Search results for 'Russ Marion' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Russ Marion & Mary Uhl-Bien (2003). Complexity Theory and Al-Qaeda: Examining Complex Leadership. Emergence 5 (1):54-76.score: 120.0
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  2. Russ Marion & Josh Bacon (1999). Organizational Extinction and Complex Systems. Emergence 1 (4):71-96.score: 120.0
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  3. Jean-Luc Marion (2007). The Erotic Phenomenon. University of Chicago Press.score: 60.0
    While humanists have pondered the subject of love to the point of obsessiveness, philosophers have steadfastly ignored it. One might wonder whether the discipline of philosophy even recognizes love. The word philosophy means “love of wisdom,” but the absence of love from philosophical discourse is curiously glaring. So where did the love go? In The Erotic Phenomenon, Jean-Luc Marion asks this fundamental question of philosophy, while reviving inquiry into the concept of love itself. Marion begins his profound and (...)
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  4. Jean-Luc Marion (1991/2012). God Without Being: Hors-Texte. University of Chicago Press.score: 60.0
    Jean-Luc Marion advances a controversial argument for a God free of all categories of Being. Taking a characteristically postmodern stance, Marion challenges a fundamental premise of both metaphysics and neo-Thomist theology: that God, before all else, must be. Rather, he locates a "God without Being" in the realm of agape, of Christian charity or love. This volume, the first translation into English of the work of this leading Catholic philosopher, offers a contemporary perspective on the nature of God. (...)
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  5. Jean-Luc Marion (2002). In Excess: Studies of Saturated Phenomena. Fordham University Press.score: 60.0
    In the third book in the trilogy that includes Reduction and Givenness and Being Given. Marion renews his argument for a phenomenology of givenness, with penetrating analyses of the phenomena of event, idol, flesh, and icon. Turning explicitly to hermeneutical dimensions of the debate, Marion masterfully draws together issues emerging from his close reading of Descartes and Pascal, Husserl and Heidegger, Levinas and Henry. Concluding with a revised version of his response to Derrida, In the Name: How to (...)
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  6. Jean-Luc Marion (1999). On Descartes' Metaphysical Prism: The Constitution and the Limits of Onto-Theo-Logy in Cartesian Thought. University of Chicago Press.score: 60.0
    Does Descartes belong to metaphysics? What do we mean when we say "metaphysics"? These questions form the point of departure for Jean-Luc Marion's groundbreaking study of Cartesian thought. Analyses of Descartes' notion of the ego and his idea of God show that if Descartes represents the fullest example of metaphysics, he no less transgresses its limits. Writing as philosopher and historian of philosophy, Marion uses Heidegger's concept of metaphysics to interpret the Cartesian corpus--an interpretation strangely omitted from Heidegger's (...)
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  7. Mathieu Marion (1998). Wittgenstein, Finitism, and the Foundations of Mathematics. Oxford University Press.score: 60.0
    This pioneering book demonstrates the crucial importance of Wittgenstein's philosophy of mathematics to his philosophy as a whole. Marion traces the development of Wittgenstein's thinking in the context of the mathematical and philosophical work of the times, to make coherent sense of ideas that have too often been misunderstood because they have been presented in a disjointed and incomplete way. In particular, he illuminates the work of the neglected 'transitional period' between the Tractatus and the Investigations.
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  8. Jean-Luc Marion (2007). On the Ego and on God: Further Cartesian Questions. Fordham University Press.score: 60.0
    This book highlights the same topics in the philosophy of Descartes.In Part I (On the Ego), Marion explores the alterity of the Cartesian ego, arguing that it ...
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  9. Jean-Luc Marion (2001). The Idol and Distance: Five Studies. Fordham University Press.score: 60.0
    Marked sharply by its time and place (Paris in the 1970s), this early theological text by Jean-Luc Marion nevertheless maintains a strikingly deep resonance with his most recent, groundbreaking, and ever more widely discussed phenomenology. And while Marion will want to insist on a clear distinction between the theological and phenomenological projects, to read each in light of the other can prove illuminating for both the theological and the philosophical reader - and perhaps above all for the reader (...)
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  10. Jean-Luc Marion (2002). Prolegomena to Charity. Fordham University Press.score: 60.0
    In seven essays that draw from metaphysics, phenomenology, literature, Christological theology, and Biblical exegesis,Marion sketches several prolegomena to a future fuller thinking and saying of love’s paradoxical reasons, exploring evil, freedom, bedazzlement, and the loving gaze; crisis, absence, and knowing.
