Results for 'Man Him Ip'

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Man-Him Ip
University of Leeds
  1.  66
    On the Conceptual Issues Surrounding the Notion of Relational Bohmian Dynamics.Antonio Vassallo & Pui Him Ip - 2016 - Foundations of Physics 46 (8):943-972.
    The paper presents a program to construct a non-relativistic relational Bohmian theory, that is, a theory of N moving point-like particles that dispenses with space and time as fundamental background structures. The relational program proposed is based on the best-matching framework originally developed by Julian Barbour. In particular, the paper focuses on the conceptual problems that arise when trying to implement such a program. It is argued that pursuing a relational strategy in the Bohmian context leads to a more parsimonious (...)
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  2. Man as Psychology Sees Him.Edward S. Robinson - 1938 - Philosophy 13 (49):119-119.
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  3.  34
    Cardinal Manning as Others Saw Him.Francis Bywater - 1992 - The Chesterton Review 18 (4):594-601.
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  4. The Man from Nazareth, as His Contemporaries Saw Him.Harry Emerson Fosdick - 1949
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  5. 'Every man knows where and how beauty gives him pleasure:'Beauty Discourse and the Logic of Aesthetics.Amelia Jones - 2002 - In Emory Elliott, Louis Freitas Caton & Jeffrey Rhyne (eds.), Aesthetics in a Multicultural Age. Oxford University Press.
     
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  6. The Man from Nazareth, as His Contemporaries Saw Him.Fosdick Emerson - 1949
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  7.  10
    Man as Psychology Sees Him.Edward S. Robinson - 1933 - Modern Schoolman 10 (3):70-70.
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  8.  16
    Man as Psychology Sees Him. By Edward S. Robinson. (New York and London: The Macmillan Co.1932. Pp. vii + 376. Price 10s. 6d. net.). [REVIEW]J. Drever - 1938 - Philosophy 13 (49):119-.
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  9. “We Can Rebuild Him!”: The essentialisation of the human/cyborg interface in the twenty-first century, or whatever happened to The Six Million Dollar Man? [REVIEW]Simon Bacon - 2013 - AI and Society 28 (3):267-276.
    This paper aims to show how recent cinematic representations reveal a far more pessimistic and essentialised vision of Human/Cyborg hybridity in comparison with the more enunciative and optimistic ones seen at the end of the twentieth century. Donna Haraway’s still influential 1985 essay “A Cyborg Manifesto” saw the combination of the organic and the technological as offering new and exciting ways beyond the normalised culturally constructed categories of gender and identity formation. However, more recently critics see her later writings as (...)
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  10. You can lead a man to oughta, but you can't make him think : the disparity between knowing what is right and doing it.Carole L. Jurkiewicz & Robert A. Giacalone - 2017 - In Carole L. Jurkiewicz & Robert A. Giacalone (eds.), Radical thoughts on ethical leadership. Information Age Publishing.
     
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  11. What Is Man that Thou Hast Mentioned Him? Psalm 8 and the Nature of the Human Person.Gary A. Anderson - 2000 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 3 (1).
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  12.  38
    An Interview with Paul de Man.Stephano Rosso & Paul de Man - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (4):788-795.
    Rosso: Can you say something more about the differences between your work and Derrida’s?De Man: I’m not really the right person to ask where the difference is, because, as I feel in many respects close to Derrida, I don’t determine whether my work resembles or is different from of Derrida. My initial engagement with Derrida—which I think is typical and important for all that relationship which followed closely upon my first encounter with him in Baltimore at the colloquium on “The (...)
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  13. Book review:《何善衡與恒生銀行早期文化: 創辦人價值觀與公司文化構建》, 葉保強與何順文合著, 信報出版, 2020年, 254頁,(IBSN: 978–988-74,176–4-4) [Its English version is: Ho Sin Hang and the Early Company Culture of Hang Seng Bank: A Founder’s Values and the Making of Company Culture by Ip Po Keung and Ho Shun Man, translated by Ip Po Keung (Hong Kong: HKEJ Publishing Ltd., 2022), pp288, (ISBN: 978–988-75,278–2-4).]. [REVIEW]C. X. George Wei - forthcoming - Asian Journal of Business Ethics:1-4.
