Results for 'Gerald L. Bruns'

991 found
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  1.  32
    On the Conundrum of Form and Material in Adorno's Aesthetic Theory.Gerald L. Bruns - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 66 (3):225 - 235.
  2.  49
    Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern.Gerald L. Bruns - 1992 - Yale University Press.
    Gerald L. Bruns. the spell of another, to liberate the language imprisoned in a work in his recreation of that work" (p. 80). The notion of a pure language, a language uncontaminated by mere speech, may be one of modernity's great unkillable ...
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  3. Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern.Gerald L. Bruns - 1996 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 29 (1):86-90.
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  4.  29
    Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern.Gerald L. Bruns - 1995 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 53 (1):100-101.
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  5.  13
    Heidegger's Estrangements: Language, Truth, and Poetry in the Later Writings.Gerald L. Bruns - 1989
    This book concerns the relationship between language and poetry in Heidegger's later writings. Gerald L. Bruns illuminates these difficult and strange writings by analyzing his style and form and by reflecting on the philosopher's insights.
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  6.  20
    Saving the Text: Literature/Derrida/Philosophy.Gerald L. Bruns & Geoffrey Hartman - 1981 - Substance 10 (3):91.
  7.  10
    Maurice Blanchot: The Refusal of Philosophy.Gerald L. Bruns - 2005 - JHU Press.
    Ch. 9, "Blanchot's 'holocaust'", discusses the French thinker's philosophy of the Holocaust.
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  8.  38
    Modern poetry and the idea of language: a critical and historical study.Gerald L. Bruns - 1974 - [Normal, Ill.]: Dalkey Archive Press.
    Bruns lucidly depicts the distinctions and convergences between these two lines of thought by examining the works of Mallarme, Flaubert, Joyce, Beckett, and ...
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  9.  11
    3 On the Tragedy of Hermeneutical Experience.Gerald L. Bruns - unknown - In eds Walter Jost and Michael J. Hyde (ed.), Rhetoric and Hermeneutics in Our Time: A Reader. Yale University Press. pp. 73-89.
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  10.  25
    Canon and Power in the Hebrew Scriptures.Gerald L. Bruns - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 10 (3):462-480.
    Thus it would not be the content or meaning of a written Torah that Jeremiah would attack; rather it would be the Deuteronomic “claim to final and exclusive authority by means of writing” . Jeremiah’s problem is political rather than theological. He knows that writing is more powerful than prophecy and that he will not be able to withstand it—and he knows that the Deuteronomists know no less. As Blenkinsopp says, “Deuteronomy produced a situation in which prophecy could not continue (...)
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  11.  10
    Intention, Authority, and Meaning.Gerald L. Bruns - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 7 (2):297-309.
    [Herbert F.] Tucker has shown us in a very practical way that the concept of meaning is the problem of problems, not only in hermeneutics but in literary theory and, indeed, literary study generally. It may well be that in literary study there can be no talk of meaning that is not ambiguous, that does not require us to speak in figures or by means of metaphorical improvisations. It would not necessarily follow that our talk of meaning is merely provisional (...)
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  12.  13
    Loose Talk about Religion from William James.Gerald L. Bruns - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 11 (2):299-316.
    In this paper I want to say some things about the way William James talks—as, for example, in The Varieties of Religious Experience , the famous Gifford Lectures in which James attempted to rehabilitate religion as a subject fit for philosophical discourse, or as something still worth talking about.1 Some familiar background for this matter is provided by the epigraph I have just given from “What Pragmatism Means,” in which James shows himself to be a nominalist as against a metaphysical (...)
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  13.  14
    Reply to Crewe and Conant.Gerald L. Bruns - 1991 - Critical Inquiry 17 (3):635-638.
    I am impressed by how angry Jonathan Crewe is, but I found his remarks confused and unclear and so I’m uncertain how to reply. Whatever the matter it, he wants “to forestall a sense of academic obligation on anyone’s part to work back to Cavell through Bruns” . God knows this might be a good idea, judging from what James Conant says.Conant’s criticisms are directed at the section of my paper called “The Moral of Skepticism,” which he cannot help (...)
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  14.  25
    Stanley Cavell's Shakespeare.Gerald L. Bruns - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 16 (3):612-632.
    “The Avoidance of Love” is Cavell’s magic looking glass onto Shakespeare, where the idea of missing something, not getting what is obvious, is, on Cavell’s reading, very close to a philosophical obsession. Shakespeare here means—besides Lear—Othello, Coriolanus, Hamlet, The Winter’s Tale, and Antony and Cleopatra, and what Cavell finds in these plays is an attempt to think through what elsewhere, in the formation of the modern philosophical tradition, was getting formulated as the problem of skepticism, or not being able to (...)