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  11. Jean-Luc Marion (2002). Being Given: Toward a Phenomenology of Givenness. Stanford University Press.score: 60.0
    Along with Husserl's Ideas and Heidegger's Being and Time, Being Given is one of the classic works of phenomenology in the twentieth century. Through readings of Kant, Husserl, Heidegger, Derrida, and twentieth-century French phenomenology (e.g., Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, and Henry), it ventures a bold and decisive reappraisal of phenomenology and its possibilities. Its author's most original work to date, the book pushes phenomenology to its limits in an attempt to redefine and recover the phenomenological ideal, which the author argues has never (...)
     
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  12. Jean-Luc Marion (2004). The Crossing of the Visible. Stanford University Press.score: 60.0
    Painting, according to Jean-Luc Marion, is a central topic of concern for philosophy, particularly phenomenology. For the question of painting is, at its heart, a question of visibility—of appearance. As such, the painting is a privileged case of the phenomenon; the painting becomes an index for investigating the conditions of appearance—or what Marion describes as “phenomenality” in general. In The Crossing of the Visible, Marion takes up just such a project. The natural outgrowth of his earlier reflections (...)
     
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  13. On-Kwok Lai & John Marchelya (1999). Reviews: The Edge of Organization: Chaos and Complexity Theories of Formal Social Systems, Russ Marion. [REVIEW] Emergence 1 (2):114-119.score: 45.0
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  14. Jean-Luc Marion (1992). Is the Ontological Argument Ontological? The Argument According to Anselm and its Metaphysical Interpretation According to Kant. Journal of the History of Philosophy 30 (2):201-218.score: 30.0
  15. Mathieu Marion (2009). Radical Anti-Realism, Wittgenstein and the Length of Proofs. Synthese 171 (3).score: 30.0
    After sketching an argument for radical anti-realism that does not appeal to human limitations but polynomial-time computability in its definition of feasibility, I revisit an argument by Wittgenstein on the surveyability of proofs, and then examine the consequences of its application to the notion of canonical proof in contemporary proof-theoretical-semantics.
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  16. Mathieu Marion (2003). Wittgenstein and Brouwer. Synthese 137 (1-2):103 - 127.score: 30.0
    In this paper, I present a summary of the philosophical relationship betweenWittgenstein and Brouwer, taking as my point of departure Brouwer's lecture onMarch 10, 1928 in Vienna. I argue that Wittgenstein having at that stage not doneserious philosophical work for years, if one is to understand the impact of thatlecture on him, it is better to compare its content with the remarks on logics andmathematics in the Tractactus. I thus show that Wittgenstein's position, in theTractactus, was already quite close to (...)
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  17. Jean-Luc Marion (1988). “L'interloqué”. Topoi 7 (2):175-180.score: 30.0
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  18. Jean-Luc Marion (2008). The Visible and the Revealed. Fordham University Press.score: 30.0
    The possible and revelation -- The saturated phenomenon -- Metaphysics and phenomenology: a relief for theology -- "Christian philosophy": hermeneutic or heuristic? -- Sketch of a phenomenological concept of the gift -- What cannot be said: Apophasis and the discourse of love -- The banality of saturation -- Faith and reason.
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  19. Mathieu Marion (1995). Wittgenstein and Finitism. Synthese 105 (2):141 - 176.score: 30.0
    In this paper, elementary but hitherto overlooked connections are established between Wittgenstein's remarks on mathematics, written during his transitional period, and free-variable finitism. After giving a brief description of theTractatus Logico-Philosophicus on quantifiers and generality, I present in the first section Wittgenstein's rejection of quantification theory and his account of general arithmetical propositions, to use modern jargon, as claims (as opposed to statements). As in Skolem's primitive recursive arithmetic and Goodstein's equational calculus, Wittgenstein represented generality by the use of free (...)
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  20. Mathieu Marion (2000). Oxford Realism: Knowledge and Perception I. British Journal for the History of Philosophy 8 (2):299 – 338.score: 30.0
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  21. Mathieu Marion, John Cook Wilson. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 30.0
    John Cook Wilson (1849–1915) was Wykeham Professor of Logic at New College, Oxford and the founder of ‘Oxford Realism’, a philosophical movement that flourished at Oxford during the first decades of the 20th century. Although trained as a classicist and a mathematician, his most important contribution was to the theory of knowledge, where he argued that knowledge is factive and not definable in terms of belief, and he criticized ‘hybrid’ and ‘externalist’ accounts. He also argued for direct realism in perception, (...)
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  22. Jeffrey L. Marion, Ben Lawhon, Wade M. Vagias & Peter Newman (2011). Revisiting 'Beyond Leave No Trace'. Ethics, Policy and Environment 14 (2):231 - 237.score: 30.0
    Ethics, Policy & Environment, Volume 14, Issue 2, Page 231-237, June 2011.