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  14. A modern interpretation of the human will of the son of God become man in the theology of Saint Maximus Confessorand the fathers before him.Vasile Cristescu - 2008 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 7 (19):226-245.
  15.  2
    Fabricated Man: The Ethics of Genetic Control.Paul Ramsey - 1970 - Yale University Press.
    “Because those who come after us may not be like us, or because those like us may not come after us, or because after a time there may be none to come after us, mankind must now set to work to insure that those who come after us will be more unlike us. In this there is at work the modern intellect’s penchant for species suicide.” With these words Paul Ramsey brings to a conclusion his provocative and surprising study of (...)
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  16. Man and logos: Heraclitus’ secret.A. V. Halapsis - 2020 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 17:119-130.
    Purpose. The author believes that the main topic of philosophical studies of Heraclitus was not nature, not dialectics, and not political philosophy; he was engaged in the development of philosophical anthropology, and all other questions raised by him were subordinated to it to one degree or another. It is anthropology that is the most "dark" part of the teachings of this philosopher, therefore the purpose of this article is to identify the hidden anthropological message of Heraclitus. In case of success, (...)
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  17.  35
    ‘History Man’. The First Biography on R.G. Collingwood.Guido Vanheeswijck - 2012 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 6 (1):134-142.
    Abstract Is `History Man', Fred Inglis' biography on R.G. Collingwood a successful biography? Inglis' explicit ambition is to portray the concrete figure Collingwood by abducting him from what he calls the vacuum-packed academic world of scholars. But the best biographers look for a balanced equilibrium between rendering philosophical ideas and dramatizing a philosopher's life. Put another way, they evoke the interweaving of a philosopher's thought with the vicissitudes of his life. Despite the unmistakable qualities of this biography, Fred Inglis did (...)
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  18.  18
    Man as a Superior Quality of the Rest of Creation.Spyros P. Panagopoulos - 2016 - Dialogue and Universalism 26 (1):69-78.
    In the treatise on the construction of man De opificio hominis, Gregory of Nyssa argues that man is qualitatively superior to other natural creations of God. Man is created in the image of God, a condition not found, at least explicitly, for other creatures. It is up to him whether he will digest this image in question or not. Despite the superiority attributed to man, it is not claimed in any way that he shall behave towards the rest of nature (...)
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  19.  36
    The man who defined truth and the lvov crisis.Miroslava Trajkovski - 2021 - In Nenad Cekić (ed.), Етика и истина у доба кризе. Belgrade: University of Belgrade - Faculty of Philosophy. pp. 97-110.
    In the period after the First World War when the various national-ideological “truths” that led to it were not well resolved which resulted in the Second World War, one of the greatest world crises occurs. In those turbulent times, one philosopher renounces his national identity (changes his religion and name), wanting not to save himself from an evil world that is emerging but to join the creation of a completely new world – the world of modern logic. This man is (...)
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  20. Man's Approach to God.Jacques Maritain - 1960 - Latrobe, Pa., Archabbey Press.
    Man's Approach to God was the 5th lecture in the Wimmer Memorial Lecture Series (1947-1970) at Saint Vincent and was given in 1951 by Jacques Maritain. Maritain was one of the most influential figures in the Thomistic revival of the 20th century. Both in his personal life and in his prolific academic corpus, Maritain modeled the Church's commitment to the interrelationship between faith and reason. So seriously did he take his intellectual commitments in his student years that, along with soon-to-be (...)
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  21.  2
    Man's Soul: An Introductory Essay in Philosophical Psychology.S. L. Frank & Boris Jakim - 1993 - Ohio University Press.
