Results for 'Assistant Professor of English Nicholas Hudson'

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  1.  3
    Writing and European Thought 1600-1830.Nicholas Hudson & Assistant Professor of English Nicholas Hudson - 1994 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book argues for the importance of writing to conceptions of language, technology, and civilization in the early modern era.
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  2. Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud's Metapsychology.Nicolas Abraham & Nicholas Rand - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (2):287-292.
    The belief that the spirits of the dead can return to haunt the living exists either as a tenet or as a marginal conviction in all civilizations, whether ancient or modern. More often than not, the dead do not return to reunite the living with their loved ones but rather to lead them into some dreadful snare, entrapping them with disastrous consequences. To be sure, all the departed may return, but some are predestined to haunt: the dead who have been (...)
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  3.  11
    Self-Culture in Emerson's Schellingian Solution to Fate.Nicholas L. Guardiano - 2024 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 45 (2):28-43.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Self-Culture in Emerson’s Schellingian Solution to FateNicholas L. Guardiano (bio)Professor of English literature, President of Yale University, and Commissioner of Major League Baseball, Angelo Bartlett Giamatti (1938–1989), delighted in saying that Emerson “is as sweet as barbed wire.”1 Giamatti understood the full range of Emerson’s thought, which spans the highs and lows of the human condition. Writings such as “Experience,” “Illusions,” “The Tragic,” and “Fate” demonstrate the (...)
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  4.  19
    Unpublished by Freud to Fliess: Restoring an Oscillation.Maria Torok & Nicholas Rand - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (2):391-398.
    The aim of the following lines is to reinstate some unpublished fragments into two letters written by Freud to Fliess on 12 and 22 December 1897, respectively. These dates refer to a period in Freud’s elaborations traditionally considered subsequent to his renunciation of the seduction theory. As is well known, the interpretation of an earlier letter to Fliess, written by Freud on 21 September 1897, makes his revocation into the first stage of what has since become Freudian psychoanalysis. This “turning (...)
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  5.  55
    The English Polydaedali: How Gabriel Harvey Read Late Tudor London.Nicholas Popper - 2005 - Journal of the History of Ideas 66 (3):351-381.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The English Polydaedali:How Gabriel Harvey Read Late Tudor LondonNicholas PopperHarvey and GauricoIn 1590 Gabriel Harvey read his copy of Luca Gaurico's 1552 Tractatus Astrologicus, a collection of genitures and commentaries for cities and individuals.1 Harvey had spent the previous twenty-five years at Oxford and Cambridge, mastering Greek and Latin, earning renown as a rhetorician, and promoting English letters. He was a well-known partisan of the French Calvinist (...)
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  6.  87
    Plato: Protagoras.Nicholas Denyer (ed.) - 2008 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The Protagoras is one of Plato's most entertaining dialogues. It represents Socrates at a gathering of the most celebrated and highest-earning intellectuals of the day, among them the sophist Protagoras. In flamboyant displays of both rhetoric and dialectic, Socrates and Protagoras try to out-argue one another. Their arguments range widely, from political theory to literary criticism, from education to the nature of cowardice; but in view throughout this literary and philosophical masterpiece are the questions of what part knowledge plays in (...)
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  7.  14
    Chernyshevskii: The Man and the Journalist (review). [REVIEW]Nicholas Valentine Riasanovsky - 1973 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 11 (1):127-127.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 127 Chernyshevskii: The Man and the Journalist. By William F. Woehrlin. (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1971. Pp. 404. $12.50) Professor Woehrlin's book on Nicholas Chernyshevskii is the first full, rich, and precise treatment of that crucially important Russian intellectual in English. The narrative moves, in ten chapters, from "Boyhood in Saratov," "University Years," "The Teacher," and "The Journalist" to a consideration of its (...)
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  8.  9
    Justice, Intervention, and Force in International Relations: Reassessing Just War Theory in the 21st Century.Kimberly A. Hudson - 2009 - Routledge.
