Results for ' Cicero, and universality of Stoic conception of city ‐ Book I of De legibus '

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  1.  40
    Virtue and Circumstances: On the City-State Concept of Arete.Margalit Finkelberg - 2002 - American Journal of Philology 123 (1):35-49.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Virtue and Circumstances:On the City-State Concept of AreteMargalit FinkelbergIn his discussion of virtue (arete) in books 1 and 10 of the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle makes the famous claim that "it is impossible, or not easy, to do noble acts without the proper equipment ()" (Eth. Nic. 1.8 1099a32-33). This is why arete would need what he calls "the external goods" () in order to be actualized:The liberal man (...)
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  2.  15
    From Nature to Artifice: Aristotle to Hobbes.David Johnston - 2011 - In A Brief History of Justice. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 89–115.
    This chapter contains sections titled: I II III.
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  3.  32
    What Kind of Cosmopolitans Were the Stoics? the Cosmic City in the Early Stoa.Henry Dyson - 2008 - Polis 25 (2):181-207.
    The Stoics are often cited as predecessors of Kantian theories of cosmopolitan justice. After setting out the various types of contemporary cosmopolitanism, I argue that the Stoic doctrine does not match any of these categories. The core of the Cosmic City doctrine in the early Stoa is cosmological and theological, not moral or political. It concerns the Zeus’ governance of the physical universe and the proper relation of our individual natures to the nature of the whole. Although the (...)
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  4. The Stoic Theory of Natural Law.Paul A. Vander Waerdt - 1989 - Dissertation, Princeton University
    This work reconstructs the original theory of natural law as developed by the early Stoic scholarchs, explains its fundamental differences from our traditional conception of natural law, and considers the philosophical motivation for this transformation of the original theory. For the nearly Stoics, natural law corresponds not to a determinate code of laws or precepts, as in Aquinas, but to a certain mental disposition, namely the perfectly rational and consistent conduct of the wise man. The content of the (...)
     
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  5.  13
    De l’influence des Mémorables (I 4, IV 3) sur le De Natura deorum (II) de Cicéron.Louis-André Dorion - 2016 - Philosophie Antique 16 (16):181-208.
    Chapters I.4 and IV.3 of the Memorabilia, where Socrates presents an anthropocentric teleology and an elaborate conception of the divine providence that rules the universe, had a profound influence on the Stoics. The ancients were well aware of this influence, but modern acknowledgement of it was slow in coming, sometimes because these chapters of the Memorabilia were seen as interpolations of Stoic origin, sometimes because the teleology presented by Socrates was attributed to Diogenes of Apollonia. Fortunately, recent commentators (...)
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  6.  43
    Mary N. Potter Packer: Cicero's Presentation of Epicurean Ethics. A study based primarily on De Finibus I and II. Pp. ix+127. New York: Columbia University Press, 1938. Paper. [REVIEW]Cyril Bailey - 1939 - The Classical Review 53 (5-6):221-.
  7.  9
    On Stoic Good and Evil: De Finibus Bonorum Et Malorum, Liber III ; And, Paradoxa Stoicorum.Marcus Tullius Cicero & M. R. Wright - 1991
    Cicero's De Finibus 3 gives in Latin, through the persona of Cato, an outline of Stoic ethical theory, and is the main continuous text on this subject extant from the ancient world. This edition with text and sub-titles, facing translation and commentary, aims to present to the modern reader the arguments in a clear and accessible form against the background of the turmoil of political events in Rome surrounding the death of Caesar, and in a presentation that will allow (...)
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  8.  53
    The Idea and the Reality of the City in the Thought of Philo of Alexandria.David T. Runia - 2000 - Journal of the History of Ideas 61 (3):361-379.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 61.3 (2000) 361-379 [Access article in PDF] The Idea and the Reality of the City in the Thought of Philo of Alexandria * David T. Runia The theme of my paper is the conception of the city as a social and cultural phenomenon held by the Jewish exegete and philosopher Philo of Alexandria (15 bc to 50 ad). There can (...)