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  23. Jean-Luc Marion (2011). The Reason of the Gift. University of Virginia Press.score: 30.0
    The phenomenological origins of the concept of givenness -- Remarks on the origins of Gegebenheit in Heidegger's thought -- Substitution and solicitude: how Levinas re-reads Heidegger -- Sketch of a phenomenological concept of sacrifice.
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  24. Mathieu Marion (2000). Oxford Realism: Knowledge and Perception II. British Journal for the History of Philosophy 8 (3):485 – 519.score: 30.0
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  25. Jean-Luc Marion (1994). The End of the End of Metaphysics. Epoché 2 (2):1-22.score: 30.0
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  26. Mathieu Marion, Cahiers D'ÉPistÉMologie.score: 30.0
    Cette publication, la trois cent vingt-troisième de la série, a été rendue possible grâce à la contribution financière du FQRSC (Fonds québécois de recherche sur la société et la culture).
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  27. Jean-Luc Marion (1979). Fragments Sur l'Idole Et L'Icône. Revue de Métaphysique Et de Morale 84 (4):433 - 445.score: 30.0
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  28. Jean-Luc Marion (2005). Phenomenon and Event. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 26 (1):147-159.score: 30.0
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  29. Jean-Luc Marion (1998). A Note Concerning the Ontological Indifference. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 20 (2/1):25-40.score: 30.0
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  30. Jean-Luc Marion & Wolfgang Röd (1984). Die Cartesianische Onto-Theo-Logie. Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 38 (3):349 - 380.score: 30.0
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  31. Jean-Luc Marion (1987). L'ego Et le Dasein Heidegger Et la “ Destruction ” de Descartes Dans "Sein Und Zeit". Revue de Métaphysique Et de Morale 92 (1):25 - 53.score: 30.0
    Descartes ne joue pas, dans la pensée de Heidegger, un rôle limité à l'interprétation de l'histoire de la philosophie. Lorsque Sein und Zeit entreprend de déterminer le mode d'être propre et irréductible du Dasein, Heidegger doit entrer en confrontation avec certes Husserl, mais surtout, par-delà la « conscience » husserlienne, avec Descartes lui-même. Car l'ennemi mortel du Dasein, cest l'ego du cogito. Dans quelle mesure cette rivalité n'induit-elle pas aussi une similitude? Die Rolle, die Descartes in dem Denken von Heidegger (...)
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  32. Jean-Luc Marion (1991). Réponses à Quelques Questions. Revue de Métaphysique Et de Morale 96 (1):65 - 76.score: 30.0
    Question - Dans Sur le prisme métaphysique de Descartes, vous concluiez par la « destitution » de la métaphysique, ainsi laissée enfin à elle-même, et vous en appeliez à une autre « instance » , un autre ‘ordre’, pour définir la tâche d'élaborer une doctrine de la charité, d'en retracer l'histoire, selon la règle d'une historicité absolument indépendante de l'historialité. Les deux protagonistes emblématiques de cet ouvrage (Pascal contre Descartes) permettaient de comprendre la nature du « saut » ainsi requis (...)
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  33. Mathieu Marion (2004). Critical Studies / Book Reviews. Philosophia Mathematica 12 (3):291-293.score: 30.0
  34. Jean-Luc Marion (2005). From the Other to the Individual. Levinas Studies 1:99-117.score: 30.0
    Being is evil not because it is finite but because it is without limits (TO 51). This extraordinary declaration no doubt marks the rather hidden center of a work (dating from 1946–47) that is seminal, in any case essential, because it constitutes, in the same way as the brilliant 1951 article “Is Ontology Fundamental?” one of the irrevocable decisions that helped Levinas to become what he was: the greatest French philosopher since Bergson and also the first phenomenologist who seriously attempted (...)
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  35. Jean-Luc Marion (1991). Le Sujet En Dernier Appel. Revue de Métaphysique Et de Morale 96 (1):77 - 95.score: 30.0
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  36. Jean-Luc Marion (1993). The Exactitude of the “Ego”. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 67 (4):561-568.score: 30.0
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  37. Gail Marion & Ralph Izard (1986). The Journalist in Life-Saving Situations: Detached Observer or Good Samaritan? Journal of Mass Media Ethics 1 (2):61 – 67.score: 30.0
    This article investigates journalists? attitudes regarding the interface between the craft's commitment to detached observation when covering the news and the perhaps equally compelling drive to assist other human beings in need at the scene of a life?threatening newsworthy incident. Also examined is the journalistic attitude toward the propriety of incorporating relevant ?good Samaritan?; provisions in existing codes of ethics and policy statements as exceptions to the primary goal of detached observation. While journalists generally are in agreement that they have (...)