    This book analyses the problems of current just war theory, and offers a more stable justificatory framework for non-intervention in international relations. The primary purpose of just war theory is to provide a language and a framework by which decision makers and citizens can organize and articulate arguments about the justice of particular wars. Given that the majority of conflicts that threaten human security are now intra-state conflicts, just war theory is often called on to make judgments about wars of (...)
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  9.  26
    The Secret of Psychoanalysis: History Reads Theory.Nicholas Rand & Maria Torok - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (2):278-286.
    All disciplines have their histories in addition to their theories. In general, the history of a set of problems is treated separately from the nature of the problems themselves. The axioms of a given discipline may be the object of external inquiry but are not usually subject to historical examination. In this way, psychoanalysis has been investigated, even challenged, by a variety of other disciplines: biology, linguistics, history, philosophy, literature, and so forth. One may ask whether psychoanalysis can also become (...)
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  10. The Friendship Model of Filial Obligations.Nicholas Dixon - 1995 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 12 (1):77-87.
    ABSTRACT This paper [1] is a defence of a modified version of Jane English's model of filial obligations based on adult children's friendship with their parents. Unlike the more traditional view that filial obligations are a repayment for parental sacrifices, the friendship model puts filial duties in the appealing context of voluntary, loving relationships. Contrary to English's original statement of this view, which is open to the charge of tolerating filial ingratitude, the friendship model can generate obligations to (...)
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  11.  33
    In the Shadow of Leviathan: John Locke and the Politics of Conscience by Jeffrey R. Collins.Nicholas Jolley - 2022 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 60 (1):164-165.
    Many years ago, professors used to teach their students that Locke wrote the Two Treatises of Government to refute Hobbes. The demolition of this thesis by Peter Laslett and others had one curious result: scholars ceased to pay much attention to the relationship between the two greatest English philosophers of the seventeenth century. This trend was perhaps reinforced by an understandable suspicion of Leo Strauss’s thesis that Locke was really a closet Hobbesian. It thus came to be accepted that (...)
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  12.  17
    Samuel Johnson and Eighteenth-Century Thought.Nicholas Hudson - 1990 - Oxford University Press.
    Although there are many books on Samuel Johnson's moral and religious thought, none have managed to provide a complete analysis of his relationship to the ethics and theology of the eighteenth-century. This major new study examines the background to Johnson's views on a wide range of issues that were debated by the philosophers and divines of the age, emphasizing the ambivalence and contradiction inherent in his orthodoxy, while challenging the assumption that his religious beliefs were unstable and filled with anxiety.
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  13.  3
    Studies in the Moral and Religious Thought of Johnson.Nicholas Hudson - 1984
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  14.  66
    Philosophical purpose and purposive philosophy: an interview with Nicholas Rescher.Nicholas Rescher & Jamie Morgan - 2020 - Journal of Critical Realism 19 (1):58-77.
    Professor Nicholas Rescher (1928-) is an unusually prolific philosopher who has published more than 175 books between 1960 and 2016.1 When I first came across his work I thought that it might be th...
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  15.  16
    The Mystery of Aesthetic Response: Dryden and Johnson on Shakespeare.Nicholas Hudson - 2011 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 30:21.
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  16.  40
    Translating Totality in Parts: Chengguan's Commentaries and Subcommentaries to the Avatamsaka Sutra by Guo Cheen. [REVIEW]Nicholas Hudson - 2016 - Philosophy East and West 66 (2):695-696.
    Guo Cheen’s Translating Totality in Parts: Chengguan’s Commentaries and Subcommentaries to the Avatamsaka Sutra translates the first of eighty fascicles or juan of Chengguan’s A Compilation of the Commentaries and Subcommentaries to the Flower Ornament Sutra with Greatly Proper and Extensive Discourses by the Buddhas as well as the preface to his The Meanings Proclaimed in the Subcommentaries Accompanying the Commentaries to the Flower Ornament Sutra with Greatly Proper and Extensive Discourses by the Buddha. Guo Cheen translates the preface first, (...)
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  17.  14
    Ten Thousand Scrolls: Reading and Writing in the Poetics of Huang Tingjian and the Late Northern Song by Yugen Wang.Nicholas Hudson - 2015 - Philosophy East and West 65 (4):1310-1311.