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  9.  8
    The Morals of Cicero. Containing, I. His Conferences de Finibus: Or, Concerning the Ends of Things Good and Evil. In Which, All the Principles of the Epicureans, Stoics, and Academics, Concerning the Ultimate Point of Happiness and Misery, are Fully Discuss'd. II. His Academics ; Or, Conferences Concerning the Criterion of Truth, and the Fallibility of Human Judgment. Translated Into English, by William Guthrie, Esq.Marcus Tullius Cicero, William Guthrie & Francis Hoffman - 1744 - Printed for T. Waller, at the Crown and Mitre, Opposite Fetter-Lane, in Fleet-Street.
  10.  64
    Some School Books - 1. G. W. Garforth: Bede's Historia Ecclesiastica: A Selection. (Alpha Classics.) Pp. viii+142; 8 plates, map. London: Bell, 1967. Cloth, 12 s. 6 d.- 2. A. S. Cox: Lucretius on Matter and Man. Extracts from Books i, ii, iv, and v. (Alpha Classics.) Pp. viii+200; 8 plates, 15 figs. London: Bell, 1967. Cloth, 9 s. 6 d.- 3. K. W. D. Hull: Martial and His Times. (Alpha Classics.) Pp. xii+142; 8 plates; plan. London: Bell, 1967. Cloth, 8 s. 6 d.- 4. Bertha Tilly: Vergil, Aeneid iv. (Palatine Classics.) Pp. viii+281; 4 plates. London: University Tutorial Press, 1968. Cloth, 11 s. 6 d.- 5. E. C. Kennedy: Caesar, De Bello Gallico, ii. (Palatine Classics.) Pp. viii+137; 4 plates; maps and plans. London: University Tutorial Press, 1967. Cloth, 10 s. 6 d.- 6. C. P. Watson: The Growth of Rome. Extracts from Livy's Histories from the foundation of the City to the death of Hannibal. Pp. 144; 2 plates, 3 maps. London: Faber, 1967. Cloth, 9 s. 6 d.- 7. D. M. [REVIEW]R. G. Penman - 1970 - The Classical Review 20 (1):89-90.
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  11.  58
    Cicero's De Fato in Deleuze's Logic of Sense.Michael James Bennett - 2015 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 9 (1):25-58.
    The arguments of the Stoic Chrysippus recorded in Cicero's De Fato are of great importance to Deleuze's conception of events in The Logic of Sense. The purpose of this paper is to explicate these arguments, to which Deleuze's allusions are extremely terse, and to situate them in the context of Deleuze's broader project in that book. Drawing on contemporary scholarship on the Stoics, I show the extent to which Chrysippus' views on compatibilism, hypothetical inference and astrology support (...)
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  12. Kant's Canon, Garve's Cicero, and the Stoic Doctrine of the Highest Good.Corey Dyck - forthcoming - In Stefano Bacin & Oliver Sensen (eds.), Kant's Moral Philosophy in Context. Cambridge:
    The concept of the highest good is an important but hardly uncontroversial piece of Kant’s moral philosophy. In the considerable literature on the topic, challenges are raised concerning its apparently heteronomous role in moral motivation, whether there is a distinct duty to promote it, and more broadly whether it is ultimately to be construed as a theological or merely secular ideal. Yet comparatively little attention has been paid to the context of a doctrine that had enjoyed a place of prominence (...)
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  13.  35
    The Stoic Conception of Law.Katja Maria Vogt - 2021 - Polis 38 (3):557-572.
    The Stoics identify the law with the active principle, which is corporeal, pervades the universe, individuates each part of the world, and causes all its movements. At the same time, the law is normative for all reasoners. The very same law shapes the movements of the cosmos and governs our actions. With this reconstruction of Stoic law, I depart from existing scholarship on whether Stoic law is a set of rules. The question of whether ethics involves a set (...)
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  14. Cicero’s Adaptation of Stoic Psychotherapy.Harald Thorsrud - 2008 - Annaeus: Anales de la Tradición Romanística 5:171-187.