    "Seymon Lyudvigovich Frank, the author of the volume here made available for the first time in English translation, was one of the leading Russian philosophers of this century; some authorities consider him the most outstanding Russian philosopher of any age...._ " _Man's Soul__ is a book which perfectly exemplifies the generous conception of the mission and competence of philosophy characteristic of Frank and the other members of the Russian metaphysical movement. Frank's stated aim in the treatise is to reclaim for (...)
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  22.  57
    Man’s potential: Views of J. F. Lincoln and Wilhelm von Humboldt.John F. Michael - 1988 - Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 8 (2):23-26.
    Interest in philosophy of management continues to grow. Growth of the philosophy of management might result from the consideration of man's potential as viewed by two different men, an industrialist and a philosopher. James Finney Lincoln was president and board chairman of The Lincoln Electric Company for 37 years. During that time, and for 14 previous years when he was the firm's general manager, he developed a philosophy basic to a practice of business management that gained national and international attention. (...)
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  23.  21
    Man’s potential: Views of J. F. Lincoln and Wilhelm von Humboldt.John F. Michael - 1988 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 8 (2):23-26.
    Interest in philosophy of management continues to grow. Growth of the philosophy of management might result from the consideration of man's potential as viewed by two different men, an industrialist and a philosopher. James Finney Lincoln was president and board chairman of The Lincoln Electric Company for 37 years. During that time, and for 14 previous years when he was the firm's general manager, he developed a philosophy basic to a practice of business management that gained national and international attention. (...)
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  24.  13
    The Man Who Mistook his Handlung for a Tat: Hegel on Oedipus and Other Tragic Thebans.Constantine Sandis - 2010 - Hegel Bulletin 31 (2):35-60.
    Throughout his work Hegel distinguishes between the notion of an act from the standpoint of the agent and that of all other standpoints. He terms the formerHandlung and the latterTat. This distinction should not be confused with the contemporary one between action andmerebodily movement. For one, bothHandlungandTatare aspects of conduct that results from the will,viz. Tun. Moreover, Hegel's taxonomy is motivated purely by concerns relating to modes of perception. So whereas theorists such as Donald Davidson assert thatallactions are events that (...)
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  25.  81
    Man's Peril, 1954-55.Bertrand Russell - 1983 - London: Routledge.
    This volume signals reinvigoration of Russell the public campaigner. The title of the volume is taken from one of his most famous and eloquent short essays and probably the best known of his many broadcasts for the BBC. Man's Peril 1954-55 not only captures the essence of Russell's thinking about nuclear weapons and the Cold War in the mid 1950s, but its extraordinary impact which served to jolt him into political protest once again. The activism of which we glimpse the (...)
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  26. Man of the People: A Life of Harry S Truman.Noam Chomsky - unknown
    by Alonzo L Hamby Noam Chomsky The Guardian, March 8, 1996 Harry Truman is a marvellous subject for a serious biography and after decades of 'scholarly engagement' with the subject, Alonzo Hamby is well qualified to write one. As he says, Truman was a 'man of the people,' whose life 'exemplifies' many aspects of 'the American experience'. In April 1945, 'knowing little more about diplomatic arrangements and military progress than what one would read in a good newspaper, he suddenly found (...)
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  27.  29
    Diderot: Man and Society.J. H. Brumfitt - 1978 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures 12:162-183.
    Principal editor of the great Encyclopedia, novelist and prose writer of genius, contributor to the development of scientific thought and method, to the theory of the bourgeois drama and to the practice of art criticism, Diderot perhaps embodies the rich variety of the Enlightenment spirit more than any other man. His only real rival is surely Voltaire. Rousseau, whose influence was greater than Diderot's, would not thank us for classing him among the philosophes. The more profound philosophers - a Hume (...)
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  28.  24
    The Man Who Saw Through Time. [REVIEW]R. M. K. - 1973 - Review of Metaphysics 27 (2):380-380.
    Those who read this book may be more impressed with its author than the man about whom he is writing. Loren Eiseley is an anthropologist, naturalist and humanist, but more than this he is a man who has a talent for poetic expression. His ardent admiration of Bacon, the heralder [[sic]] of the scientific age, permeates the work and motivates him to speak of the philosopher as "the greatest Elizabethan voyager of all time—a man who sounded the cavernous surges of (...)