  18.  21
    What is the Enlightenment? Investigating the Origins and Ideological Uses of an Historical Category.Nicholas Hudson - 2006 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 25:163.
  19.  29
    'Are We "Voltaire's Bastards?"' John Ralston Saul and Post-Modern Representations of the Enlightenment.Nicholas Hudson - 2001 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 20:111.
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  20.  56
    Locke's Nominalism and the “linguistic turn” of the enlightenment.Nicholas Hudson - 1997 - The European Legacy 2 (2):223-228.
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  21. Situating Xunzi.Nicholas Bunnin - 2008 - In On Cho Ng & Zhongying Cheng, The Imperative of Understanding: Chinese Philosophy, Comparative Philosophy, and Onto-Hermeneutics: A Tribute Volume Dedicated to Professor Chung-Ying Cheng. Global Scholarly Publications.
     
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  22.  51
    On the Difference between Physician‐Assisted Suicide and Active Euthanasia.Nicholas Dixon - 1998 - Hastings Center Report 28 (5):25-29.
    Those who defend physician‐assisted suicide often seek to distinguish it from active euthanasia, but in fact, the two acts face the same objections. Both can lead to abuse, both implicate the physician in the death of a patient, and both violate whatever objections there are to killing. Their moral similarity derives from the similar roles of the physician.
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  23.  10
    (1 other version)Autobiography.Nicholas Rescher - 2007 - De Gruyter.
    Nicholas Rescher was born in Germany in 1928 and emigrated to the United States shortly before the outbreak of World War II. After training in philosophy at Princeton University he embarked on a long and active career as professor, lecturer, and writer. His many books on a wide variety of philosophical topics have established him as one of the most productive and versatile contributors to twentieth-century philosophical thought, combining historical and analytical investigators to articulate an amalgam of German (...)
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  24. Reid on Common Sense, with Wittgenstein’s Assistance.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 2000 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 74 (3):491-517.
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  25. Nicholas Hudson: Writing and European Thought 1600-1830.V. Brown - 2000 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 8 (2):376-378.
  26.  31
    Assisting Reproduction, Testing Genes: Global Encounters with the New Biotechnologies. Edited by Daphna Birenbaum-Carmeli & Marcia C. Inhorn. Pp. 304. (Berghahn Books, Oxford, 2009.) £55.00, ISBN 978-1-84545-625-2, paperback. [REVIEW]Nicholas Shapiro - 2010 - Journal of Biosocial Science 42 (6):829-830.
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  27.  42
    Visions of Peace: Asia and the West ed. by Takashi Shogimen and Vicki A. Spencer.Nicholas Hudson - 2016 - Philosophy East and West 66 (4):1386-1387.
    Peace, compared to war, receives scant attention. Comprised of nine essays drawn from a 2009 conference, the essays collected in Visions of Peace: Asia and the West, edited by Takashi Shogimen and Vicki A. Spencer, reach wide and far to push against that neglect. The essays focus on different conceptions of and plans for political peace. Even more impressively, they generally avoid well-trodden paths like Kant’s Toward Perpetual Peace and instead draw upon Asian traditions and more obscure Western traditions. The (...)
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  28.  29
    (1 other version)Bertrand Russell and Harold Joachim.Nicholas Griffin - 2007 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 27 (2).
    The paper is partly biographical and partly philosophical. It traces Russell’s philosophical interactions with the British neo-Hegelian philosopher, Harold Joachim, from Russell’s days as an undergraduate in the 1890s to his scathing review of Joachim’s inaugural lecture as Wykeham Professor of Logic at Oxford in 1920. The philosophical part attempts to evaluate Russell’s main argument against Joachim’s coherence theory of truth, that it is equivalent to the doctrine of internal relations. The paper makes use of Russell’s recently discovered letters (...)
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  29.  16
    Sarah Angelina Acland: First Lady of Colour Photography.Giles Hudson - 2012 - Bodleian Library, University of Oxford.