    In this paper I explore some ways in which Cicero does not merely report Chrysippus’ view of psychotherapy and mental health in the Tusculan Disputations, but rather adapts them to suit his own Academic and practical purposes. In particular, I argue Cicero is unwilling to wholeheartedly endorse three key Stoic principles: (1) the uniformly rational nature of the mind, (2) the exclusive goodness of virtue, and (3) the possibility of attaining Stoic wisdom. As a result, he allows for (...)
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  15. The Concept of Order in Plato's Philosophy.James V. Robinson - 1987 - Dissertation, University of Waterloo (Canada)
    For Plato order was a normative concept and a metaconcept with regard to the soul, the city-state, the universe and the Forms. In this thesis I use Plato's conception of order as a perspective from which to study these four things. By so doing, I not only establish the role of order in Plato's thought, but present certain aspects of his thought in a new light and solve some old problems in a new way.
     
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  16.  30
    Sozzini's Ghost: Pierre Bayle and Socinian Toleration.Barbara Sher Tinsley - 1996 - Journal of the History of Ideas 57 (4):609-624.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Sozzini’s Ghost: Pierre Bayle and Socinian TolerationBarbara Sher TinsleyPierre Bayle’s Philosophical Commentary (1686–87), a Huguenot exile’s response to the Revocation of Nantes, established its author as a defender of free conscience for pagans, Muslims, Jews, atheists, Catholics, Protestants, Anabaptists, and Socinians. 1 The virtues of Pagans and Atheists are most fully treated in Bayle’s work on the comet. 2 In this work pagans, Catholics (whom Bayle equated with pagan (...)
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  17.  24
    Cicero the Advocate/The Roman World of Cicero's De Oratore.Anthony Corbeill - 2006 - American Journal of Philology 127 (1):144-149.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Cicero the Advocate, and: The Roman World of Cicero's De OratoreAnthony CorbeillJonathan Powell and Jeremy Paterson, eds. Cicero the Advocate. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. xii + 448 pp. Cloth, $150.Elaine Fantham. The Roman World of Cicero's De Oratore. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. x + 354 pp. Cloth, $120.Emphasis falls emphatically on "advocate" in the fine Powell and Paterson collection. Each essay concentrates on the forensic speeches (...)
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  18.  12
    The Concept of Poverty in St. Thomas Aquinas’s Contra Impugnantes Dei Cultum et Religionem.John D. Jones - 1995 - The Thomist 59 (3):409-439.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:THE CONCEPT OF POVERTY IN ST. THOMAS AQUINAS'S CONTRA IMPUGNANTES DE/ CULTUM ET RELIGIONEM JOHN D. ]ONES Marquette University Milwaukee, Wisconsin MEDIEVAL CONCEPTIONS of poverty have been given ongoing and serious attention by scholars during this century. The extensive literature on the nature and practice of poverty among the Franciscans bears witness to this. Serious investigation of St. Thomas Aquinas's understanding of poverty, however, is virtually nonexistent. Except for (...)
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  19.  50
    Tales from Two Cities: The Evolving Identity of John Henry Newman’s The Idea of a University.Todd Ream - 2007 - Newman Studies Journal 4 (1):24-37.
    This essay describes not only the evolving identity of Newman’s The Idea of a University, but also the way in which this process points to a larger tension between what Augustine referred to as the City of God and the city of this world.While no other work is perhaps more quoted than Newman’s Idea in relation to theoretical conceptions of university life, the origins of this work are often little understood. As a result, Newman’s Idea frequently goes from (...)
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  20.  83
    The concept of will in early latin philosophy.Neal Ward Gilbert - 1963 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 1 (1):17-35.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Concept of Will in EarlyLatin Philosophy NEAL W. GILBERT AN HISTORICALDISCUSSIONOf the concept of will is best begun with an analysis of the use of voluntas in Latin philosophy, from its earliest occurrences in Lucretius and Cicero on down to Augustine and medieval times. This development can be traced without much controversy because the line of transmission and development is more or less unbroken. But the correlating of (...)
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  21.  50
    Using Our Selves: An Interpretation of the Stoic Four-personae Theory in Cicero’s De Officiis I.David Machek - 2016 - Apeiron 49 (2).
