Results for 'Bernard Grasset'

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  1. Comprendre et inventer.Bernard Grasset - 1953 - [Paris]: Grasset.
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  2.  36
    Louis Lavelle : la philosophie, chemin de sagesse.Bernard Grasset - 2007 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 63 (3):495-514.
    For Louis Lavelle who wanted to write De la sagesse as a crowning of his work, the question of wisdom stands in the very centre of philosophy. The wise questions the meaning of existence. Thanks to wisdom, man, a free and temporal being, chooses the possible realities that bring him closer to Being. Wisdom in Lavelle’s sense is a wisdom of love, of mind and of being. The friend of wisdom, a man of reason and interiority, discovers in love the (...)
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  3.  9
    Une esthétique pascalienne.Bernard M.-J. Grasset - 2007 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 105 (3):361-384.
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  4.  10
    Art, esprit et mystère.Bernard Grasset - 2015 - le Portique 35.
    Que dire de l’art dans ses rapports avec l’esprit et le mystère à partir de la Bible, de la philosophie, de la poésie? Dans l’Écriture, la beauté se révèle comme indissociable de la bonté, l’amour. Dans la perspective d’une philosophie, comme d’une poésie, de l’esprit et de l’existence, la beauté nous arrache au règne de l’avoir, de l’intérêt, de la puissance, pour nous rapprocher du mystère de l’être. Si pour Nietzsche l’esthétique est étrangère à l’éthique comme à la vérité, l’esthétique (...)
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  5. La notion d'amour dans l'oeuvre de Louis Lavelle.Bernard Grasset - 2004 - Filosofia Oggi 27 (2-3):217-236.
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  6. La philosophie des Pères.Bernard Grasset - 2007 - Filosofia Oggi 30 (120):417-448.
     
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  7.  25
    Le sens pascalien du mot esprit et les trois ordres.Bernard M.-J. Grasset - 2008 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 133 (1):4.
    Esprit, l’un des mots clés des Pensées, reçoit chez Pascal deux significations : la raison et le souffle intérieur. Si l’esprit en tant que mens rationalis appartient au deuxième ordre, l’esprit en tant que mens spiritualis relève du troisième ordre. Deux dualismes se croisent dans la distinction pascalienne des trois ordres : le premier de nature philosophique, cartésienne, oppose le premier ordre, voué au corps, et les deuxième et troisième ordres, voués à la mens ; le second, de nature éthico-religieuse, (...)
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  8. La sagesse selon Gabriel Marcel.Bernard Grasset - 2005 - Filosofia Oggi 28 (109):31-52.
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  9. Le temps pascalien.Bernard Grasset - 2011 - Filosofia Oggi 34 (133):173-182.
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  10.  4
    Pascal et Rouault: penser, écrire, créer.Bernard Grasset - 2016 - Nice: Les éditions Ovadia.
    Ecriture, art et pensée seront au coeur de notre cheminement. En interrogeant Rouault à partir de Pascal, nous tenterons d'élucider, en tissant un vaste parallélisme, l'oeuvre d'un artiste par celle d'un philosophe biblique. Et, en même temps, comme par réverbération, nous aurons peut-être l'occasion d'apporter, à partir de la traduction picturale, des angles de vue nouveaux sur l'univers pascalien. Les sources enseignent sur ceux qui y puisent mais aussi, d'une certaine manière, les héritiers sur ceux dont ils proviennent. Les siècles (...)
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  11.  13
    Poésie, philosophie et mystique.Bernard Grasset - 2005 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 61 (3):553-581.
    Il s’agit de mettre en regard les domaines à la fois proches et différents de la poésie, de la philosophie et de la mystique, en conjuguant démarche diachronique et synchronique. Après avoir exploré les sources grecques et patristiques, l’analyse essaie de montrer, à partir d’auteurs comme Jean de la Croix, Pascal, Péguy, R. Tagore…, comment la philosophie s’approfondit à la rencontre de la poésie, comment la poésie s’élève à la rencontre de la pensée. Réunies l’une à l’autre par l’esprit, philosophie (...)
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  12.  6
    Sur les pas de Blaise Pascal, voyageur de l'infini: essai de biographie.Bernard Grasset - 2023 - Paris IIe: Éditions Kimé.
  13.  2
    René Huyghe, Ce que je crois. Paris, Bernard Grasset, 1976. 13.5 × 20,5, 184p.Jean-Claude Margolin - 1979 - Revue de Synthèse 100 (93-94):122-123.
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  14.  2
    Philippe Nemo, L'Homme structural. Paris, Bernard Grasset, 1975. 13 × 20, 250 p. ( « Figures » ).Jean-Claiude Margolin - 1977 - Revue de Synthèse 98 (85-86):131-132.