    Sarah Angelina Acland is one of the most important photographers of the late Victorian and early Edwardian periods. Daughter of the Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford, she was photographed by Lewis Carroll as a child, along with her close friend Ina Liddell, sister of Alice of Wonderland fame. The critic John Ruskin taught her art and she also knew many of the Pre-Raphaelites, holding Rossetti's palette for him as he painted the Oxford Union murals. At the age of (...)
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  30.  14
    Letters Concerning the English Nation.Nicholas Cronk (ed.) - 2009 - Oxford University Press.
    Inspired by Voltaire's stay in England, this is one of the key works of the Enlightenment. Exactly contemporary with Gulliver's Travels and The Beggar's Opera, Voltaire's controversial pronouncements on politics, philosophy, religion, and literature have placed the Letters among the great Augustan satires. Voltaire wrote most of the book in English, in which he was fluent and witty, and it fast became a bestseller in Britain. He re-wrote it in French as the Lettres philosophiques, and current editions in (...) translate his French. This edition restores for the modern reader Voltaire's own English text, allowing us to appreciate him as a stylist at first hand. It is the only critical edition of the original text and, as well as providing an introduction and notes, it includes intriguing accounts of Voltaire by contemporary English observers. (shrink)
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  31. Understanding Scientific Progress: Aim-Oriented Empiricism.Nicholas Maxwell - 2017 - St. Paul, USA: Paragon House.
    "Understanding Scientific Progress constitutes a potentially enormous and revolutionary advancement in philosophy of science. It deserves to be read and studied by everyone with any interest in or connection with physics or the theory of science. Maxwell cites the work of Hume, Kant, J.S. Mill, Ludwig Bolzmann, Pierre Duhem, Einstein, Henri Poincaré, C.S. Peirce, Whitehead, Russell, Carnap, A.J. Ayer, Karl Popper, Thomas Kuhn, Imre Lakatos, Paul Feyerabend, Nelson Goodman, Bas van Fraassen, and numerous others. He lauds Popper for advancing beyond (...)
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  32.  11
    Al-Farabi's Short Commentary on Aristotle's Prior Analytics.Nicholas Rescher - 1963 - University of Pittsburgh Press.
    During the years 800-1200 A.D., Arabic scholars studied many of the works of Greek philosophy, and recorded their interpretations. Significant Arabic interpretations of Aristotle's Prior Analytics, the key work of his logical Organon, however, have remained largely unavailable in the West. The recent discovery of several Arabic manuscripts in Istanbul revealed the “Short Commentary on Prior Analytics” by the medieval Arabic philosopher al-Farabi. Nicholas Rescher here presents the first translation of this work in English, and supplements this with (...)
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  33. Information dependency in quantificational subordination.Nicholas Asher - unknown
    The purpose of this paper is to (a) show that the received view of the problem of quantificational subordination (QS) is incorrect, and that, consequently, existing solutions do not succeed in explaining the facts, and (b) provide a new account of QS. On the received view of QS within dynamic semantic frameworks, determiners treated as universal quantifiers (henceforth universal determiners) such as all, every, and each behave as barriers to inter-sentential anaphora yet allow anaphoric accessibility in a number of situations. (...)
     
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  34. Lavoisier’s "Reflections on phlogiston" I: against phlogiston theory.Nicholas W. Best - 2015 - Foundations of Chemistry 17 (2):137-151.
    This seminal paper, which marks a turning point of the chemical revolution, is presented for the first time in a complete English translation. In this first half Lavoisier undermines phlogiston chemistry by arguing that his French contemporaries had replaced Stahl’s original theory with radically different systems that conceptualised the phlogiston principle in completely incompatible ways. He refutes their claims by showing that these later models were riddled with inconsistencies as to phlogiston’s weight, its ability to penetrate glass and its (...)
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  35.  23
    Neo-Confucian ecological humanism: an interpretive engagement with Wang Fuzhi (1619-1692).Nicholas S. Brasovan - 2017 - Albany, New York: SUNY Press.