    One of the most discussed parts of Cicero’s De Officiis is a theory (1.107–121), attributed by Cicero to a Stoic scholarch Panaetius, which attributes to all human beings four different roles (personae): our universal or rational nature; a set of our individual natural dispositions or traits; what we are by external circumstances; and the vocation or lifestyle that we freely choose. An appropriate action (officium) is to conform to constraints associated with one or more of these personae. Since Cicero (...)
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  22. Cicero's De Legibus I: Its Plan and Intention.Seth Benardete - 1987 - American Journal of Philology 108 (2):295-309.
  23.  14
    Commentary on The Stoic Conception of Mental Disorder.Rosamond Rhodes - 1997 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 4 (4):303-304.
    This commentary challenges Professor Lennard Nordenfelt's thesis that Cicero's The Tusculan Disputations has presented us with "the first Diagnostic Manual of Mental Disorders". In this short response I argue that by making his "peculiar" claim Nordenfelt is mistaken about the thrust of the stoic project and Cicero's presentation of it, and mistaken about the stoic view of irrational responses.
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  24.  92
    Breve storia dell'etica.Sergio Cremaschi - 2012 - Roma RM, Italia: Carocci.
    The book reconstructs the history of Western ethics. The approach chosen focuses the endless dialectic of moral codes, or different kinds of ethos, moral doctrines that are preached in order to bring about a reform of existing ethos, and ethical theories that have taken shape in the context of controversies about the ethos and moral doctrines as means of justifying or reforming moral doctrines. Such dialectic is what is meant here by the phrase ‘moral traditions’, taken as a name (...)
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  25.  38
    Book Reviews : Human Understanding. Volume I: The Collective Use and Evolution of Concepts. Stephen Toulmin. Toronto: Saunders (Princeton University Press), I972. Pp. 502. $I4.85. [REVIEW]I. C. Jarvie - 1975 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 5 (1):91-94.
  26.  15
    Cicero on the Emotions: Tusculan Disputations 3 and 4.Marcus Tullius Cicero - 2002 - University of Chicago Press.
    The third and fourth books of Cicero's Tusculan Disputations deal with the nature and management of human emotion: first grief, then the emotions in general. In lively and accessible style, Cicero presents the insights of Greek philosophers on the subject, reporting the views of Epicureans and Peripatetics and giving a detailed account of the Stoic position, which he himself favors for its close reasoning and moral earnestness. Both the specialist and the general reader will be fascinated by the Stoics' (...)
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  27.  8
    The Unity of Stoic Metaphysics: Everything is Something.Vanessa de Harven - 2024 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Everything is Something is a book about Stoic metaphysics. It argues that the Stoics are best understood as forging a bold new path between materialism and idealism, a path best characterized as non-reductive physicalism. To be sure, only individual bodies exist for the Stoics, but not everything there is exists — some things are said to subsist. However, this is no Meinongian move beyond existence, to the philosophy of intentionality (as the language of subsistence might suggest), but a (...)
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  28.  41
    Life's Form: Late Aristotelian Conceptions of the Soul (review).Jorge Secada - 2003 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 41 (1):127-128.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 41.1 (2003) 127-128 [Access article in PDF] Dennis Des Chene. Life's Form: Late Aristotelian Conceptions of the Soul. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2000. Pp. viii + 220. Cloth, $45.00. The history of philosophy aims at the recovery and interpretation of past thought, and its reconstructions seek to avoid anachronism. Dennis Des Chene's book is exemplary in this respect. It offers a (...)
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  29.  1
    Implementation of the Third Mission of the University: case of Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences.Rulf Jürgen Treidel & Mykhailo Boichenko - 2024 - Filosofiya osvity Philosophy of Education 30 (1):136-160.
    On the example of the activities of the Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences (Fachhochschule des Mittelstands Bielefeld – FHM Bielefeld, Germany) as a key par­ticipant in the UNICOM project, the modern university’s implementation of its Third Mission – its fulfillment of its public purpose and observance of public responsibility – is considered. A comparative analysis of the four missions of a modern university was carried out, thanks to which the necessary relationship between them was re­vealed as an integral prerequisite for (...)