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  15. Book Review: LÉVY, BERNARD-HENRI, Le Siècle de Sartre, Ed. Bernard Grasset, Paris, 2000. [REVIEW]Juan Pérez - 2001 - Phainomenon 2 (1):101-106.
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  16.  13
    La Morale nouvelle. Psychosynthèse de la vie morale. Par Ignace Lepp. Bernard Grasset Éditeur, Paris, 1963, 308 pages. [REVIEW]André Bergeron - 1964 - Dialogue 3 (3):313-315.
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  17.  16
    Bernard Foccroulle, Robert Legros, Tzvetan Todorov, La naissance de l'individu dans l'art. Paris, Éditions Grasset (coll. « Nouveau Collège de Philosophie »), 2005, 240 p.Bernard Foccroulle, Robert Legros, Tzvetan Todorov, La naissance de l'individu dans l'art. Paris, Éditions Grasset (coll. « Nouveau Collège de Philosophie »), 2005, 240 p. [REVIEW]Joëlle Boivin - 2006 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 62 (1):172-175.
  18.  24
    In the Beginning Was the Deed: Realism and Moralism in Political Argument.Bernard Williams - 2005 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    Bernard Williams is remembered as one of the most brilliant and original philosophers of the past fifty years. Widely respected as a moral philosopher, Williams began to write about politics in a sustained way in the early 1980s. There followed a stream of articles, lectures, and other major contributions to issues of public concern--all complemented by his many works on ethics, which have important implications for political theory. This new collection of essays, most of them previously unpublished, addresses many (...)
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  19. Shame and Necessity.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Apeiron 27 (1):45-76.
  20. Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in Genealogy.Bernard Williams - 2005 - Philosophical Quarterly 55 (219):343-352.
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  21.  16
    Morality: An Introduction to Ethics.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Bernard Williams's remarkable essay on morality confronts the problems of writing moral philosophy, and offers a stimulating alternative to more systematic accounts which seem nevertheless to have left all the important issues somewhere off the page. Williams explains, analyses and distinguishes a number of key positions, from the purely amoral to notions of subjective or relative morality, testing their coherence before going on to explore the nature of 'goodness' in relation to responsibilities and choice, roles, standards, and human nature. (...)
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  22.  63
    The Frankenstein Syndrome: Ethical and Social Issues in the Genetic Engineering of Animals.Bernard E. Rollin - 1995 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book is a philosophically sophisticated and scientifically well-informed discussion of the moral and social issues raised by genetically engineering animals, a powerful technology which has major implications for society. Unlike other books on this emotionally charged subject, the author attempts to inform, not inflame, the reader about the real problems society must address in order to manage this technology. Bernard Rollin is both a professor of philosophy, and physiology and biophysics, and writes from a uniquely well-informed perspective on (...)
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  23.  37
    Science and Ethics.Bernard E. Rollin - 2006 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Science and Ethics, Bernard Rollin examines the ideology that denies the relevance of ethics to science. Providing an introduction to basic ethical concepts, he discusses a variety of ethical issues that are relevant to science and how they are ignored, to the detriment of both science and society. These include research on human subjects, animal research, genetic engineering, biotechnology, cloning, xenotransplantation, and stem cell research. Rollin also explores the ideological agnosticism that scientists have displayed regarding subjective experience in (...)
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  24.  13
    Viii Persons, Character and Morality.Bernard Williams - 1976 - In Amélie Oksenberg Rorty (ed.), Identities of Persons. University of California Press. pp. 197-216.
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  25.  23
    Nationalism and the Moral Psychology of Community.Bernard Yack - 2012 - University of Chicago Press.
    Nationalism is one of modern history’s great surprises. How is it that the nation, a relatively old form of community, has risen to such prominence in an era so strongly identified with the individual? Bernard Yack argues that it is the inadequacy of our understanding of community—and especially the moral psychology that animates it—that has made this question so difficult to answer. Yack develops a broader and more flexible theory of community and shows how to use it in the (...)
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  26.  75
    Insight.Bernard J. F. Lonergan - 1957 - New York,: Philosophical Library.
    Insight is Bernard Lonergan's masterwork. It aim is nothing less than insight into insight itself, a comprehensive view of knowledge and understanding, and to state what one needs to understand and how one proceeds to understand it. In Lonergan's own words: 'Thoroughly understand what it is to understand, and not only will you understand the broad lines of all there is to be understood but also you will possess a fixed base, and invariant pattern, opening upon all further developments (...)
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  27.  49
    Nature's Challenge to Free Will.Bernard Berofsky - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press USA.
    Bernard Berofsky addresses that metaphysical picture directly.Nature's Challenge to Free Willoffers an original defense of Humean Compatibilism.
