Results for 'Idols and images'

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  1. Image, idol and likeness : Ralph Cudworth's "Sermon before the House of Commons" 1647.Douglas Hedley - 2018 - In Alfons Fürst, Christian Hengstermann & Ralph Cudworth (eds.), Origenes Cantabrigiensis: Ralph Cudworth, "Predigt vor dem Unterhaus" und andere Schriften. Münster: Aschendorff Verlag.
     
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  2. Theology and Images. --.E. L. Mascall - 1963 - A.R. Mowbray.
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  3.  8
    Hindu Images and Their Worship with Special Reference to Vaisnavism: A Philosophical-Theological Inquiry.Julius Lipner - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    Hinduism comprises perhaps the major cluster of religio-cultural traditions of India, and it can play a valuable role in helping us understand the nature of religion and human responses to life. Hindu image-worship lies at the core of what counts for Hinduism - up-front and subject to much curiosity and misunderstanding, yet it is a defining feature of this phenomenon. This book focuses on Hindu images and their worship with special reference to Vaiṣṇavism, a major strand of Hinduism. Concentrating (...)
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  4.  7
    Bild und idol: perspektiven aus philosophie und jüdischem denken.Beniamino Fortis (ed.) - 2022 - Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.
    Das angebliche Bilderverbot, das im Zweiten Gebot des Dekalogs enthalten sein soll, ist eigentlich ein Idolatrieverbot. Das heißt, dass das jüdische Gesetz nicht Bilder an sich, sondern Idole verbietet. Gewiss: Manche Bilder werden als Idole verehrt. Es gibt aber auch Bilder, die keine idolatrische Bedeutung haben, und umgekehrt Idole, die keinen bildlichen Charakter aufweisen. Die Untersuchung dieser komplexen Zusammenhänge ist das Hauptziel des vorliegenden Sammelbandes. Von unterschiedlichen theoretischen Standpunkten ausgehend, eröffnen die hier versammelten Aufsätze neue Perspektiven auf das Verhältnis zwischen (...)
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  5.  4
    Identity and idolatry: the image of God and its inversion.Richard Lints - 2015 - Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press.
    Living inside the text : canon and creation -- A strange bridge: connecting the image and the idol -- The liturgy of creation in the cosmic temple -- The image of God on the temple walls -- Turning the imago Dei upside down: idolatry and the prophetic stance -- Inverting the inversion: idols and the perfect image in the New Testament -- The rise of suspicion: the religious criticism of religion -- Significance and security in a new key.
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  6.  17
    Gods, Demons, and Idols in the Andes.Sabine MacCormack - 2006 - Journal of the History of Ideas 67 (4):623-647.
    During the era in which the Spanish first encountered public religious practices that they perceived to be idolatrous in the Americas, the study of Hermetic and Platonic texts in Europe was reactivating interest in the power of images and idols, and in the agency of demons. In the Americas, Spanish newcomers encountered idolatry, the cult of deities present to their worshippers in material objects of various kinds, as part of daily religious practice. The resulting battle over idols (...)
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  7.  10
    Idols in the Roman west - (p.) Kiernan Roman cult images. The lives and worship of idols from the iron age to late antiquity. Pp. XVI + 358, ills, map. Cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2020. Cased, £90, us$120. Isbn: 978-1-108-48734-4. [REVIEW]Erica Angliker - 2021 - The Classical Review 71 (1):159-161.
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  8.  6
    Images at work: the material culture of enchantment.David Morgan - 2018 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Images can be studied in many ways--as symbols, displays of artistic genius, adjuncts to texts, or naturally occurring phenomena like reflections and dreams. Each of these approaches is justified by the nature of the image in question as well as the way viewers engage with it. But images are often something more when they perform in ways that exhibit a capacity to act independent of human will. Images come alive--they move us to action, calm us, reveal the (...)
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  9.  12
    The ancient faults of the other: religion and images at the heart of an unfinished dispute.Maria Bettetini - 2014 - Rivista di Estetica 56:141-162.
    Can a material object refer to the divine without attracting to itself devotion and veneration? And, in particular, can a depiction call to mind a reality that subtracts itself from its materiality? There are thus two problems here: whether the divine (God and what pertains to Him) can be rightly said to be represented by an object and whether, in any case, such an object runs the risk of becoming an idol, a little God, an imitation of God. The paper (...)
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  10.  42
    Commodifying adolescence for performance and profit: Language and gender in Japanese idol music.Hannah E. Dahlberg-Dodd - forthcoming - Empedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication.
