Results for ' mysteries of Artemis in ancient Mytilene'

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  1.  13
    Ephesian Artemis and Initiation.Kent J. Rigsby - 2023 - Kernos 36:145-155.
    The claim that the cult of Artemis of Ephesus included a rite of initiation, conducted by the kouretes, should be doubted. Various Ephesian magistrates in Roman Imperial times, but not the annual kouretes, declare that they celebrated “all the sacrifices and mysteries”. This however can be merely the increasingly pretentious terminology of the age, “mysteries” meaning no more than “holy rites”. Ancient authors show no knowledge of initiation to Artemis at Ephesus. In contrast, the inscriptions (...)
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  2.  5
    Cyril of Alexandria and Julian the Emperor in dialogue for the ancient Greek philosophy and paganism.Eirini Artemi - 2020 - Diakrisis Yearbook of Theology and Philosophy 3:101-114.
    In the 5th century, Cyril of Alexandria wrote a large apologetic work, as a response to Julian the Apostate’s anti-Christian work Against the Galileans. Aside from the obvious divide of one being a Christian and one a pagan, Cyril's religious views were very different from Julian's. Julian's arguments against the Christian doctrine do not greatly differ from those used in the second century by Celsus and by Porphyry in the third, and he regarded the relations between Neoplatonic criticism of Christian (...)
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  3. Аристотель и сапфо.Timothey Myakin - 2018 - Schole 12 (1):122-136.
    In the article, I prove that the dialogical ritual obscene songs, in which Sappho “scolds” Gorgo and Andromeda, are the closest parallel to Aristotle's poetic dialogue of Sappho with Alcaeus, 70, 145, 99 etc. Campbell; cf. Max Tyr., 18. 9 Hobein). Also I prove that this poetic dialogue was most likely included in the text of the “Rhetoric” in mid-340s., when Aristotle and his young wife Pythias were living in Mytilene. Aristotelian verb tetimekasin indicates that, even in his time, (...)
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  4. Mediterranean Theoria: A View from Delphi.Artemis Leontis - 2001 - Thesis Eleven 67 (1):101-117.
    Whereas the Mediterranean has not submitted easily to strong theories, still it has inspired a certain kind of theorizing from the ground. The setting of the Mediterranean viewed from the land's edge gave the world theoria, which Greek etymology and usage associates with looking onto a scene with amazement, viewing drama, being sent as an emissary to consult the oracle, or traveling for the purposes of sightseeing. The present essay explores some connections between the Mediterranean and theoria. Following a brief (...)
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  5.  26
    Dimensions of Individuality in Ancient Mystery Cults: Religious Practice and Philosophical Discourse.Katharina Waldner - 2013 - In Jörg Rüpke (ed.), The Individual in the Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean. Oxford University Press. pp. 215.
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  6.  68
    How Many More Mysteries Are There in Ancient China?: After Reading Li Xueqin's Lost Bamboo Slips and Silk Manuscripts and the History of Learning.Ge Zhaoguang - 2002 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 34 (2):75-91.
    As historiographical studies on ancient China gradually move from the center to the margins of the public's field of vision, research on historiographical studies concerning ancient China have been undergoing some unusual changes. A truly considerable quantity of bamboo slip and silk manuscripts have either been discovered by archaeologists or accidentally unearthed in the last twenty years. Although these have been made public very slowly, even maddeningly so, the few of them that have appeared before the world in (...)
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  7.  28
    Revelation and Mystery in Ancient Judaism and Pauline Christianity.J. A. F. & Markus N. A. Bockmuehl - 1993 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 113 (3):506.
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  8.  15
    The Mystery of Numbers.Annemarie Schimmel - 1994 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Why is the number seven lucky--even holy--in almost every culture? Why do we speak of the four corners of the earth? Why do cats have nine lives? From literature to folklore to private superstitions, numbers play a conspicuous role in our daily lives. But in this fascinating book, Annemarie Schimmel shows that numbers have been filled with mystery and meaning since the earliest times, and across every society. In The Mystery of Numbers Annemarie Schimmel conducts an illuminating tour of the (...)
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  9.  11
    The Mystery of Human Relationship: Alchemy and the Transformation of the Self.Nathan Schwartz-Salant - 1998 - Routledge.