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  38. Jean-Luc Marion & Arianne Conty (2002). The Unspoken. Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 76:39-56.score: 30.0
    That which we call “negative theology” inspires within us both fascination and unease. We can either challenge all “negative theology” as a language game that is both impractical and contradictory, as many contemporaries do, or we can explore the question in light of the recent arguments of Derrida. The primary thesis in this paper is that we should reject “negative theology” as a descriptor and replace it, following the nomenclature of the Dionysian corpus, with “mystical theology.” In doing this, we (...)
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  39. Jean-Luc Marion (1986). On Descartes' Constitution of Metaphysics. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 11 (1):21-33.score: 30.0
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  40. Mathieu Marion (1996). Wittgenstein Et Son Œuvre Posthume. Dialogue 35 (04):777-.score: 30.0
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  41. Mathieu Marion (2000). Critical Studies / Book Reviews. Philosophia Mathematica 8 (1):291-293.score: 30.0
  42. Jean-Luc Marion (2002). D'autrui à l'individu. Au-delà de l'éthique. Studia Phaenomenologica 2 (1-2):11-30.score: 30.0
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  43. Jean-Luc Marion (2012). Les limites de la phénoménalité. Journal of Philosophical Research 37:61-76.score: 30.0
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  44. Jean-Luc Marion (2008). Remarques sur les origines de la Gegebenheit dans la pensée de Heidegger. Heidegger Studies 24:167-179.score: 30.0
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  45. Jean-Christophe Bardout, Michel Fichant, Jean-Luc Marion, Christophe Bouriau & Olivier Dubouclez (eds.) (2006). Descartes En Kant. Presses Universitaires de France.score: 30.0
     
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  46. David Jones & Michele Marion (eds.) (2013). . Suny Press.score: 30.0
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  47. Sandra Lapointe, Jan Wolenski, Mathieu Marion & Wioletta Miskiewicz (eds.) (2009). The Golden Age of Polish Philosophy: Kazimierz Twardowski's Philosophical Legacy. Springer.score: 30.0
    This volume portrays the Polish or Lvov-Warsaw School, one of the most influential schools in analytic philosophy, which, as discussed in the thorough introduction, presented an alternative working picture of the unity of science.
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  48. Jean-Luc Marion (2011). Cézanne's Certainty. In Jacques Khalip & Robert Mitchell (eds.), Releasing the Image: From Literature to New Media. Stanford University Press.score: 30.0
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  49. Jean-Luc Marion (2009). Granice fenomenalności. Fenomenologia 7:11-28.score: 30.0
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  50. Mathieu Marion (2009). Jogando o bebê junto com a água do banho: Wittgenstein, Goodstein e o cálculo equacional. Dois Pontos 6 (1).score: 30.0
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  51. Jean-Luc Marion (2005). Le Visible Et le Révélé. Cerf.score: 30.0
     
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  52. Jean-Luc Marion (2010). The Care of the Other and Substitution. In Kevin Hart & Michael Alan Signer (eds.), The Exorbitant: Emmanuel Levinas Between Jews and Christians. Fordham University Press.score: 30.0
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  53. Jean-Luc Marion (2010). The Phenomenality of the Sacrament: Being and Givenness. In Bruce Ellis Benson & Norman Wirzba (eds.), Words of Life: New Theological Turns in French Phenomenology. Fordham University Press.score: 30.0
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  54. Matthieu Marion (2011). Wittgenstein on Surveyability of Proofs. In Oskari Kuusela & Marie McGinn (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Wittgenstein. Oup Oxford.score: 30.0
     
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  55. Thomas H. Russ (2010). Sustainability and Design Ethics. Taylor & Francis.score: 30.0
     
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  56. Joanna Russ (1998). What Are We Fighting For?: Sex, Race, Class, and the Future of Feminism. St. Martin's Press.score: 30.0
  57. Jan Wolenski, Sandra Lapointe, Mathieu Marion & Wioletta Miskiewicz (eds.) (2010). The Golden Age of Polish Philosophy. Kaziemierz Twardowski’s Philosophical Legacy. Springer.score: 30.0
     
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  58. Florian Forestier (2012). The Phenomenon and the Transcendental: Jean-Luc Marion, Marc Richir, and the Issue of Phenomenalization. Continental Philosophy Review 45 (3):381-402.score: 18.0
    After reviewing the status of the concept of the phenomenon in Husserl’s phenomenology and the aim of successive attempts to reform, de-formalize, and to widen it, we show the difficulties of a method that, following the example of Jean-Luc Marion’s phenomenology, intends to connect the phenomenon directly to the revelation of an exteriority. We argue that, on the contrary, Marc Richir’s phenomenology, which strives to grasp the phenomenon as nothing-but-phenomenon, is more likely to capture the “meaning” of the phenomenological (...)