    Addresses Ming Dynasty philosopher Wang Fuzhi’s neo-Confucianism from the perspective of contemporary ecological humanism. In this novel engagement with Ming Dynasty philosopher Wang Fuzhi (1619–1692), Nicholas S. Brasovan presents Wang’s neo-Confucianism as an important theoretical resource for engaging with contemporary ecological humanism. Brasovan coins the term “person-in-the-world” to capture ecological humanism’s fundamental premise that humans and nature are inextricably bound together, and argues that Wang’s cosmology of energy (qi) gives us a rich conceptual vocabulary for understanding the continuity that (...)
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  36. Aspects of Johnson: Essays on his Arts, Mind, Afterlife, and Politics. [REVIEW]Nicholas Hudson - 2006 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 36 (1):135-138.
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  37.  16
    Can Ontology Do Without Events?Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1979 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 7 (1):177-201.
    In his book Persons and Objects, Professor Chisholm undertakes to show the satisfactoriness of an ontology which does not admit the existence of concrete events, such as sneezings, runnings, etc. He attempts to show that if we allow the existence of states of affairs, these being everlastingly existing entities, we need not acknowledge the existence of those perishing entities which are concrete events. I n this paper I discuss the tenability of this contention, considering especially whether the reductions that (...)
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  38. Parting smoothly?Nicholas Shackel - 2007 - Analysis 67 (4):321–324.
    In ‘How to part ways smoothly’ Hud Hudson (2007) presents ‘two temporally-continuous spatially unextended material objects that ... share all of their temporal parts up until their very last time-slice’ (2007: 156). They share their location throughout all but the last instant of their lives, at which instant they are a metre apart. Hudson claims that they part smoothly. I shall show that they don’t.
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  39.  13
    Klarowność wypowiedzi dramatycznej, czyli irlandzki dramat końca wieku dwudziestego.Nicholas Grene - 2014 - Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica 24 (2):7-27.
    Synge, with his “fully-flavoured” Hiberno-English established a tradition of Irish theatrical eloquence that has come down into the contemporary period in the lyrical fluencies of Brian Friel, the vatic speech of Frank McGuinness and the Midlands poeticism of Marina Carr. Tom Murphy, however, set a different sort of precedent, resistant to such eloquence, forging a stage speech instead from the broken language of the inarticulate. The aim of this paper is to explore the rejection of ‘poetry talk’ in contemporary (...)
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  40.  47
    Jacques Maritain.Nicholas Capaldi - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (2):399-421.
    THIS ARTICLE IS OCCASIONED BY THE RECENT APPEARANCE of three books focused on the life and thought of Jacques Maritain : Jude P. Dougherty, Jacques Maritain, An Intellectual Profile; John P. Hittinger, Liberty, Wisdom, and Grace, Thomism and Democratic Political Theory; and Ralph McInerny, The Very Rich Hours of Jacques Maritain. It is at the same time an attempt to reassess the work of arguably the most influential and important Catholic philosopher of the twentieth century. The Jacques Maritain Center at (...)
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  41.  93
    Being, Identity and Truth.Nicholas Denyer - 1994 - Philosophical Quarterly 44 (174):117.
    Philosophers have met with many problems in discussing the interconnected concepts being, identity, and truth, and have advanced many theories to deal with them. Professor Williams argues that most of these problems and theories result from an inadequate appreciation of the ways in which the words `be', `same', and `true' work. By means of linguistic analysis he shows that being and truth are not properties, and identity is not a relation. He is thus able to demystify a number of (...)
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  42.  11
    David Hume: The Philosopher as Historian.Nicholas Phillipson - 2012 - Yale University Press.
    A giant of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment, David Hume was one of the most important philosophers ever to write in English. He was also a brilliant historian. In this book—a new and revised edition of his 1989 classic—Nicholas Phillipson shows how Hume freed history from religion and politics. As a philosopher, Hume sought a way of seeing the world and pursuing happiness independently of a belief in God. His groundbreaking approach applied the same outlook to Britain's history, showing how (...)
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  43.  9
    Economic Growth and Distribution in China.Nicholas R. Lardy - 1978 - Cambridge University Press.