    All human relationships are containers of emotional life, but what are the structures underlying them? Nathan Schwartz-Salant looks at all kinds of relationships through an analyst's eye. By analogy with the ancient system of alchemy he shows how states of mind that can undermine our relationships - in marriage, in creative work, in the workplace - can become transformative when brought to consciousness. It is only by learning how to access the interactive field of our relationships that we can (...)
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  10.  23
    Masks and Maidens: Women and the Sanctuary of Artemis Orthia.Toryn Suddaby - 2015 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 6 (1).
    This paper explores the archaeological finds at the site of Artemis Orthia in Sparta through a gender-based framework. It chronicles the history of the site from the 6th century BCE to modern excavations and critically evaluates the subtle biases of recent scholarship on the artefacts found there, including bronze dedications, the Orthia masks, and an architectural votive. This research aims to question established perceptions of Sparta as unique within Greece and scholarly biases against Laconian art as “backwards” by focusing (...)
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  11.  98
    Mystery Cults of the Ancient World.Hugh Bowden - 2010 - Princeton University Press.
    This is the first book to describe and explain all of the ancient world's major mystery cults--one of the most intriguing but least understood aspects of Greek and Roman religion. In the nocturnal Mysteries at Eleusis, participants dramatically re-enacted the story of Demeter's loss and recovery of her daughter Persephone; in the Bacchic cult, bands of women ran wild in the Greek countryside to honor Dionysus; and in the mysteries of Mithras, men came to understand the nature (...)
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  12.  10
    Machiavelli and mystery of state.Peter Samuel Donaldson - 1988 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book studies the intersection of sacred and secular conceptions of kingship in the Renaissance. The book documents in detail six instances of the attempt to connect Machiavelli's thought to an ancient and secret tradition of political counsel, the arcana imperii, or mysteries of state. The ways in which Renaissance writers attempted such a connection varied widely. In addition to carefully analyzing these arguments, the book documents patterns in their dissemination. Through his connection with mysteries of state, (...)
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  13.  89
    Ancient philosophy, mystery, and magic: Empedocles and Pythagorean tradition.Peter Kingsley - 1995 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This is the first book to analyze systematically crucial aspects of ancient Greek philosophy in their original context of mystery, religion, and magic. The author brings to light recently uncovered evidence about ancient Pythagoreanism and its influence on Plato, and reconstructs the fascinating esoteric transmission of Pythagorean ideas from the Greek West down to the alchemists and magicians of Egypt, and from there into the world of Islam.
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  14.  14
    Aeneas of Gaza: Theophrastus with Zacharias of Mytilene, Ammonius.Sebastian Ramon Philipp Gertz - 2012 - London: Bristol Classical Press. Edited by John M. Dillon & D. A. Russell.
    Translated for the first time into English, this volume in the Ancient Commentators on Aristotle series contains works of two Christian philosophers from Gaza, Aeneas of Gaza and Zacharias of Mytilene.
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  15.  58
    Essays on a Science of Mythology: The Myth of the Divine Child and the Mysteries of Eleusis.Carl Gustav Jung & Karl Kerényi - 1963 - Princeton University Press.
    Essays on a Science of Mythology is a cooperative work between C. Kerényi, who has been called "the most psychological of mythologists," and C. G. Jung, who has been called "the most mythological of psychologists." Kerényi contributes an essay on the Divine Child and one on the Kore, together with a substantial introduction and conclusion. Jung contributes a psychological commentary on each essay. Both men hoped, through their collaboration, to elevate the study of mythology to the status of a science.In (...)
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  16. Mystery cults in the ancient world [Book Review].Jo Clyne - 2011 - Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 46 (3):60.
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  17.  13
    The scientific sublime: popular science unravels the mysteries of the universe.Alan G. Gross - 2018 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    The sublime evokes our awe, our terror, and our wonder. Applied first in ancient Greece to the heights of literary expression, in the 18th-century the sublime was extended to nature and to the sciences, enterprises that viewed the natural world as a manifestation of God's goodness, power, and wisdom. In The Scientific Sublime, Alan Gross reveals the modern-day sublime in popular science. He shows how the great popular scientists of our time--Richard Feynman, Stephen Hawking, Steven Weinberg, Brian Greene, Lisa (...)
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  18.  19
    Reaching God speed: unlocking the secret broadcast revealing the mystery of everything.Joe Kovacs - 2022 - New York: Fidelis Books.