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  59. Alia Al-Saji (2005). Review of Iris Marion Young, On Female Body Experience: "Throwing Like a Girl" and Other Essays. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2005 (10).score: 15.0
  60. Christina M. Gschwandtner (2007). The Neighbor and the Infinite: Marion and Levinas on the Encounter Between Self, Human Other, and God. Continental Philosophy Review 40 (3):231-249.score: 12.0
    In this article I examine Jean-Luc Marion's two-fold criticism of Emmanuel Levinas’ philosophy of other and self, namely that Levinas remains unable to overcome ontological difference in Totality and Infinity and does so successfully only with the notion of the appeal in Otherwise than Being and that his account of alterity is ambiguous in failing to distinguish clearly between human and divine other. I outline Levinas’ response to this criticism and then critically examine Marion's own account of subjectivity (...)
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  61. Anselm K. Min (2006). Naming the Unnameable God: Levinas, Derrida, and Marion. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1/3):99 - 116.score: 12.0
    In this essay I present the postmodern phenomenological approach of Levinas, Derrida, and Marion to the problem of naming the unnameable God. For Levinas, God is never experienced directly but only as a third person whose infinity is testified to in the infinity of responsibility to the hungry. For Derrida, God remains the unnameable "wholly other" accessible only as the indeterminate term of pure reference in prayer. For Marion, God remains the object of "de-nomination" through praise. In all (...)
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  62. Merold Westphal (2006). Vision and Voice: Phenomenology and Theology in the Work of Jean-Luc Marion. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1/3):117 - 137.score: 12.0
    The kind of phenomenology that can be useful to theology will be a hermeneutical phenomenology, one that takes us beyond the Cartesian/Husserlian ideal of presuppositionless intuition. It will also be a phenomenology of inverse intentionality, one in which the constituting subject is constituted by the look and the voice of another. In light of these suggestions, the phenomenology of Jean-Luc Marion is defended against three critiques, namely that it compromises the boundary between phenomenology and theology, that the theology it (...)
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  63. Saulius Geniusas (2006). Is the Self of Social Behaviorism Capable of Auto-Affection? Mead and Marion on the "I" and the "Me". Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 42 (2):242-265.score: 12.0
    : The purpose of this manuscript is to bring Mead's pragmatism into contact with Jean-Luc Marion's phenomenology. Taking as its focus the question of the I-pole of the self, the paper points to the absence and the need of a concept like auto-affection in Mead's analysis of selfhood. A pragmatic appropriation of this concept does not undermine the social framework of selfhood because the most rudimentary self-givenness is immediate and direct, yet simultaneously a posteriori. The social and biological genesis (...)
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  64. Joeri Schrijvers (2010). Marion, Levinas, and Heidegger on the Question Concerning Ontotheology. Continental Philosophy Review 43 (2):207-239.score: 12.0
    In this article, the differences between Jean-Luc Marion, Emmanuel Levinas and Martin Heidegger’s approaches to ontotheology are discussed. Whereas Marion argues for a historical approach to this question, i.e., testing whether ontotheology can be detected in this or that thinker in this history of philosophy, this article aims, with Levinas and Heidegger, for an ontological approach to the question concerning ontotheology. In this regard, this text expresses wonder about Marion’s claim that Medieval theology would not have succumbed (...)
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  65. Allison Weir (2008). Home and Identity: In Memory of Iris Marion Young. Hypatia 23 (3):pp. 4-21.score: 12.0
    Drawing on Iris Marion Young’s essay, “House and Home: Feminist Variations on a Theme,” Weir argues for an alternative ideal of home that involves: (1) the risk of connection, and of sustaining relationship through conflict; (2) relational identities, constituted through both relations of power and relations of mutuality, love, and flourishing; (3) relational autonomy: freedom as the capacity to be in relationships one desires, and freedom as expansion of self in relationship; and (4) connection to past and future, through (...)
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  66. Jane Monica Drexler (2007). Politics Improper: Iris Marion Young, Hannah Arendt, and the Power of Performativity. Hypatia 22 (4):1-15.score: 12.0
    : This essay explores the value of oppositional, performative political action in the context of oppression, domination, and exclusionary political spheres. Rather than adopting Iris Marion Young's approach, Drexler turns to Hannah Arendt's theories of political action in order to emphasize the capacity of political action as action to intervene in and disrupt the constricting, politically devitalizing, necrophilic normalizations of proceduralism and routine, and thus to reorient the importance of contestatory action as enabling and enacting creativity, spontaneity, and resistance.