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  30.  61
    Rhetoric as a balancing of ends: Cicero and Machiavelli.Gary Remer - 2009 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 42 (1):pp. 1-28.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Rhetoric as a Balancing of Ends:Cicero and MachiavelliGary RemerIn his youthful work on rhetoric, De inventione (published about 86 B.C.E.), Cicero lists the ends for deliberative (political) oratory as honestas and utilitas (the good or honorable and the useful or expedient). In more mature writings, like De oratore (55 B.C.E.) and De officiis (44 B.C.E.), Cicero maintains a similar position: that the morally good and the beneficial are reconcilable. (...)
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  31.  25
    A revised translation of cicero's de re publica and de legibus - (j.E.g.) Zetzel (trans.) Cicero: On the commonwealth and on the laws. Second edition. Pp. lx + 212. Cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2017 (first edition 1999). Paper, £17.99 (cased, us$54.99). Isbn: 978-1-316-50556-4 (978-1-107-14006-6 hbk). [REVIEW]Thomas J. B. Cole - 2020 - The Classical Review 70 (2):377-378.
  32.  34
    Bilingualism in Ancient Society: Language Contact and the Written Word (Book).Philip Baldi - 2004 - American Journal of Philology 125 (2):279-283.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:American Journal of Philology 125.2 (2004) 279-283 [Access article in PDF] J. N. Adams, Mark Janse, and Simon Swain, eds. Bilingualism in Ancient Society: Language Contact and the Written Word. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. x + 483 pp. Cloth, $98. There are some issues, and bilingualism is one of them, that have been mainstays in the scholarly dialogue of classicists and historical linguists for centuries. This interest has (...)
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  33.  61
    Stoic Conditionals, Necessity and Explanation.Scott Labarge - 2002 - History and Philosophy of Logic 23 (4):241-252.
    An examination of a particular passage in Cicero's De fato—Fat. 13–17—is crucial to our understanding of the Stoic theory of the truth-conditions of conditional propositions, for it has been uniquely important in the debate concerning the kind of connection the antecedent and consequent of a Stoic conditional should have to one another. Frede has argued that the passage proves that the connection is one of logical necessity, while Sorabji has argued that positive Stoic attitudes toward empirical inferences (...)
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  34. (1 other version)Review: David S. Brown. Richard Hofstadter: An Intellectual Biography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006. [REVIEW]Bruce Kuklick - 2006 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 42 (4):574-577.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Richard Hofstadter: An Intellectual BiographyBruce KuklickDavid S. Brown, Richard Hofstadter: An Intellectual BiographyChicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006. xxiv+291 pp. Notes, Bibliographic Essay, Sources, Students of Richard Hofstadter, Index. $27.50.In the mid-twentieth century Richard Hofstadter was one the finest historians of the United States. Uncommitted to work in primary sources, he was perhaps not at the level of Perry Miller, Vann Woodward, and Edmund Morgan. But Hofstadter had (...)
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  35.  42
    Book review: UFFELMANN, Sarah Anna. Vom System zum Gebrauch: Eine genetisch-philosophische Untersuchung des Grammatikbegriffs bei Wittgenstein. Bergen: University of Bergen, 2016. 242 pp. ISBN 978-82-308-3234-9. [REVIEW]Nuno Venturinha - 2018 - Manuscrito 41 (1):167-175.
    ABSTRACT This review discusses Uffelmann’s thesis that Wittgenstein’s conception of grammar underwent important changes in the different phases of his philosophizing. I claim that if we do not accentuate the shifts in approach and terminology that naturally exist in Wittgenstein’s thought, we can see that grammar and logic go hand in hand all along the way, from the Tractatus to the very end, and that grammar was simply a mode he found to conceive of logic in a completely different (...)
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  36.  7
    Recovering the Ancient View of Founding: A Commentary on Cicero's de Legibus.Timothy W. Caspar - 2010 - Lexington Books.
    In Recovering the Ancient View of Founding, Timothy Caspar defends the influential political thinker Cicero and his philosophical dialogue De Legibus. Cicero and De Legibus have often been criticized as eclectic and mismatched parts stitched together. However, through close reading and robust scholarship, Caspar illuminates how De Legibus was in fact a unified and original work, and an important development of classical political philosophy.