    The answer is surprising, and what we're about to learn will wake us up to a reality most of us never knew existed.The reason we're so oblivious is because we've all been operating at human speed, relying on our own physical power and our five senses. But there is something extremely important we've all been missing. It holds the key to everything good--the key to life, success, happiness, peace of mind, and understanding beyond our wildest imagination. It's perhaps the best-kept (...)
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  19.  33
    The concept of time in ancient India.Rallapalli Venkateswara Rao - 2004 - Delhi: Bharatiya Kala Prakashan.
    Investigates The Concept Of Time, Juxtaposes The Mystery Of Time In Ancient Thought, The Varied Experience Of Time In Cosmological, Cultural, Historical, Spiritual Memory And Knowledge. Deals With In Vedic And Post Vedic Periods-The Concept Of Time In Jainism, Buddhism, Pre Kaliyuga And Kaliyuga Eras And Examins The Significance Of Application Of Time In Rituals, Festiviities According To Dharma Sastras To The Historical And Modern Man. The Volume As It Stands Now With Six Chapters Begins With An Introduction On (...)
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  20. Mystical Contemplation or Rational Reflection? The Double Meaning of Tafakkur in Shabistarī’s Rose Garden of Mystery.Rasoul Rahbari Ghazani & Aydın Topaloğlu - 2023 - Islam and Contemporary World 1 (1):9-30.
    This paper examines the following three questions: (1) In The Rose Garden of Mystery (Golshan-e Rāz), how does the prominent 7-8th-century Iranian Sufi, Maḥmūd Shabistarī, distinguish the mystical “contemplation” and “rational reflection” in pursuing divine knowledge? (2) Was Shabistarī an anti-rationalist (strict fideist)? (3) How does Shabistarī’s position fit into the ancient Greek, Neoplatonist, and medieval Islamic and Christian metaphysics? This paper examines Golshan-e Rāz in the context of Shabistarī’s other works, commentaries, secondary sources, and Islamic thought—Sufism and philosophy. (...)
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  21.  25
    Mechanical and Structural Artefacts Used in “The Mystery of Elche”.A. Navarro-Arcas, S. M. Marco Lozano & Emilio Velasco-Sánchez - 2024 - Foundations of Science 29 (1):157-183.
    In the city of Elche, every year, on the 14th and 15th of August, a sacred musical play about the death, the Assumption and the Coronation of the Virgin Mary is held. This event, known as the “Misterio de Elche”, is unique in the world. Since the middle of the 15th century it has been performed in the Basilica of Santa Maria and in the streets of the ancient city of Elche, located in the Valencian Community. In this work, (...)
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  22.  55
    A Mystery Solved? David Ulansey: The Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries: Cosmology and Salvation in the Ancient World. Pp. xii + 154; 47 figs. Oxford University Press, 1989. [REVIEW]J. Gwyn Griffiths - 1991 - The Classical Review 41 (01):122-124.
  23.  6
    God and Mystery in Words: Experience Through Metaphor and Drama.David Brown - 2008 - Oxford University Press UK.
    In God and Mystery in Words David Brown uses the way in which poetry and drama have in the past opened people to the possibility of religious experience as a launch pad for advocating less wooden approaches to Christian worship today. So far from encouraging imagination and exploration, hymns and sermons now more commonly merely consolidate belief. Again, contemporary liturgy in both its music and its ceremonial fails to take seriously either current dramatic theory or the sociology of ritual. Yet (...)
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  24. The Death of Immortality and the Mystery of Art’s Temporal Transcendence.Derek Allan - manuscript
    It has long been recognised that great art, whether visual art, literature or music, has a special capacity to “live on” – to endure – long after the moment of its creation. Thus, our world of art today includes, for example, ancient Mesopotamian sculpture, Shakespeare’s plays, and the music of medieval times. How does this capacity to endure operate? Or to ask that question another way: what does “endure” mean in the case of art? The Renaissance concluded that art (...)
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  25.  6
    MYSTERY CULTS AND SCHOLARSHIP - (A.) Lannoy, (D.) Praet (edd.) The Christian Mystery. Early Christianity and the Ancient Mystery Cults in the Work of Franz Cumont and in the History of Scholarship. (Potsdamer Altertumswissenschaftliche Beiträge 81.) Pp. 335. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2023. Paper, €60. ISBN: 978-3-515-13197-1. [REVIEW]David Walsh - 2024 - The Classical Review 74 (2):646-648.