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  67. Derek Clifford (forthcoming). Ethics, Politics and the Social Professions: Reading Iris Marion Young. Ethics and Social Welfare:1-18.score: 12.0
    This paper seeks to describe and evaluate the work of the late Iris Marion Young as a critical reference point for values and ethics in the social professions. Her credentials are both experiential and theoretical, having studied analytical then postmodern and phenomenological thought, publishing a series of influential books on political and ethical concepts from a critical feminist position. Her theory and practice were closely related: she actively campaigned for feminist and related social causes for many years. The aim (...)
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  68. Robert Jubb (forthcoming). Social Connection and Practice Dependence: Some Recent Developments in the Global Justice Literature: Iris Marion Young,Responsibility for Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011; and Ayelet Banai, Miriam Ronzoni and Christian Schemmel,Social Justice, Global Dynamics. Oxford: Routledge, 2011. Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy:1-16.score: 12.0
    This review essay discusses two recent attempts to reform the framework in which issues of international and global justice are discussed: Iris Marion Young?s ?social connection? model and the practice-dependent approach, here exemplified by Ayelet Banai, Miriam Ronzoni and Christian Schemmel?s edited collection. I argue that while Young?s model may fit some issues of international or global justice, it misconceives the problems that many of them pose. Indeed, its difficulties point precisely in the direction of practice dependence as it (...)
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  69. Joseph M. Rivera (2010). The Call and the Gifted in Christological Perspective: A Consideration of Brian Robinette's Critique of Jean-Luc Marion. Heythrop Journal 51 (6):1053-1060.score: 12.0
    In his recent article, ‘A Gift to Theology? Jean-Luc Marion's ‘Saturated Phenomena’ in Christological Perspective’, Brian Robinette has critiqued Marion's phenomenology for confining theology to a one-sided approach to Christology, one that stresses only the passive, mystical reception of Christ. To correct this imbalance, Robinette brings Marion into dialogue with those more active Christologies or ‘prophetical-ethical’ liberation theologies of Gustavo Gutierrez, Johann Baptist Metz and others that stress a life-praxis focused on confronting evil and suffering. In this (...)
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  70. Derek J. Morrow (2006). Aquinas, Marion, Analogy, and Esse. International Philosophical Quarterly 46 (1):25-42.score: 12.0
    The recent translation into English of Jean-Luc Marion’s essay “Saint Thomas Aquinas and Onto-Theo-Logy” provides an opportunity to re-examine the significance of Marion’s earlier criticisms of Aquinas (set forth, as is well known, in God without Being) in the light of his most current position on Aquinas. Toward this end, I discuss the role that the doctrine of analogy plays in Marion’s reassessment, and partial retraction, of the controversial indictment of Aquinas that was presented in God without (...)
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  71. Jeffrey L. Kosky (2004). Philosophy of Religion and Return to Phenomenology in Jean-Luc Marion. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 78 (4):629-647.score: 12.0
    The phenomenological project of Jean-Luc Marion’s Being Given (namely, to free phenomenological possibility to the unconditional self-giving of all phenomena) should be distinguished from the theological project of his God without Being (to think God unconditionally and absolutely). In freeing phenomenological possibility to the self-giving of all phenomena (on the model of the saturated phenomenon), and in proposing a new figure of the subject who receives phenomena (the gifted), Marion’s phenomenology provides the conceptual means for a philosophy of (...)
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  72. Declan Lawell (2009). Thomas Aquinas, Jean-Luc Marion, and an Alleged Category Mistake Involving God and Being. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 83 (1):23-50.score: 12.0
    This article seeks to defend the possibility of a metaphysical approach to philosophical theology. Challenging the claim that there can be nothing in commonbetween God (with whom theology or even a form of phenomenology such as Jean-Luc Marion’s deals) and being (as expounded for example in the metaphysical approach of Thomas Aquinas), the article develops a critique of Marion’s views with close reference to his interpretations of Aquinas.
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  73. Christina M. Gschwandtner (2010). À Dieu or From the Logos? Emmanuel Lévinas and Jean-Luc Marion—Prophets of the Infinite. Philosophy and Theology 22 (1/2):177-203.score: 12.0
    This paper examines the extent to which certain aspects of the philosophies of Emmanuel Lévinas and Jean-Luc Marion are directed toward the divine, especially in regard to how they employ religious imagery or even explicitly biblical metaphors, namely those of the face of the neighbor, the glory of the Infinite, the response of the witness, and the breaking or sharing of bread. This will show important parallels and connections between their respective works, but it will also highlight where they (...)