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  29.  12
    William Manning and the political theory of the dependent classes.Alex Gourevitch - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (2):331-360.
    This article reappraises the political ideas of William Manning, and through him the trajectory of early modern republicanism. Manning, an early American farmer writing in the 1780s and 1790s, developed the republican distinction between and into a novel On this theory, it is the dependent, laboring classes who share an interest in social equality. Because of this interest, they are the only ones who can achieve and maintain republican liberty. With this identification of the interests of the dependent classes with (...)
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  30.  28
    The Man from Snowy River.Tom Griffiths - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 74 (1):7-20.
    George Seddon takes a cheeky pride in his native wit, in his ability to improvise, invent, and to trip lightly over difficult terrain. These are the bush virtues of the Man from Snowy River. In this essay I reflect upon the interdisciplinary (and undisciplined) nature of Seddon's vision and practice, and place him in a tradition of nature and landscape writing in Australia that goes back to the 19th century. But I also suggest that he has been ahead of his (...)
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  31.  4
    Diderot: Man and Society.J. H. Brumfitt - 1978 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures 12:162-183.
    Principal editor of the great Encyclopedia, novelist and prose writer of genius, contributor to the development of scientific thought and method, to the theory of the bourgeois drama and to the practice of art criticism, Diderot perhaps embodies the rich variety of the Enlightenment spirit more than any other man. His only real rival is surely Voltaire. Rousseau, whose influence was greater than Diderot's, would not thank us for classing him among the philosophes. The more profound philosophers - a Hume (...)
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  32.  2
    Man as a global and cosmic Being in the works of V.I. Vernadsky and K.E. Tsiolkovsky.Oksana Evgenievna Makeeva - 2021 - Kant 41 (4):160-164.
    The article reveals the approaches to the essence of man by one of the founders of Russian cosmism K.E. Tsiolkovsky and V.I. Vernadsky. the teaching of which is attributed to the natural-scientific direction of Russian cosmism, during the emergence of the vector of technical and technological development of mankind. The idea of a holistic, harmonious approach to the material and spiritual world of man united the philosophical worldview of K.E. Tsiolkovsky and V.I. Vernadsky, who viewed man and the surrounding world (...)
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  33.  66
    A Man of Dark Thoughts: Carl Schmitt.William Kluback - 1988 - The Owl of Minerva 19 (2):183-190.
    Carl Schmitt was a jurist, political philosopher, and a devoted student of Thomas Hobbes. Schmitt lived from 1888 to 1985 in Germany, and for a time enjoyed with Martin Heidegger the right to create under Hitler a new spiritual German state. Both men shared enduring veneration, admiring pilgrimages, and remain sources of political and philosophical discussions and interpretation. Recently, three of Schmitt’s books were added to the one already available in English, The Concept of the Political. Most of Schmitt’s books (...)
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  34.  39
    A new anatomy: Domenico Bertoloni-Meli: Mechanism, experiment, disease: Marcello Malpighi and seventeenth-century anatomy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011, 456pp, $45 PB.Gideon Manning & Cynthia Klestinec - 2014 - Metascience 24 (1):65-69.
    Howard Adelmann’s majestic five volume Marcello Malpighi and the Evolution of Embryology was published nearly 50 years ago. A mix of paraphrase and translation, as well as extended commentary, Adelmann described Malpighi as “one of the cardinal figures in the history of biology. As we look back over the three centuries that separate him from us, he may, for all his towering stature, at first glance seem a distant figure. And yet he and his work are not so remote after (...)
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  35. A Serious Man.Timothy Stanley - 2013 - Bible and Critical Theory 9 (1):27-37.
