy -- René Girard's categories of scapegoats in literature of the American South -- Hopkins's metaphysics of nature as sacred disclosure -- The book of job as mirrored in Hopkins's metaphysics -- Beckett's mythos of the absence of God.
     
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  48. Vivienne Myine (1965). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] British Journal of Aesthetics 5 (4).score: 1.0
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