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  28.  23
    Taking Freedom Seriously: Kantian Ethics versus the Ethics of Kant.Bernard Yack - 2023 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 35 (3):233-246.
    No understanding of morality has more zealous or influential defenders among academic philosophers than Kant’s. Yet as Michael Rosen demonstrates in The Shadow of God, there is a sense in which Kant’s critics take his conception of freedom more seriously nowadays than his defenders. As a result, contemporary versions of “Kantian ethics” often end up challenging what Rosen calls “the ethics of Kant,” not just the claims of rival moral theories. Rosen supports this surprising conclusion with some powerful arguments, showing (...)
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  29. Moral Incapacity.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 93:59-70.
    Bernard Williams; IV*—Moral Incapacity, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 93, Issue 1, 1 June 1993, Pages 59–70, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristotel.
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  30.  16
    Kyoto school philosophy in comparative perspective: ideology, ontology, modernity.Bernard Stevens - 2023 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book presents the thought of the Kyoto School in comparison with continental philosophers better known in the West and addresses the affiliation of some of its members with the militarism of the 1930s and 1940s.
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  31.  23
    Morality: An Introduction to Ethics.Morality and Moral Reasoning.Bernard Williams & John Casey - 1975 - Journal of Philosophy 72 (12):334-339.
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  32. The Many-Faceted Enigma of Time: A Physicist's Perspective.Bernard Carr - 2023 - In The Mystery of Time (13th Symposium of Bial Foundation: Behind and Beyond the Brain). Porto: Bial Foundation. pp. 97-118.
    The problem of time involves an overlap between physics, philosophy, psychology and neuroscience. My talk will discuss the role of time in physics but also emphasize that physics may need to expand to address issues usually regarded as being in the other domains. I will first review the mainstream physics view of time, as it arises in Newtonian theory, relativity theory and quantum theory. I will then discuss the various arrows of time, the most fundamental of which is the passage (...)
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  33.  64
    Rhetoric and Public Reasoning.Bernard Yack - 2006 - Political Theory 34 (4):417-438.
    This essay asks why Aristotle, certainly no friend to unlimited democracy, seems so much more comfortable with unconstrained rhetoric in political deliberation than current defenders of deliberative democracy. It answers this question by reconstructing and defending a distinctly Aristotelian understanding of political deliberation, one that can be pieced together out of a series of separate arguments made in the Rhetoric, the Politics, and the Nicomachean Ethics.
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  34. The myth of the civic nation.Bernard Yack - 1996 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 10 (2):193-211.
    Abstract The idea of a purely civic nationalism has attracted Western scholars, most of whom rightly disdain the myths that sustain ethnonationalist theories of political community. Civic nationalism is particularly attractive to many Americans, whose peculiar national heritage encourages the delusion that their mutual association is based solely on consciously chosen principles. But this idea misrepresents political reality as surely as the ethnonationalist myths it is designed to combat. And propagating a new political myth is an especially inappropriate way of (...)
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  35.  21
    IV*—Moral Incapacity.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 93 (1):59-70.
    Bernard Williams; IV*—Moral Incapacity, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 93, Issue 1, 1 June 1993, Pages 59–70, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristotel.
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  36.  69
    XIV*—The Truth in Relativism.Bernard Williams - 1975 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 75 (1):215-228.
    Bernard Williams; XIV*—The Truth in Relativism, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 75, Issue 1, 1 June 1975, Pages 215–228, https://doi.org/10.1093.
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  37.  29
    From Edmund Husserl to Audre Lorde: The Path to a Critical Phenomenology of Oppression.Marion Bernard - 2024 - Symposium 28 (1):79-102.
    What corresponds, in contemporary feminist and decolonial usage, to the demand to “return to experience,” or rather “to the lived experiences” of oppression - a distant echo of Husserl’s call to return to the things themselves? Beauvoir and Fanon appear to have laid the first foundations of a critical phenomenology of oppression - or of a phenomenologization of social critique. Later, Young and Ahmed took up a similar approach, reading history and politics in bodies, and habitus and structures in intimate (...)
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  38.  27
    The Matter-Gravity Entanglement Hypothesis.Bernard S. Kay - 2018 - Foundations of Physics 48 (5):542-557.
    I outline some of my work and results on my matter-gravity entanglement hypothesis, according to which the entropy of a closed quantum gravitational system is equal to the system’s matter-gravity entanglement entropy. The main arguments presented are: that this hypothesis is capable of resolving what I call the second-law puzzle, i.e. the puzzle as to how the entropy increase of a closed system can be reconciled with the asssumption of unitary time-evolution; that the black hole information loss puzzle may be (...)