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  37.  40
    Jusnaturalismo estoico e republicanismo no De Legibus de Cícero.André Menezes Rocha - 2011 - Cadernos de Ética E Filosofia Política 19:227-247.
    The purpose of this article is to show how Cicero construct his argument in defense of the tribunatum plebis when thinking about the participatory justice and the constitution of the City in De Legibus . We shall see the argument in a broader context whose scope was to defend the autonomy of the Senate face of the threats of dictatorship that was hanging over the Roman Republic.
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  38.  19
    Battlefield Triage.Christopher Bobier & Daniel Hurst - 2024 - Voices in Bioethics 10.
    Photo ID 222412412 © US Navy Medicine | Dreamstime.com ABSTRACT In a non-military setting, the answer is clear: it would be unethical to treat someone based on non-medical considerations such as nationality. We argue that Battlefield Triage is a moral tragedy, meaning that it is a situation in which there is no morally blameless decision and that the demands of justice cannot be satisfied. INTRODUCTION Medical resources in an austere environment without quick recourse for resupply or casualty evacuation are often (...)
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  39. De immenso et innumerabilibus, I, 3 and the Concept of Planetary Systems in the Infinite Universe. A Commentary.Miguel Angel Granada - 2013 - In Anne Eusterschulte & Henning S. Hufnagel (eds.), Turning traditions upside down: rethinking Giordano Bruno's enlightenment. New York: Central European University Press.
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  40.  16
    Illusions of Human Thinking: On Concepts of Mind, Reality, and Universe in Psychology, Neuroscience, and Physics.Gabriel Vacariu - 2016 - Wiesbaden: Imprint: Springer.
    The book illustrates that the traditional philosophical concept of the "Universe", the "World" has led to anomalies and paradoxes in the realm of knowledge. The author replaces this notion by the EDWs perspective, i.e. a new axiomatic hyperontological framework of "Epistemologically Different Worlds" (EDWs). Thus it becomes possible to find a more appropriate approach to different branches of science, such as cognitive neuroscience, physics, biology and the philosophy of mind. The consequences are a better understanding of the mind-body problem, (...)
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  41.  9
    Schürmann’s Cicero.Benjamin Hutchens - 2024 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 29 (1):59-75.
    This article evaluates the success of Reiner Schürmann’s reading of Cicero in Broken Hegemonies. It examines his reading phusis/natura, the divine mind and natural law, the “natural birth of the city,” and universal/(normative) singular dichotomies in the presentation of the “Latin fantasm” Cicero’s work allegedly represents. Offering a closer reading of Cicero, specifically his De Legibus, De Re Publica and De Officiis, this article will show that Cicero does not represent the Latin fantasm in any clear and compelling (...)
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  42. Cum on Feel the Noize.Jamie Allen - 2012 - Continent 2 (1):56-58.
    continent. 2.1 (2012): 56–58 Nechvatal, Joseph, Immersion Into Noise , Open Humanities Press, 2011, 267 pp, $23.99 (pbk), ISBN 1-60785-241-1. As someone who’s knowledge of “art” mostly began with the domestic (Western) and Japanese punk and noise scenes of the late 80’s and early 90’s, practices and theories of noise fall rather close to my heart. It is peeking into the esoteric enclaves of weird music and noise that helped me understand what I think I might like art to be: (...)
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  43.  9
    Alice Notley's Disobedient Cities.Zoë Skoulding - 2010 - Feminist Review 96 (1):89-105.
    The American poet Alice Notley has described one of her goals as being to take up ‘as much literary space as any male poet’ (Notley, 2005: 6), a phrase that questions the nature of ‘literary space’, and its relationship to material and political spaces. In Disobedience (2001), as in her earlier book The Descent of Alette (1992), the city is imagined in relation to what lies beneath it. Both of these extended poem sequences set up urban underground geographies, (...)