    Japanese pop idols occupy an ambiguous position in the broader popular music landscape, straddling a line between fiction and non-fiction, simultaneously characterological yet physically instantiated. As idealized representations of the girl or boy next door, idols serve as both ‘image characters’ who can be used to sell a variety of products, as well as ‘quasi companions’ meant to provide fans with a manufactured sense of intimacy. Using a joint quantitative and qualitative approach, this article analyses the lyrics of (...)
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  11.  8
    L'image et l'Occident: sur la notion d'image en Europe latine.Jean Louis Schefer - 2017 - Paris: P.O.L.
    Il y a bien eu, dans le refus d'un culte des images en Europe latine, la construction d'un dogme des images portant prescription de leur usage conforme à leur pouvoir d'évocation du passé (un art de mémoire), aux manipulations de figures dans la machinerie des rêves. La théologie et les philosophies en ont fait l'instrument approché de toute connaissance conçue comme la lecture d'un tableau, possible parce que nous en participons par notre nature. Que signifient les formules de (...)
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  12.  24
    A Patrimony of Idols: Second-Wave Jewish and Christian Feminist Theology and the Criticism of Religion.Melissa Raphael - 2014 - Sophia 53 (2):241-259.
    This article suggests that second-wave feminist theology between around 1968 and 1995 undertook the quintessentially religious and task of theology, which is to break its own idols. Idoloclasm was the dynamic of Jewish and Christian feminist theological reformism and the means by which to clear a way back into its own tradition. Idoloclasm brought together an inter-religious coalition of feminists who believed that idolatry is not one of the pitfalls of patriarchy but its symptom and cause, not a subspecies (...)
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  13. The Manifest Image and the Scientific Image.Bas Van Fraassen - 1999 - In Diederik Aerts, Jan Broekaert & Ernest Mathijs (eds.), Einstein meets Magritte: an interdisciplinary reflection: the white book of "Einstein meets Magritte". Boston: Kluwer Academic. pp. 29-52.
    There are striking differences between the scientific theoretical description of the world and the way it seems to us. The consequent task of relating science to ’the world we live in’ has been a problem throughout the history of science. But have we made this an impossibility by how we formulate the problem? Some say that besides the successive world-pictures of science there is the world-picture that preceded all these and continues to exist by their side, elucidated by more humanistic (...)
     
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  14.  4
    Icônes et saintes images: la représentation de la transcendance.Philippe Sers - 2002 - Paris: Belles lettres.
    Aborde la question de l'image chrétienne face à la révolution de la modernité, en montrant comment la nature spécifique de l'image conduit à l'exigence d'un discernement en engageant le spectateur à dépasser ses propres limites. Démontre également que le modernisme de la représentation iconographique n'a rien perdu de son actualité.
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  15.  3
    The Indiscrete Image: Infinitude and Creation of the Human.Thomas A. Carlson - 2008 - University of Chicago Press.
    Humanity’s creative capacity has never been more unsettling than it is at our current moment, when it has ushered us into new technological worlds that challenge the very definition of “the human.” Those anxious to safeguard the human against techno-scientific threats often appeal to religious traditions to protect the place and dignity of the human. But how well do we understand both theological tradition and today’s technological culture? In _The Indiscrete Image, _Thomas A. Carlson challenges our common ideas about both, (...)
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  16.  62
    Definitions and Paradigms: Laches' First Definition.Øyvind Rabbås - 2004 - Phronesis 49 (2):143-168.
    Laches' first definition is rejected because it is somehow formally inadequate, but it is not clear exactly how this is so. On my interpretation, the failure of this definition cannot be explained by reference to the distinction between universals and particulars. Rather, it provides a paradigm of courage, which is inadequate because it fails to make clear how it is to be projected into other, non-paradigmatic cases. The definition is interesting because it articulates essential elements of the dominant moral tradition, (...)
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  17. The Human Subject in the Image of a Body: Neither Instrument nor Idol.Olivier Abel - 1995 - Diogenes 43 (172):55-71.
    The somewhat disturbing success of bioethics as a discipline is probably due to the unique nature of its subject matter. Indeed what is it that happens when scientific interest, with its particular resources and language, turns toward the study of the human body? Can this body be instrumentalized like any other object, or do the sciences have to give way here before a taboo subject? Have the sciences not, without their knowing it, taken on an unprecedented signification? The truly prodigious (...)