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  26. Ii the occult forces of life.Ancient Mysteries & Modern Revelations - 1977 - In John W. White & Stanley Krippner (eds.), Future Science. Doubleday/Anchor. pp. 51.
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  27.  58
    Supplementing the Ecstatic: Plato, the Eleusinian Mysteries and the Phaedrus.Michael A. Rinella - 2000 - Polis 17 (1-2):61-78.
    The tradition of interpreting Plato's Phaedrus as simply a homage to passion ignores many passages that draw on ancient Greek religion, particularly the Eleusinian Mysteries. States of religious mania, particularly that experienced at Eleusis, included visions brought on by the use of some drug, or pharmakon. The experience of truth in the Phaedrus is read through the experience of ecstasy by initiates.
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  28.  10
    Compound Formation in Language Mixing.Artemis Alexiadou - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    There is a growing body of literature using the tools of syntactic models of word formation (e.g. Distributed Morphology) to provide analyses of language mixing phenomena, in particular word internal mixing. In fact, the very phenomenon of word internal mixing directly supports a syntactic approach to word formation, according to which words are structurally complex. On the basis of this view, the basic units of word formation involve roots that combine with functional elements in the syntax. The combination of roots (...)
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  29.  22
    The Tyrant's Writ: Myths and Images of Writing in Ancient Greece (review).Thomas Cole - 1996 - American Journal of Philology 117 (1):145-148.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Tyrant’s Writ: Myths and Images of Writing in Ancient GreeceThomas ColeDeborah T. Steiner. The Tyrant’s Writ: Myths and Images of Writing in Ancient Greece. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994. xiv + 279 pp. Cloth, price not stated.Literacy, as the author correctly points out in her introduction (5), tends to be seen nowadays as “a tool of cultural progress, of rational thought, of scientific analysis, a (...)
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  30.  34
    The Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries: Cosmology and Salvation in the Ancient World. David Ulansey.Alan Bowen - 1991 - Isis 82 (2):359-360.
  31.  22
    From the Origins of Government and Binding to the Current State of Minimalism 1.Artemis Alexiadou & Terje Lohndal - 2021 - In Nicholas Allott, Terje Lohndal & Georges Rey (eds.), A Companion to Chomsky. Wiley. pp. 23–51.
    Generative grammar is an approach to the study of language which is explicit, mentalistic, and based on the claim that the ability to acquire language is innately specified. This chapter outlines some of the recent history leading up to contemporary generative grammar. It provides some context for the emergence of Principles and Parameters and the basic gist of the Principles and Parameters approach. Chomsky is a fundamental contribution to the study of human language in its effort to develop a new (...)
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  32.  5
    Sections of Hell in Ancient Egypt.Yosuef Ibrahim Abbas - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:1656-1672.
    The ancient Egyptian mentality was characterized by endless philosophical ideas. The foundations of the sources of these philosophical ideas were born from the natural phenomena in ancient Egypt. The ancient Egyptian found the phenomenon of the Nile flooding and then its recession and the drought that affected the country and its positive and negative impact on crops. He also found the phenomenon of sunset at night and its interpretation was its death. The explanation for the sunrise in (...)
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  33.  36
    A return of barbarism.Artemy Magun - 2022 - Studies in East European Thought 74 (4):483-492.
    This article discusses the 2022 war from the point of view of its well-documented savagery. It addresses philosophical discussions of barbarism and gives a dialectical explanation of this phenomenon through the gradual polarization between the forces of Enlightenment and the obstinacy of the subject. This clash has a double shape: formality versus materiality and morality versus happiness.
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  34.  21
    Lenin on democratic theory.Artemy Magun - 2018 - Studies in East European Thought 70 (2-3):141-152.
    Lenin’s State and Revolution is not only a project for imminent revolutionary policy and not only a legitimization argument for a revolutionary dictatorship, but also a theory of state and theory of democracy. Lenin points at the reduplication of state organs that is inherent in a democratic state. While the Russian revolutionary thinks of this reduplication as something transitory, we today increasingly see it as a durable condition coterminous with the late-modern democratic state. I use Lenin’s treatise as a point (...)
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  35.  11
    Love Poetry, Women’s Bonding and Feminist Consciousness: The Complex Interaction between Edna St Vincent Millay and Adrienne Rich.Artemis Michailidou - 2006 - European Journal of Women's Studies 13 (1):39-57.