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  15.  50
    Blanchot/levinas: Interruption (on the conflict of alterities).Gerald L. Bruns - 1996 - Research in Phenomenology 26 (1):132-154.
  16.  9
    On the anarchy of poetry and philosophy: a guide for the unruly.Gerald L. Bruns - 2006 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Marcel Duchamp once asked whether it is possible to make something that is not a work of art. This question returns over and over in modernist culture, where there are no longer any authoritative criteria for what can be identified (or excluded) as a work of art. As William Carlos Williams says, “A poem can be made of anything,” even newspaper clippings.At this point, art turns into philosophy, all art is now conceptual art, and the manifesto becomes the distinctive genre (...)
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  17.  28
    Between Philosophy and Literature.Gerald L. Bruns - 1989 - Renascence 41 (4):233-251.
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  18.  21
    Daedalus, Orpheus, and Dylan Thomas's.Gerald L. Bruns - 1973 - Renascence 25 (3):147-156.
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  19. Freud, structuralism, and "the Moses of michelangelo".Gerald L. Bruns - 1974 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 33 (1):13-18.
  20. Heidegger's Language, Truth and Poetry. Estrangements in the Later Writings.Gerald L. BRUNS - 1989
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  21.  22
    Inventions: Writing, Textuality, and Understanding in Literary History.Gerald L. Bruns - 1984 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 42 (3):342-345.
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  22.  61
    On the tragedy of hermeneutical experience.Gerald L. Bruns - 1988 - Research in Phenomenology 18 (1):191-201.
  23. The Concepts of Art and Poetry in Emmanuel Levinas's writings.Gerald L. Bruns - 2002 - In Simon Critchley & Robert Bernasconi (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Levinas. Cambridge University Press. pp. 206--233.
     
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  24.  69
    The Obscurity of Modern Poetry.Gerald L. Bruns - 1964 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 39 (2):180-198.
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  25.  22
    The Obscurity of Modern Poetry (II).Gerald L. Bruns - 2001 - Renascence 53 (3):173-190.
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  26.  14
    The problem of figuration in antiquity.Gerald L. Bruns - 1984 - In Gary Shapiro & Alan Sica (eds.), Hermeneutics: Questions and Prospects. University of Massachusetts Press. pp. 147--164.
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  27.  33
    Tragic thoughts at the end of philosophy: language, literature, and ethical theory.Gerald L. Bruns - 1999 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    Recently, a number of Anglo-American philosophers of very different sorts--pragmatists, metaphysicians, philosophers of language, philosophers of law, moral philosophers--have taken a reflective rather than merely recreational interest in literature. Does this literary turn mean that philosophy is coming to an end or merely down to earth? In this collection of essays, one of the most insightful of contemporary literary theorists investigates the intersection of literature and philosophy, analyzing the emerging preferences for practice over theory, particulars over universals, events over structures, (...)
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  28.  49
    Gadamer on Celan: "Who Am I and Who Are You?" and Other Essays.Hans-Georg Gadamer & Gerald L. Bruns - 1997 - State University of New York Press.
    Brings together all of Gadamer's published writings on Celan's poetry, and makes them available in English for the first time. This is accessible commentary on a notoriously difficult poet.
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  29.  25
    Book review: Ancient and modern hermeneutics. [REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 1995 - Philosophy and Literature 19 (1).
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  30.  66
    David Michael Kleinberg-Levin: Gestures of Ethical Life: Reading Hölderlin’s Question of Measure After Heidegger: Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2005, pp. xlvi + 484. ISBN 0-8047-5088-2. [REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 2010 - Continental Philosophy Review 42 (4):573-576.
  31.  20
    Echoes after Heidegger. [REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 1991 - International Studies in Philosophy 23 (3):144-145.
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  32.  24
    Habermas on Historical Materialism. [REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 1990 - Review of Metaphysics 44 (2):430-431.
    This is a book about Jurgen Habermas's attempt to replace historical materialism with communicative action as a social theory that is not external to society in the manner of traditional theories but is at work within it as an agency for human freedom. However, Rockmore is not so much interested in the genealogy of Habermas's theory of communicative action as in the complicated and sometimes confusing story of Habermas's own struggle with historical materialism as a way of accounting for social (...)
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  33.  21
    Review of Leslie hill, Brian Nelson, Dimitris Vardoulakis (eds.), After Blanchot: Literature, Criticism, Philosophy[REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 2006 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (8).
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  34.  40
    Review of Simon Critchley, Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens[REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 2006 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (2).