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  18.  30
    Introduction: Thinking about Idols in Early Modern Europe.Jonathan Sheehan - 2006 - Journal of the History of Ideas 67 (4):561-569.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 67.4 (2006) 561-569 MuseSearchJournalsThis JournalContents[Access article in PDF]Introduction: Thinking about Idols in Early Modern EuropeJonathan Sheehan University of MichiganAbstractThis essay is an introduction to a collection of six articles on early modern debates about idolatry. If the debates started in religion, however, they quickly generated political, philosophical, anthropological, and even scientific corollaries. These may appear to be abstract and theoretical questions, but (...)
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  19.  6
    Multiculturalism, Difference and Postmodernism.Gordon L. Clark, Dean K. Forbes & Roderick Francis - 1993
    Postmodern view of Australian multiculturalism. Discusses the ways in which identity and imagery merge and interact in a multicultural society, within a postmodern theoretical framework, and examines topics such as liberalism and multiculturalism, and cultural postmodernity. Includes chapter notes, a bibliography and an index. Clark is director of the Institute of Ethics and Public Policy at Monash University, Forbes is professor of geography at Flinders University of South Australia, and Francis is a postgraduate student at Monash University. The contributors include (...)
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  20.  36
    Tanūnapāt: Kalos, Philos, and the Vestiges of Trace.D. Venkat Rao - 2013 - The European Legacy 18 (3):287-307.
    This essay probes the aniconic and iconic elements that pervade Indian visual culture and, more specifically, the aniconic impulse that has structured, for nearly two millennia, the cultivated indifference of Indian, especially Sanskrit, reflective traditions toward the plastic arts. Over the last hundred years, inquiries have concentrated largely on the historical and formal aspects of Indian temples, idols, and images. These attempts, however, are based entirely on the conceptual-theoretical frameworks of the Western tradition. By drawing on Sanskrit reflective (...)
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  21. Fr. Nit︠s︡she.B. Rogachev - 1909
  22.  8
    Graven images: substitutes for true morality.Dietrich Von Hildebrand - 1957 - New York,: McKay.
    Dietrich von Hildebrand provides a uniquely in-depth and astute analysis of the many ways we substitute false idols (the "graven images") for true Christian morality. This is not a simple book on the differences between good and evil; most people do not replace true morality with pure evil, but with some other "extramoral" good, like "respectability" or "honor." Hildebrand guides us through these false alternatives, helping to show both what is good in them, but also where they fall (...)
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  23.  14
    Par-delà l’iconoclasme et l’idol'trie.Céline Denat - 2006 - Nietzsche Studien 35 (1):166-194.
    Let texted de Nietzsche se caractérise par l'usage de métaphors ed d'images multiples. Nietzshce affirme que nous n'avons accès à rien de plus qu'a des images. Il repense à la fois, de façcon polémique et contre tout dualisme, le statut de l'image, et la «connaissance» dont nous sommes susceptibles. L'image n'est alors que l'autre nom de l'«interprétation», nom qui permet de préciser en quel sens celle-ci doit être entendue. En conséquence, la tâche d'une philosophie neuve ne doid consister (...)
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  24.  2
    Zur Kritik von Schelers Idolenlehre: Ansätze e. Phänomenologie d. Wahrnehmungstäuschungen.Michael Ludwig Schäfer - 1978 - Bonn: Bouvier.
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  25.  36
    Representation and Misrepresentation.E. H. Gombrich - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 11 (2):195.
    It is a thankless task to have to reply to Professor Murray Krieger’s “Retrospective.” Qui s’excuse, s’accuse, and since I cannot ask my readers to embark on their own retrospective of my writings and test them for consistency, I have little chance of restoring my reputation in their eyes. Hence I would have been happier to leave Professor Krieger to his agonizing, if he did not present himself the “spokesman” for a significant body of theorists who appear to have acclaimed (...)
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  26.  42
    Standards of Truth: The Arrested Image and the Moving Eye.E. H. Gombrich - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 7 (2):237-273.
    I have stressed here and elsewhere that perspective cannot and need not claim to represent the world "as we see it." The perceptual constancies which make us underrate the degree of objective diminutions with distance, it turns out, constitute only one of the factors refuting this claim. The selectivity of vision can now be seen to be another. There are many ways of "seeing the world," but obviously the claim would have to relate to the "snapshot vision" of the stationary (...)
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  27.  3
    Immagini differenti: problema, natura e funzione dell'immagine nelle altre culture.Simone Furlani (ed.) - 2019 - Milano: Mimesis.