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  74. Derek J. Morrow (2007). Aquinas According to the Horizon of Distance: Jean-Luc Marion's Phenomenological Reading of Thomistic Analogy. International Philosophical Quarterly 47 (1):59-77.score: 12.0
    Ever since the publication of Dieu sans l’être in 1982, Jean-Luc Marion’s various (and varying) pronouncements on the status and meaning of esse in Aquinas have excited a good deal of interest and controversy among Thomists. Marion’s evolving understanding of Thomistic metaphysics in general, and of Thomistic analogy in particular, has been commended for its openness to correction even as it has been criticized for what many still regard as its residual deficiencies. All such criticisms, however, neglect to (...)
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  75. Stéphane Vinolo (2013). Jean-Luc Marion: escribir la ausencia. El “giro teológico” como porvenir de la filosofía. Escritos 20 (45):275-304.score: 12.0
    De los filósofos acusados de “giro teológico”, Jean-Luc Marion es posiblemente el que mejor ha seguido la iniciativa heideggeriana de una fenomenología radical: una fenomenología de lo inaparente. Lo ha hecho al introducir en la fenomenalidad los llamados “fenómenos saturados”, lo que lo ha puesto en el centro del debate. Contra sus críticos, este ensayo muestra que esta ampliación de la fenomenalidad no proviene prioritariamente de una voluntad teológica, sino de una necesidad de liberar la fenomenalidad del paradigma de (...)
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  76. Joseph Carew (2009). The Threat of Givenness in Jean-Luc Marion. Symposium 13 (2):97-115.score: 12.0
    Absent within Jean-Luc Marion’s theory of selfhood is an account of psychosis that displaces standard phenomenological and psychoanalytic models. Working primarily with Book V of Being Given, my paper sketches the formal possibilities exhibited in a self who cannot manage the superabundance of the given and, swept away by an uncontrollable flood of givenness, thereby falls into a hysteria of self-experience and loses its ipseity. Then, contrasting psychosis with positive figures of the self, I explore the dynamic relationship between (...)
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  77. Antonio Malo (2012). The Limits of Marion's and Derrida's Philosophy of the Gift. International Philosophical Quarterly 52 (2):149-168.score: 12.0
    Is it possible to think of the gift philosophically? How should we think of the gift in a world that seems to be regulated only with economic rules? These are two of the main questions that are treated in this essay. In order to deal with them, the author analyzes Jacques Derrida’s deconstruction of the gift and Jean-Luc Marion’s notion of givenness. Derrida and Marion are in agreement in refusing intentionality as an essential element of the logic of (...)
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  78. Lorenz B. Puntel (2011). Being and God: A Systematic Approach in Confrontation with Martin Heidegger, Emmanuel Levinas, and Jean-Luc Marion. Northwestern University Press.score: 12.0
    Ch. 1: Inadequate approaches to the question of God -- 1.1. Initial clarifications -- 1.2 Wholly unsystematic direct approaches -- 1.3. Semi-systematic indirect approaches -- 1.4. A wholly anti-systematic, anti-theoretical, and direct approach: Ludwig Wittgenstein -- 1.5. A characteristic example of a failed critique: Thomas Nagel's objections to God as "last point" -- Ch. 2. Heidegger's thinking of Being: the flawed development of a significant approach -- 2.1. Heidegger's failed and distorting interpretation and critique of the Christian metaphysics of Being (...)
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  79. Christina Gschwandtner (2013). Being and God: A Systematic Approach in Confrontation with Martin Heidegger, Emmanuel Levinas, and Jean-Luc Marion, by Lorenz B. Puntel. Comparative and Continental Philosophy 4 (1):164 - 165.score: 12.0
    Being and God: A Systematic Approach in Confrontation with Martin Heidegger, Emmanuel Levinas, and Jean-Luc Marion , by Lorenz B. Puntel Content Type Journal Article Pages 164-165 Authors Christina M. Gschwandtner, University of Scranton Journal Comparative and Continental Philosophy Online ISSN 1757-0646 Print ISSN 1757-0638 Journal Volume Volume 4 Journal Issue Volume 4, Number 1 / 2012.
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  80. Shane Mackinlay (2010). Interpreting Excess: Jean-Luc Marion, Saturated Phenomena, and Hermeneutics. Fordham University Press.score: 12.0
    Introduction -- Marion's claims -- The hermeneutic structure of phenomenality -- The theory of saturated phenomena -- Events -- Dazzling idols and paintings -- Flesh as absolute -- The face as irregardable icon -- Revelation : the phenomenon of God's appearing -- Conclusion: Revising the phenomenology of givenness.
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  81. Joeri Schrijvers (2006). Marion on Miracles: Of Insufficient Reason and a New Enlightenment. In Faith in the Enlightenment? The Critique of the Enlightenment Revisited. Rodopi Ny.score: 12.0
    This article examines Jean-Luc Marion’s account of the miracle and its link to what Marion calls the saturated phenomenon. First, Marion’s indebtedness to the classical definitions of the miracle is scrutinized. Second, through discussing the understanding of Marion’s saturated phenomenon in the work of Merold Westphal, John Caputo and Emmanuel Falque, it is asked just how Marion would differ from metaphysics: just as the miracle, in traditional thought, contradicts the laws of nature, so too the (...)