    This article examines Adrienne Rich’s Twenty-One Love Poems in relation to Edna St Vincent Millay’s Fatal Interview. Discussing notions such as lyric voice and innovation within traditional genres, the author analyses how Millay’s attempts to challenge commonplace definitions of female sexuality impacted on Rich’s articulation of sexual desire. The intertextual dialogue between the above works reveals that Millay and Rich produced two remarkably similar erotic narratives, which resist masculinist conceptions of literary history and comment on the self-referentiality of poetic composition. (...)
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  36.  29
    Psychometric Properties of the Parent-Infant Caregiving Touch Scale.Artemis Koukounari, Andrew Pickles, Jonathan Hill & Helen Sharp - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  37.  20
    Tai Chi: I Ching Form - Embracing the Mystery.Don Giles - 2015 - Pure Land.
    Tai Chi: I Ching Form - Embracing the Mystery is an easy to follow instruction manual that enables practitioners to tap into and express directly each of the sixty-four energies that exist throughout the eternal movement of Tao, as outlined and explained in the I Ching (The Book of Changes). By way of mindful illustration, multiple pictures of postures and movements, and careful attention to detailed description, the practitioner is carefully led through the various postures and transitional movements presented in (...)
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  38.  9
    Politics of the One: Concepts of the One and Many in Contemporary Thought.Artemy Magun (ed.) - 2012 - Bloomsbury Academic.
    This volume in the Political Theory and Contemporary Philosophy series examines one of the most important topics in contemporary political theory: how to conceptualize the relationship between the one and the many. The essays discuss how to reconcile multiple ontologies without subsuming them to a totalitarian unity. While one school of thought seeks to create a new ontology based on the many instead of the one,, another proposes to understand the "one" as the "ultra-one" of the event. In this groundbreaking (...)
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  39.  14
    Greek philosophy and mystery cults.María José Martín-Velasco, García Blanco & María José (eds.) - 2016 - Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    "The contributions to this book offer a broad vision of the relationships that were established between Greek Philosophy and the Mystery Cults. The authors centre their attention on such thinkers as Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoic and the Neoplatonist philosophers, who used - and in some cases criticised - doctrinal elements from Mystery Cults, adapting them to their own thinking. Thus, the volume provides a new approach to some of the most renowned Greek philosophers, highlighting the influence that Mystery Cults, (...)
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  40. The Concept and the Experience of Revolution: France 1789--/Russia 1985--.Artemy V. Magun - 2003 - Dissertation, University of Michigan
    The historical meaning of the dissolution of the Soviet Union and of the subsequent post-communist transformation remains profoundly unclear. Most observers hesitate to designate these events as a revolution, building on a common-sense notion of revolution as a violent, radical change. My dissertation argues that the post-communist transformation was indeed a revolution and proves this claim by comparing it with the French Revolution, in its political, social, and anthropological aspects. In both historical cases, the quick and easy victory of society (...)
     
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  41.  16
    Manteis, Magic, Mysteries and Mythography.Jan Bremmer - 2010 - Kernos 23:13-35.
    Ces dernières décennies, il est devenu habituel de considérer que la polis de la période classique contrôlait la religion sous tous ces aspects. Ce n’est que récemment que ce point de vue a été mis en question. Même si les aspects plus marginaux de la religion de la polis ont déjà reçu l’attention nécessaire, leur étude reste marquée, dans une certaine mesure, par les préjugés des savants des générations antérieures, eux-mêmes nourris des préjugés et des représentations des auteurs anciens. Cet (...)
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  42.  17
    Roundtable: Q&A discussion.Artemy Magun, Kate Khan, Lina Bulakhova, Anastasia Merzenina, Artem Serebryakov & Oleg Aronson - 2022 - Studies in East European Thought 74 (4):605-615.
    This is the Q&A portion of the roundtable that focuses on the crucial issues of individual and collective guilt of the intellectual class in the face of war. The participants address the stratification of Russian society, possibilities and obstacles of dissent, and the eschatological tendencies of history by engaging with each other’s claims and ideas and seeking answers to direct questions.
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  43.  26
    Units of Language Mixing: A Cross-Linguistic Perspective.Artemis Alexiadou & Terje Lohndal - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:394167.