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  44.  27
    The Life of Roman Republicanism by Joy Connolly (review).T. P. Wiseman - 2015 - American Journal of Philology 136 (2):372-375.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Life of Roman Republicanism by Joy ConnollyT. P. WisemanJoy Connolly. The Life of Roman Republicanism. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2014. xix + 228 pp. Cloth. $39.95.This book was written for the best of reasons. Joy Connolly explains in her preface that she began to study the republican tradition in 2001, when “the Bush administration’s imprudence, paranoia, and disregard of democratic values stoked in me an anger (...)
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  45.  21
    Aristotle on the Concept of Shared Life by Sara Brill. [REVIEW]Zoli Filotas - 2023 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 61 (1):149-150.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Aristotle on the Concept of Shared Life by Sara BrillZoli FilotasSara Brill. Aristotle on the Concept of Shared Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. 304. Hardback, $100.00.This book is a sweeping survey of Aristotle's approach to human life. It covers what might seem to be an idiosyncratic set of topics: friendship, animal behavior, commerce, tyranny, and motherhood are among the more prominent. But Sara Brill pulls (...)
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  46.  47
    Cicero and epicurus on gods A. R. Dyck (ed.): Cicero: De natura deorum book I . (cambridge greek and latin classics.) Pp. X + 236. Cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2003. Paper, £16.95/us$25 (cased, £45/us$70). Isbn: 0-521-00630-9 (0-521-80360-8 hbk). [REVIEW]Woldemar Görler - 2004 - The Classical Review 54 (02):364-.
  47.  42
    Apologii︠a︡ Sofistov: Reli︠a︡tivizm Kak Ontologicheskai︠a︡ Sistema.Igorʹ Nikolaevich Rassokha - 2009 - Kharʹkov: Kharkivsʹka Nat͡sionalʹna Akademii͡a Misʹkoho Hospodarstva.
    Sophists’ apologia. -/- Sophists were the first paid teachers ever. These ancient Greek enlighteners taught wisdom. Protagoras, Antiphon, Prodicus, Hippias, Lykophron are most famous ones. Sophists views and concerns made a unified encyclopedic system aimed at teaching common wisdom, virtue, management and public speaking. Of the contemporary “enlighters”, Deil Carnegy’s educational work seems to be the most similar to sophism. Sophists were the first intellectuals – their trade was to sell knowledge. They introduced a new type of teacher-student relationship – (...)
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  48.  41
    Wise therapy: philosophy for counsellors.Tim LeBon - 2001 - New York: Continuum.
    Independent on Sunday October 2nd One of the country's lead­ing philosophical counsellers, and chairman of the Society for Philosophy in Practice (SPP), Tim LeBon, said it typically took around six 50 ­minute sessions for a client to move from confusion to resolution. Mr LeBon, who has 'published a book on the subject, Wise Therapy, said philoso­phy was perfectly suited to this type of therapy, dealing as it does with timeless human issues such as love, purpose, happiness and emo­tional challenges. (...)
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  49.  82
    The stoic conception of mental disorder: the case of Cicero.Lennart Nordenfelt - 1997 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 4 (4):285-291.
    Marcus Tullius Cicero, the great promoter of Greek thought to the Latin world, gives a very detailed presentation of the Stoic philosophy of mind and of mental disorder in his Tusculan Disputations. In an interesting way, this philosophy anticipates the modern philosophical theories of affections or emotions developed by, for instance, R.M. Gordon, which are based on the concepts of belief and desire. According to Cicero, having an affection is the same as having a belief about something which one (...)
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  50.  6
    Summa LogicaeOckham’s Theory of Terms: Part I of the Summa LogicaeTheories of the Proposition. [REVIEW]B. W. A. - 1976 - Review of Metaphysics 29 (4):742-742.
    These are three welcome works on medieval logic. The Summa Logica of William of Ockham has long been a classic, and scholars have been waiting for this critical edition, begun almost a quarter of a century ago by Philotheus Boehner and finally brought to completion by the combined efforts of Stephen Brown and especially Gedeon Gal, now the general editor of the Opera Philosophica et Theologica being prepared at the Franciscan Institute at St. Bonaventure University. The editors date this work (...)
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