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  35.  31
    Review of Stanley Cavell, Cora diamond, John McDowell, Ian Hacking, Cary wolf (authors 1st book), Stephen Mulhall (author 2nd book), (Book 1) Philosophy and Animal Life; (Book 2) the Wounded Animal: J. M. Coetzee and the Difficulty of Reality in Literature and Philosophy[REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 2009 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (5).
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  36.  7
    Structuralism, Deconstruction, and Hermeneutics. [REVIEW]Gerald L. Bruns - 1984 - Diacritics 14 (1):12.
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  37. Derrida's cat (who am I?).Gerald Bruns - 2008 - Research in Phenomenology 38 (3):404-423.
    What is it to be seen (naked) by one's cat? In “L'animal que donc je suis” (2006), the first of several lectures that he presented at a conference on the “autobiographical animal,” Jacques Derrida tells of his discomfort when, emerging from his shower one day, he found himself being looked at by his cat. Th experience leads him, by way of reflections on the question of the animal, to what is arguably the question of his philosophy: Who am I? It (...)
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  38.  39
    Strategies for the control of voluntary movements with one mechanical degree of freedom.Gerald L. Gottlieb, Daniel M. Corcos & Gyan C. Agarwal - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (2):189-210.
    A theory is presented to explain how accurate, single-joint movements are controlled. The theory applies to movements across different distances, with different inertial loads, toward targets of different widths over a wide range of experimentally manipulated velocities. The theory is based on three propositions. (1) Movements are planned according to “strategies” of which there are at least two: a speed-insensitive (SI) and a speed-sensitive (SS) one. (2) These strategies can be equated with sets of rules for performing diverse movement tasks. (...)
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  39. Gerald L. Bruns. Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern.A. Scult - 1996 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 29:86-90.
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  40.  7
    Gerald L. Bruns, Inventions: Writing, Textuality, and Understanding in Literary History.Richard Buchanan - 1984 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 42 (3):342-345.
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  41. Gerald L. Bruns, Heidegger's estrangements: Language, truth and poetry in the later writings. [REVIEW]Joanna Hodge - 1990 - Radical Philosophy 55:58.
     
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  42.  73
    How emotions inform judgment and regulate thought.Gerald L. Clore & Jeffrey R. Huntsinger - 2007 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 11 (9):393-399.
  43.  21
    Psychotropic Hedonism vs. Pharmacological Calvinism.Gerald L. Klerman - 1972 - Hastings Center Report 2 (4):1-3.
  44.  39
    Psychological Construction in the OCC Model of Emotion.Gerald L. Clore & Andrew Ortony - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (4):335-343.
    This article presents six ideas about the construction of emotion: (a) Emotions are more readily distinguished by the situations they signify than by patterns of bodily responses; (b) emotions emerge from, rather than cause, emotional thoughts, feelings, and expressions; (c) the impact of emotions is constrained by the nature of the situations they represent; (d) in the OCC account (the model proposed by Ortony, Clore, and Collins in 1988), appraisals are psychological aspects of situations that distinguish one emotion from another, (...)
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  45.  35
    Control theoretic concepts and motor control.Gerald L. Gottlieb & Gyan C. Agarwal - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (4):546-547.
  46.  65
    Cognition in emotion: Always, sometimes, or never.Gerald L. Clore & Andrew Ortony - 2000 - In Richard D. R. Lane, L. Nadel, G. L. Ahern, J. Allen & Alfred W. Kaszniak (eds.), Cognitive Neuroscience of Emotion. Oxford University Press. pp. 24--61.
  47. Affective causes and consequences of social information processing.Gerald L. Clore, Norbert Schwarz & Michael Conway - 1994 - In R. Wyer & T. Srull (eds.), Handbook of Social Cognition. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 1--323.
  48.  67
    How the Object of Affect Guides its Impact.Gerald L. Clore & Jeffrey R. Huntsinger - 2009 - Emotion Review 1 (1):39-54.
    In this article, we examine how affect influences judgment and thought, but also how thought transforms affect. The general thesis is that the nature and impact of affective reactions depends largely on their objects. We view affect as a representation of value, and its consequences as dependent on its object or what it is about. Within a review of relevant literature and a discussion of the nature of emotion, we focus on the role of the object of affect in governing (...)
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  49. Scientific change, emerging specialties, and research schools.Gerald L. Geison - 1981 - History of Science 19 (43 pt 1):20-40.
  50.  40
    Cognitive phenomenology: Feelings and the construction of judgment.Gerald L. Clore - 1992 - In L. Martin & A. Tesser (eds.), The Construction of Social Judgments. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 10--133.
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