    Language mixing is a ubiquitous phenomenon characterizing bilingual speakers. A frequent context where two languages are mixed is the word-internal level, demonstrating how tightly integrated the two grammars are in the mind of a speaker and how they adapt to each other. This raises the question of what the minimal unit of language mixing is, and whether or not this unit differs depending on what the languages are. Some scholars have argued that an uncategorized root serves as a unit, others (...)
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  44.  1
    Conservatism and the dialectic of ideology.Artemy Magun - forthcoming - Studies in East European Thought:1-9.
    This essay applies the dialectical method to the phenomenon of conservatism by putting it into a coherent system of modern ideologies. It draws attention to three groups of dialectical phenomena: the mutual reflection of modern ideologies in each other, which leads to the partial syntheses of their hybridization; the dialectic of form and content that changes situational conservatism into a substantive one, and vice versa, and the historical dialectic of progress and regress that makes conservatism constituent of many modern institutions (...)
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  45.  27
    The double bind: The ambivalent treatment of traig passions in Hanna Arendt's theory of revolution.Artemy Magun - 2007 - History of Political Thought 28 (4):719-746.
    This article offers a close reading of Hannah Arendt's book On Revolution. It exposes the ambivalence of Arendt with regard to tragedy and mimesis. This ambivalence is not just her own; it is inherent in the treatment of tragedy and mimesis throughout the history of political thought. In spite of Arendt's argument that privileges the limited American Revolution against the boundless French one, in her rhetoric and in her storytelling Arendt presents a unitary but dialectical picture of revolution, where suffering (...)
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  46.  10
    Fear and loathing in ancient Athens: religion and politics during the Peloponnesian War.Alexander Rubel - 2014 - Durham: Acumen Publishing.
    Athens at the time of the Peloponnesian war was the arena for a dramatic battle between politics and religion in the hearts and minds of the people. 'Fear and loathing in ancient athens', originally published in German but now available for the first time in an expanded and revised English edition, sheds new light on this dramatic period of history and offers a new approach to the study of Greek religion. The book explores an extraordinary range of events and (...)
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  47.  85
    Karl Marx and Hannah Arendt on the Jewish question: political theology as a critique.Artemy Magun - 2012 - Continental Philosophy Review 45 (4):545-568.
    The article is dedicated to the politico-theological critique of Judaism from the position of Christianity. It shows the affinity of Marx’s early critique of liberal state and of Hannah Arendt’s criticism of formal legalistic thinking in the contemporary judicial treatment of Nazism (and of similar international political crimes). Marx’s critique of nation-state finds its unlikely continuation in Arendt’s critique of international law. The politico-theological argument is explicit in Marx and implicit in Arendt, but both develop the Hegelian criticism of liberal (...)
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  48.  22
    Negativity in Communism: Ontology and Politics.Artemy Magun - 2014 - Russian Sociological Review 13 (1):9-25.
    The article addresses the notion of communism with a special angle of factuality and negativity, and not in the usual sense of a futurist utopia. After considering the main contemporary theories of communism in left-leaning political thought, the author turns to the Soviet experience of an “actually existing communism.” Apart from and against the bureaucratic state, a social reality existed organized around res nullius, that is, an unappropriated world that was not a collective property, as in the case of res (...)
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  49.  58
    Primordial Home, Elusive Home.Artemis Leontis - 1999 - Thesis Eleven 59 (1):1-16.
    This article builds on a developing interdisciplinary discussion of home. It studies two 20th-century texts in counterpoint: political philosopher Agnes Heller's essay, `Where Are We at Home,' and novelist Melpo Axioti's My Home, a nostalgic recollection of life on Mykonos. Heller contrasts the elusive, self-appointed geography of postmodern living with a traditional view of primordial dwelling, a non-transient way of dwelling that gave to Earth a commitment stretching from ancestral past to a distant future. That experience is all but lost (...)
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  50.  40
    What is an Orientation in History? Openness and Subjectivity.Artemy Magun - 2009 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2009 (147):121-148.
    This essay attempts to formulate an ethical program for today's left by showing that such a program should necessarily involve both the insistence on a subjectivity, in the sense of a revolutionary self-determination that would go beyond the liberal pre-established autonomy and an openness to the new and unrecognized that would go beyond all liberal tolerance. I further argue that the only way to understand the co-articulation of subjectivity and openness is to accentuate the event as the origin of open (...)
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