    The film A Serious Man cinematically deconstructs the life of a mid-twentieth century, mid-western American physics professor named Larry Gopnik. As it happens, Larry is up for tenure with a wife who is about to leave him, an unemployed brother who sleeps on his couch, and two self-obsessed teenage children. The film presents a Job-like theodicy in which the mysteries of quantum physics are haunted both by questions of good and evil as well as the spectre of an un-named God, (...)
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  36.  2
    The Man Who Could Fly: St. Joseph of Copertino and the Mystery of Levitation, by Michael Grosso.Stephen Braude - 2016 - Journal of Scientific Exploration 30 (2).
    The case of St. Joseph, the Flying Friar, is one of the most fascinating in the entire history of parapsychology. But until now, there was very little written in English about Joseph. Grosso’s new book fills that void handily, and goes well beyond that by speculating in detail and great subtlety on a variety of surrounding issues, including the efficacy of prayer, the history of religion and religious miracles in general, and the psychology of the period in relation to the (...)
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  37.  16
    The Grand Old Man of Evolution.Michael Shermer & Frank J. Sulloway - unknown
    rnst Mayr was born in Kempten, Germany, on July 5, 1904, making him, at age 95, the grand old man of evolutionary biology, one of the primary architects of the modem synthesis of genetic and evolutionary theory, and arguably one of the most influential scientists of the 20th century. His career interests have spanned a remarkable five different fields, including: (1) ornithology, (2) systematics, (3) zoogeography, (4) evolutionary theory, and (5) philosophy and history of science. Such broad research interests grew (...)
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  38.  25
    Observations on Man: His Frame, His Duty, and His Expectations (1749).David Hartley - 1801 - Gainseville, Fla.Scholars; Facsimiles & Reprints.
    This Hartley applies to man, and observes, that as man cannot comprehend his own nature, he must imagine a finite being superior to him that can ...
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  39.  26
    For a Pragmatics of the Useless, or the Value of the Infrathin.Erin Manning - 2017 - Political Theory 45 (1):97-115.
    Marcel Duchamp describes the infrathin as “the most minute of intervals, or the slightest of differences.” Working through Duchamp’s proposition, and taking him at his work that the infrathin cannot be defined as such—“One can only give examples of it”—this article explores how the infrathin comes to expression and asks what a politics of the infrathin might look like. Key to the exploration is the question of how else value can be defined and how this rethinking of the concept of (...)
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  40. The ordinary man of cinema.Jean Louis Schefer - 2016 - South Pasadena, CA.: Semiotext(e).
    When it was first published in French in 1980, The Ordinary Man of Cinema signaled a shift from the French film criticism of the 1960s to a new breed of film philosophy that disregarded the semiotics and post-structuralism of the preceding decades. Schefer describes the schizophrenic subjectivity the cinema offers us: the film as a work projected without memory, viewed by (and thereby lived by) a subject scarred and shaped by memory. The Ordinary Man of Cinema delineates the phenomenology of (...)
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  41. Matter, Mind and Man.Edmund Ware Sinnott - 1957 - New York: Harper.
    Originally published in 1957 and written by one of the 20th Century's leading botanists and a fierce advocate of organicism, this book explores concepts about man and his relation to life and the universe, and about the great creative and spiritual powers within and around him. The author provides answers to perennial human questions whilst discussing the problems of sin, justice, ugliness and beauty.
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  42.  77
    Polanyi’s Problematic ‘Man in Thought’.S. R. Jha - 1999 - Tradition and Discovery 26 (3):15-23.
    Polanyi’s philosophy of “man in thought,” by all appearances, chronologically and structurally, seems to be founded on his epistemology. Polanyi’s epistemology of tacit knowing as integration is teleological. By his “ontological equation,” he patterned comprehensive (and complex) entities as emergence on his epistemology. This forces him to make puzzling formulaic statements which land him in trouble with fellow scientists. The equation also lends itself to unwarranted problematic interpretations. The exploration leads me to suggest that Polanyi may be understood as a (...)
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  43. Thoughtful Economic Man: Essays on Rationality, Moral Rules and Benevolence.J. Gay Tulip Meeks (ed.) - 1991 - Cambridge University Press.