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  39. Art by Jerks.Bernard Wills & Jason Holt - 2017 - Contemporary Aesthetics 15 (1).
     
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  40.  16
    A dictionary of scholastic philosophy.Bernard J. Wuellner - 1956 - Milwaukee,: Bruce Pub. Co..
    The scholastic philosopher is interested in definition for a different reason than the lexicographer and linguist. The philosopher is trying to learn things. Fe defines, after investigating reality, in an attempt to describe reality clearly and to sum up some aspect of his understanding of reality. Hence, we find our scholastic philosophers adopting as a main feature of their method this insistence on defining, on precise and detailed explanation of their definitions, and on proving that their definitions da correctly express (...)
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  41.  11
    Les Éléments de géométrie de Clairaut : rupture ou héritage?Alain Bernard - 2022 - Philosophia Scientiae 26:19-66.
    D’un point de vue patrimonial, le célèbre texte des Éléments de géométrie de Clairaut, publié la première fois en 1741, est traditionnellement considéré comme le début d’une riche histoire plutôt que son aboutissement, en raison notamment du succès considérable qu’il a eu dès sa parution et de la manière dont Clairaut en a défendu le projet, en rupture apparente avec le modèle euclidien. Nous proposons ici une image un peu différente qui s’appuie sur la nature très particulière de la production (...)
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  42.  13
    Le raisonnement par analogie considéré comme un schéma d'inférence.Bernard Walliser, Denis Zwirn & Hervé Zwirn - 2022 - Dialogue 61 (2):225-248.
    Despite its importance in various fields, analogical reasoning has not yet received a unified formal representation. Our contribution proposes a general scheme of inference that is compatible with different types of logic (deductive, probabilistic, non-monotonic). Firstly, analogical assessment precisely defines the similarity of two objects according to their properties, in a relative rather than absolute way. Secondly, analogical inference transfers a new property from one object to a similar one, thanks to an over-hypothesis linking two sets of properties. The belief (...)
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  43.  7
    Qu'appelle-t-on panser?Bernard Stiegler - 2018 - [Paris]: Éditions Les liens qui libèrent.
    1. L'immense régression -- 2. La lec̨on de Greta Thunberg.
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  44.  17
    Before Revelation: The Boundaries of Muslim Moral Thought.Bernard Weiss & Kevin A. Reinhart - 1999 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (2):317.
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  45. The Analogy of City and Soul in Platos "Republic".Bernard Williams - 1973 - Phronesis 18:196.
  46.  17
    Gender Differences in Affective Responses to Having Cheated: The Mediating Role of Attitudes.Bernard E. Whitley - 2001 - Ethics and Behavior 11 (3):249-259.
    Although women hold more negative attitudes toward cheating than do men, they are about as likely to engage in academic dishonesty. Cognitive dissonance theory predicts that this attitude-behavior inconsistency should lead women to experience more negative affect after cheating than would men. This prediction was tested in a sample of 92 male and 78 female college students who reported having cheated on an examination during the prior 6 months. Consistent with the results of previous research, women reported more negative attitudes (...)
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  47. The truth in relativism.Bernard Williams - 1981 - In . pp. 132-142.
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  48.  13
    Academic Freedom and Institutional Violence.Michael Bernard-Donals - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (3-4):380-387.
    ABSTRACT Academic freedom is typically understood as a means of protecting faculty rights against the violence—physical or intellectual—of the state or of the institution’s administration. This article argues that academic freedom may be seen as a form of violence, insofar as it is potentially threatening to the methodological and institutional stasis of colleges and universities.
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  49.  16
    Quantum Electrostatics, Gauss’s Law, and a Product Picture for Quantum Electrodynamics; or, the Temporal Gauge Revised.Bernard S. Kay - 2021 - Foundations of Physics 52 (1):1-61.
    We provide a suitable theoretical foundation for the notion of the quantum coherent state which describes the electrostatic field due to a static external macroscopic charge distribution introduced by the author in 1998 and use it to rederive the formulae obtained in 1998 for the inner product of a pair of such states. (We also correct an incorrect factor of 4π\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$4\pi$$\end{document} in some of those formulae.) Contrary to what one might expect, (...)
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  50.  11
    Dictionary of scholastic philosophy.Bernard J. Wuellner - 1956 - Milwaukee,: Bruce Pub. Co..
    The scholastic philosopher is interested in definition for a different reason than the lexicographer and linguist. The philosopher is trying to learn things. Fe defines, after investigating reality, in an attempt to describe reality clearly and to sum up some aspect of his understanding of reality. Hence, we find our scholastic philosophers adopting as a main feature of their method this insistence on defining, on precise and detailed explanation of their definitions, and on proving that their definitions da correctly express (...)
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