     
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  82. Marion Vorms (2012). R. Frigg & M.C. Hunter, Eds. 2010. Beyond Mimesis and Convention (Marion Vorms). Theoria 27 (3):391-394.score: 12.0
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  83. Alia Al-Saji (2009). A Phenomenology of Critical-Ethical Vision: Merleau-Ponty, Bergson, and the Question of Seeing Differently. Chiasmi International 11:375-398.score: 9.0
    Drawing on Merleau-Ponty’s “Eye and Mind” and Bergson’s Matière et mémoire and “La perception du changement,” I ask what resources are available in vision for interrupting objectifying habits of seeing. While both Bergson and Merleau-Ponty locate the possibility of seeing differently in the figure of the painter, I develop by means of their texts, and in dialogue with Iris Marion Young’s work, a more general phenomenology of hesitation that grounds what I am calling “critical-ethical vision.” Hesitation, I argue, stems (...)
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  84. Ronald Beiner (2006). Multiculturalism and Citizenship: A Critical Response to Iris Marion Young. Educational Philosophy and Theory 38 (1):25–37.score: 9.0
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  85. Adi Efal (2008). Iconology and Iconicity. Towards an Iconic History of Figures, Between Erwin Panofsky and Jean-Luc Marion. Naharaim - Zeitschrift für Deutsch-Jüdische Literatur Und Kulturgeschichte 2 (1).score: 9.0
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  86. James Griesemer (1998). Turning Back to Go Forward. A Review of Epigenetic Inheritance and Evolution, the Lamarckian Dimension, by Eva Jablonka and Marion Lamb. Biology and Philosophy 13 (1).score: 9.0
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  87. Evelyn Fox Keller (1998). Structures of Heredity. Review of Eva Jablonka and Marion Lamb, Epigenetic Inheritance and Evolution, the Lamarckian Dimension. Biology and Philosophy 13 (1).score: 9.0
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  88. Rainer Forst (2007). Radical Justice: On Iris Marion Young's Critique of the "Distributive Paradigm". Constellations 14 (2):260-265.score: 9.0
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  89. Debra A. DeBruin (1993). Book Review:Justice and the Politics of Difference. Iris Marion Young. [REVIEW] Ethics 103 (2):398-.score: 9.0
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  90. Willemien Otten (2010). Jean-Luc Marion: Au Lieu de Soi. L'approche de Saint Augustin. Continental Philosophy Review 42 (4):597-602.score: 9.0
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  91. John D. Caputo (2007). Jean‐Luc Marion, The Erotic Phenomenon:The Erotic Phenomenon. Ethics 118 (1):164-168.score: 9.0
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  92. Jonathan Grose (2009). Eva Jablonbka and Marion J. Lamb Evolution in Four Dimensions: Genetic, Epigenetic, Behavioral and Symbolic Variation in the History of Life. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 60 (3):667-672.score: 9.0
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  93. Christina M. Gschwandtner (2005). A New 'Apologia': The Relationship Between Theology and Philosophy in the Work of Jean-Luc Marion. Heythrop Journal 46 (3):299–313.score: 9.0
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  94. Matthew Chrisman (2005). Russ Shafer‐Landau, Moral Realism: A Defense:Moral Realism: A Defense. Ethics 116 (1):250-255.score: 9.0
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  95. Justin Weinberg (2011). Young , Iris Marion . Responsibility for Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. Pp. 193. $35.00 (Cloth). Ethics 122 (1):224-228.score: 9.0
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  96. Mark E. Warren (2002). Iris Marion Young, Inclusion and Democracy:Inclusion and Democracy. Ethics 112 (3):646-650.score: 9.0
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  97. Hallvard Lillehammer (2004). Review of Russ Shafer-Landau, Moral Realism: A Defense. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (5).score: 9.0
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  98. Ilsup Ahn (2010). The Genealogy of Debt and the Phenomenology of Forgiveness: Nietzsche, Marion, and Derrida on the Meaning of Thepeculiar Phenomenon. Heythrop Journal 51 (3):454-470.score: 9.0
  99. Debra Bergoffen (2008). On Female Body Experience: Throwing Like a Girl and Other Essaysby Iris Marion Young. Hypatia 23 (3):217-220.score: 9.0
  100. James K. A. Smith (1999). Liberating Religion From Theology: Marion and Heidegger on the Possibility of a Phenomenology of Religion. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 46 (1):17-33.score: 9.0
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