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  28.  36
    Korean Temple Burnings and Vandalism: The Response of the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies.Harry L. Wells - 2000 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 20 (1):239-240.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Buddhist-Christian Studies 20 (2000) 239-240 [Access article in PDF] News and Views Korean Temple Burnings and Vandalism: The Response of the Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies Harry L. WellsHumboldt State UniversityOver the course of the last decade a fairly large number of Buddhist temples in South Korea have been destroyed or damaged by fire by misguided Christian fundamentalists. More recently, Buddhist statues have been identified as idols, and attacked (...)
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  29.  23
    Traces of Derrida: Nietzsche's Image of Woman.Gayle L. Ormiston - 1984 - Philosophy Today 28 (2):178-188.
    The focus of this essay is to display and to work within the congruent levels of discourse at play in Nietzsche's text, with particular reference to the trope ''woman." Derrida's treatment of Nietzsche produced in Eperons: Les Styles de Nietzsche provides the medium, the universe of discourse if you will, for reading Nietzsche's deployment of "woman" in his writings. Derrida is a prop that sets up the discourse in the following fashion: Nietzsche's metaphor of the vita femina is comprehended in (...)
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    Cultural Variation and Cultural Creation in Chinese Biographical Writing and Carnegie's Work.Weidong Zhou - 2021 - Cultura 18 (1):81-94.
    In "Cultural Variation and Cultural Creation in Chinese Biographical Writing and Carnegie's Work" Weidong Zhou discusses the impact on Chinese biographical writing via biographies written in Chinese and translated from English about Andrew Carnegie's life and work. The interpretation of Carnegie's philanthropy includes Chinese traditional cultural concepts such as "righteousness," "cause and effect," and "self-cultivation" which constitute the unique understanding of "philanthropy" in modern Chinese literature. From a "moral model" to "successful person" the overall images following Carnegie can reflect (...)
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  31.  10
    Dionysus and the Overman. Two Characters in the Philosophy of F. Nietzsche.Е.С Смышляева - 2022 - History of Philosophy 27 (2):42-54.
    The article attempts to reveal the mutual relations between: the figure of the Greek god Dionysus, inseparable companion of the philosopher throughout his work, and, in contrast, the somewhat mysterious figure of the overman, who burst like a meteor in the first pages of the book “Thus Spoke Zarathustra”. Genetically linked not only to Greek mythology but also to Schopenhauer’s will, Nietzsche’s Dionysus already in “The Birth of Tragedy” appears on the other side of good and evil and sanctions the (...)
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  32.  10
    Technology and Our Relationship with God.O. P. Anselm Ramelow - 2024 - Nova et Vetera 22 (1):159-186.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Technology and Our Relationship with GodAnselm Ramelow O.P.God's Original Plan and the FallTechnology may appear to be a very secular thing, but to assume that technology can be understood without God would be a mistake. Technology is deeply involved in our relationship with God. This involvement is, moreover, profoundly ambivalent.1To begin with the positive side of this ambivalence: the growing awareness of the dangers of technology should not lead (...)
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  33.  2
    Nietzsche and the Philosophers ed. by Mark T. Conard (review).Melanie Shepherd - 2024 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 55 (1):117-123.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Nietzsche and the Philosophers ed. by Mark T. ConardMelanie ShepherdMark T. Conard, ed., Nietzsche and the Philosophers New York: Routledge, 2017. vi + 299 pp. isbn 978-0-367-88513-7. Paper, $42.36.While every good philosopher engages a philosophical tradition in some way, the history of philosophy is more central to Nietzsche's work than to most. Insofar as a wide range of philosophers are implicated in a metaphysics and framework of values (...)
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  34.  9
    Western theology’s whiteness and some Liberation theologies, two sides of the same coin?Sifiso Khuzwayo - 2024 - HTS Theological Studies 80 (2):10.
    This article explores how the Western theology often employed by European explorers sought to deify ‘whiteness’. Whiteness as an ideological construction found the ideal tool in Christianity and through supersessionism detached Jesus of Nazareth from his Jewish roots and clothed him in whiteness, thus making white maleness the idol that all creatures must aspire towards. In defiance, liberation theologians, in particular James Cone, coined the possibility that ‘Jesus is black’. Thus, the possibility of Jesus being anything to anyone becomes conceivable. (...)
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  35.  31
    Vital Matters and Generative Materiality: Between Bennett and Irigaray.Rachel Jones - 2015 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 46 (2):156-172.