    The essays by celebrated authors in this 1991 book cover themes fundamental to economics: the influence of benevolence, altruism, justice and religious principles in our treatment of others in society; and the bases of rationality in decision making under conditions of uncertainty. These common themes are given a wide range of perspectives by the contributors, who discuss whether not just a 'rational' but also a 'thoughtful' economic man can be fitted into a sophisticated version of the orthodox model of man (...)
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  44. Machiavelli: the man who taught the people what they have to fear.Patrick Boucheron - 2020 - New York: Other Press.
    In a series of poignant vignettes, a preeminent historian makes a compelling case for Machiavelli as an unjustly maligned figure with valuable political insights that resonate as strongly today as they did in his time. Whenever a tempestuous period in history begins, Machiavelli is summoned, because he is known as one for philosophizing in dark times. In fact, since his death in 1527, we have never ceased to read him to pull ourselves out of torpors. But what do we really (...)
     
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  45. The last man takes LSD: Foucault and the end of revolution.Mitchell Dean - 2021 - New York: Verso.
    Part intellectual history, part critical theory, The Last Man Takes LSD challenges the way we think about both Michel Foucault and modern progressive politics. One fateful day in May 1975, Foucault dropped acid in the southern California desert. In letters reproduced here, he described it as among the most important events of his life, one which would lead him to completely rework his History of Sexuality. That trip helped redirect Foucault's thought and contributed to a tectonic shift in the intellectual (...)
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  46.  11
    From the End of Man to the Art of Life: Rereading Foucault’s Changing Aesthetics.Kenneth Berger - forthcoming - Foucault Studies:125-150.
    In Foucault’s writing throughout the 1960s, in which he foregrounds the critical function of language and signification, works of art and literature – and works of avant-garde art and literature in particular – appear prominently and are the objects of sustained theoretical investment. In the 1970s, however, as Foucault moves away from his earlier concern with language’s capacity to dissolve “man” and begins to concentrate instead on the ways in which man is governed, works of art and literature no longer (...)
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  47. The Christian Idea of Man.Dan Farrelly (ed.) - 2011 - St. Augustine's Press.
    In The Christian Idea of Man Josef Pieper brings off an extraordinary feat. He acknowledges that whoever introduces the theme of "virtue" and "the virtues" can expect to be met with a smile - of various shades of condescension. He then proceeds to single out "prudence" as the fundamental virtue on which the other cardinal virtues are based. In defining it, he does away with the shallow connotations which have debased it in modern times. Similarly, he manages to divest it (...)
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  48.  16
    The No-Man's Land of Competing Patterns.Robert Denham - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (1):194-202.
    The reductive nature of Kincaid's undertaking comes into sharper focus when we compare his kind of critical inquiry with that, say, of [Sheldon] Sacks or [Ralph] Rader. Kincaid concludes where they begin. For Sacks, the identification of some type, such as satire, is what initiates the critical process. What then remains is to move beyond type, which exists at the highest level of generality, to form and finally to those detailed analyses which will account for the peculiar powers of unique (...)
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  49. On the Eternal in Man.Max Scheler - 2010 - Routledge.
    Max Scheler decisively influenced German philosophy in the period after the First World War, a time of upheaval and new beginnings. Without him, the problems of German philosophy today, and its attempts to solve them would be quite inconceivable. What was new in his philosophy was that he used phenomenology to investigate spiritual realities. The subject of On the Eternal in Manis the divine and its reality, the originality and non-derivation of religious experience. Scheler shows the characteristic quality of that (...)
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  50.  2
    The Mind of God and the Works of Man.Edward Craig - 1987 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Seeking to rediscover the connection between philosophy as studied in universities and those general views of man and reality which are 'philosophy' to the educated layman, Edward Craig here offers a view of philosophy and its history since the early seventeenth century. He presents this period as concerned primarily with just two visions of the essential nature of man. One portrays human beings as made in the image of God, required to resemble him as far as lies in our power; (...)
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