    This paper puts Jane Bennett’s vital materialism into dialogue with Luce Irigaray’s ontology of sexuate difference. Together these thinkers challenge the image of dead or intrinsically inanimate matter that is bound up with both the instrumentalization of the earth and the disavowal of sexual difference and the maternal. In its place they seek to affirm a vital, generative materiality: an ‘active matter’ whose differential becomings no longer oppose activity to passivity, subject to object, or one body, self or entity to (...)
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  36.  5
    O discurso da imagem: invenção, cópia e circularidade na arte.Alex Fernandes Bohrer - 2020 - Lisboa: Lisbon International Press.
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  37.  13
    Nietzsche and the Philosophers.Melanie Shepherd - 2024 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 55 (1):117-123.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Nietzsche and the Philosophers ed. by Mark T. ConardMelanie ShepherdMark T. Conard, ed., Nietzsche and the Philosophers New York: Routledge, 2017. vi + 299 pp. isbn 978-0-367-88513-7. Paper, $42.36.While every good philosopher engages a philosophical tradition in some way, the history of philosophy is more central to Nietzsche's work than to most. Insofar as a wide range of philosophers are implicated in a metaphysics and framework of values (...)
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  38.  13
    Scandal and Imitation In Matthew, Kierkegaard, and Girard.David McCracken - 1997 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 4 (1):146-162.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:SCANDAL AND IMITATION IN MATTHEW, KIERKEGAARD, AND GIRARD David McCracken University ofWashington Charlie Chaplin once entered a Charlie Chaplin look-alike contest, but his resemblance was insufficient for the first- or secondplace prize. He finished third, and thus created a small scandal: the judges—experts on Charlie Chaplin—proved to be so inept that they could not recognize the genuine article1. The simple, mimetic entertainment of a look-alike contest can become more (...)
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  39.  44
    Jena Romanticism and Its Appropriation of Jakob Bohme: Theosophy, Hagiography, Literature (review).Michael G. Vater - 2001 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 39 (2):307-308.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 39.2 (2001) 307-308 [Access article in PDF] Mayer, Paola. Jena Romanticism and Its Appropriation of Jakob Böhme: Theosophy, Hagiography, Literature. McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Ideas, no. 25. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1999. Pp. x + 242. Cloth, $65.00. Paolo Mayer sets out to revise the accepted image of the influence of Jakob Böhme, the sixteenth-century mystic and theosophist, on (...)
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  40.  22
    Resisting Idolatry and Instrumentalisation in Loving the Neighbour: The Significance of the Pilgrimage Motif for Augustine’s Usus–Fruitio Distinction.Sarah Stewart-Kroeker - 2014 - Studies in Christian Ethics 27 (2):202-221.
    This article addresses Augustine’s distinction between usus and fruitio—and O’Donovan’s critique of it—in order to consider the dangers of disordered love in the forms of idolatry and instrumentalisation in neighbourly relations on earth. Examining the christological heart of the pilgrimage image as articulated in De doctrina christiana addresses O’Donovan’s critique that the pilgrimage image instrumentalises one’s relationships to others in the progress of one’s own journey to God. In fact, this image presents a christological dialectic that establishes the continuity of (...)
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  41. Understanding the Role of Thai Aesthetics in Religion, and the Potentiality of a Thai Christian Aesthetic.L. Keith Neigenfind - 2020 - Religion and Social Communication 1 (18):49-66.
    Thailand has a rich history of using aesthetics as a means of communication. This is seen not only in the communication of basic ideas, but aesthetics are also used to communicate the cultural values of the nation. Aesthetical images in Thailand have the tendency to dwell both in the realm of the mundane and the supernatural, in the daily and the esoteric. Historically, many faith traditions have used aesthetics as an effective form of communication, including Buddhism, Brahmanism, as well (...)
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  42.  17
    Iconoclasm in the Old and New Testaments.Peter Goldman - 2003 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 10 (1):83-94.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:ICONOCLASM in the OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS Peter Goldman Westminster State College ofSalt Lake City Acentral problem for any monotheistic religion is distinguishing worship of the one true God from idolatry in all its forms. René Girard's pioneering interpretation ofthe Judeo-Christian scriptures clarifies this distinction by recourse to an ethical conception ofthe sacrificial: False religion or idolatry is essentially sacrificial, while the Judeo-Christian tradition opposes the sacrificial in all (...)
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  43.  87
    Marlow's morality.Daniel Brudney - 2003 - Philosophy and Literature 27 (2):318-340.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Literature 27.2 (2003) 318-340 [Access article in PDF] Marlow's Morality Daniel Brudney "Good is a transcendent reality" means that virtue is the attempt to pierce the veil of selfish consciousness and join the world as it really is. —Iris Murdoch, The Sovereignty of Good I THE REPUTATION OF Conrad's sailor-narrator, Charlie Marlow, has risen and fallen through the years. Initially seen as a simple master mariner or (...)
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  44.  55
    The "Très Riches Heures": An Illuminated Manuscript in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.Michael Camille - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 17 (1):72-107.
    This new nonexistence of the Très Riches Heures is, I would argue, crucial to the existence of its replications. It is essential for each numbered copy of the limited facsimile edition that the original manuscript not be available for all to see. Most art historians, no matter how "contextual" or theoretical, would still emphasize the necessity of looking at the objects they study with that oddly singular, egocentrically well-trained "eye"/I. Left, however, with only the piles of reproductions I am forced (...)
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  45.  3
    Das Bild eines „europäischen Goethe“ in Nietzsches Götzen-Dämmerung. Einige Bemerkungen.Aldo Venturelli - 2021 - Nietzsche Studien 50 (1):102-120.
    This article analyses the origin of TI 49–51 on the basis of several posthumous fragments from the autumn of 1887, which had been reworked in 1888. This analysis highlights significant connections that got lost along the way to the final version of these aphorisms, such as Nietzsche’s comparison between Goethe and Spinoza which, in 1887, was the beginning of his updated reflections on Goethe. The origin and context of these aphorisms allow for a better understanding of the long-established image of (...)
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  46.  8
    The use of artificial intelligence technology in Chinese show business.Chzhantsin' Tun - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The object of the study is artificial intelligence technology in Chinese show business. The subject of the study is the following technologies of Chinese show business, at the basis of which we can find an artificial intelligence: virtual idols, digital avatars, virtual influencers. The following aspects of these technologies are considered in detail: making a profit, strengthening national identity. Special attention is focused on the fact that the development of artificial intelligence technology is part of the state policy of (...)
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  47.  41
    Fragile Faces: Levinas and Lanzmann.Libby Saxton - 2007 - Film-Philosophy 11 (2):1-14.
    In recent years, the concept of a ‘prohibition against representation’ and its ethical andpolitical implications for artistic practices past, present and future have been subjected torenewed critical scrutiny. While this interdiction derives from the Second Commandmentgiven by God to Moses, forbidding the creation of graven images or idols, it hasfrequently been invoked in secular contexts, and has acquired special resonance inongoing debates about the difficulty of adequately representing the event which hasbeen called the Holocaust or Shoah. The persistent (...)
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  48.  33
    "They Were All Human Beings: So Much Is Plain": Reflections on Cultural Relativism in the Humanities.E. H. Gombrich - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (4):686-699.
    In the fourth section of Goethe’s Zahme Xenien we find the quatrain from which I have taken the theme of such an old and new controversy, which, as I hope, concerns both Germanic studies and the other humanities: “What was it that kept you from us so apart?” I always read Plutarch again and again. “And what was the lesson he did impart?” “They were all human beings—so much is plain.”1 In the very years when Goethe wrote these lines, that (...)
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  49.  26
    On feminizing the philosophy of rhetoric.Molly Meijer Wertheimer - 2000 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 33 (3):v-vii.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Rhetoric 33.3 (2000) v-vii [Access article in PDF] On Feminizing the Philosophy of Rhetoric Molly Meijer Wertheimer When asked to define his editorial policies in choosing articles to publish in Philosophy and Rhetoric, Henry W. Johnstone Jr. disavowed following any strict editorial guidelines; instead, he gave two examples to show how selection worked as a process. In one case, he agreed to publish an "off the wall (...)
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  50. Readymades in the Social Sphere: an Interview with Daniel Peltz.Feliz Lucia Molina - 2013 - Continent 3 (1):17-24.
    Since 2008 I have been closely following the conceptual/performance/video work of Daniel Peltz. Gently rendered through media installation, ethnographic, and performance strategies, Peltz’s work reverently and warmly engages the inner workings of social systems, leaving elegant rips and tears in any given socio/cultural quilt. He engages readymades (of social and media constructions) and uses what are identified as interruptionist/interventionist strategies to disrupt parts of an existing social system, thus allowing for something other to emerge. Like the stereoscope that requires two (...)
     
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