    This study maintains that China's system of economic planning tends to mitigate the trade-off between economic growth and equity that has been found to prevail in the early stages of development in most less developed countries. The analysis focuses on the Chinese leadership's attempt to improve economic efficiency by decentralizing economic management without encouraging, as a consequence, increased economic inequality among different regions. By examining the budgetary and planning process, focusing in particular on the fiscal relations between the centre and (...)
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  44.  17
    Writings on church and reform.Cardinal Nicholas - 2008 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Edited by Thomas M. Izbicki.
    Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464), a student of canon law who became a Catholic cardinal, was widely considered the most important original philosopher of the Renaissance. He wrote principally on theology, philosophy, and church politics. This volume makes most of Nicholas's other writings on Church and reform available in English for the first time.
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  45.  20
    Consciousness in Locke, by Shelley Weinberg.Nicholas Jolley - 2017 - Mind 126 (504):1239-1243.
    © Mind Association 2017Locke was not the first English philosopher to use the term ‘consciousness’ in a recognizably modern sense; that distinction seems to belong to Ralph Cudworth. But he was perhaps the first to accord consciousness a major place in his philosophy: as Shelley Weinberg reminds us in her new book, the concept of consciousness is central to his polemics against Descartes’ philosophy of mind. Here Locke seeks to turn Descartes’ own weapons against him: he deploys the mental (...)
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  46.  12
    Al-Kindi: An Annotated Bibliography.Nicholas Rescher - 1965 - University of Pittsburgh Press.
    In his day, al-Kindi was the only philosopher of pure Arab descent, and became known as “the philosopher of the Arabs.” He was one of the first Arab scholars interested in a scientific rather than theological viewpoint, and played a key role in bringing Greek learning into the orbit of Islam. al-Kindi wrote over three hundred fifty treatises, for the most part short studies on special topics in science and philosophy. Nicholas Rescher assembles this annotated bibliography, listing of over (...)
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  47.  55
    Averroes' Quaesitum on Assertoric (Absolute) Propositions.Nicholas Rescher - 1963 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 1 (1):80-93.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:80 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY AVERROES' Quaesitum ON ASSERTORIC (ABSOLUTE) PROPOSITIONS UNTIL 1962 ONLY ONE logical work of Averroes existed in print in the original Arabic? At this late date, D. M. Dunlop published the Arabic text of the short tract by Averroes on the modality of propositions with which we shall be concerned here.' The text published by Professor Dunlop forms part of a collection of treatises by (...)
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  48.  40
    (1 other version)Borrowing and the historical LGBTQ lexicon.Nicholas Lo Vecchio - 2021 - Pragmatics and Cognition 28 (1):167-192.
    Unlike most areas involving taboo, where language-internal innovations tend to dominate, homosexuality is characterized by a basic international vocabulary shared across multiple languages, notably English, French, Italian, Spanish and German. Historically, the lexis of nonnormative gender identity has shared space with that of sexual orientation. This lexicon includes (inexhaustively) the following series of internationalisms:sodomite, bugger, bardash, berdache, tribade, pederast, sapphist, lesbian, uranist, invert, homosexual, bisexual, trans, gay, queer. This common terminology has resulted from language contact in a broad sense, (...)
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  49. Moral Skepticism and Moral Naturalism in Hume's Treatise.Nicholas L. Sturgeon - 2001 - Hume Studies 27 (1):3-83.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Hume Studies Volume 27, Number 1, April 2001, pp. 3-83 Moral Skepticism and Moral Naturalism in Hume's Treatise NICHOLAS L. STURGEON Section I I believe that David Hume's well-known remarks on is and ought in his Treatise of Human Nature (T 469-70)1 have been widely misunderstood, and that in consequence so has their relation to his apparent ethical naturalism and to his skepticism about the role of reason (...)
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  50.  42
    Transcendentalist Aesthetics in Emerson, Peirce, and Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Painting.Nicholas Guardiano - unknown
    My thesis is that there is an aesthetic dimension of nature that is metaphysically significant, qualitatively pluralistic, and artistically creative, and that this accounts for the sensuous complexity of experience, as well as the possibility of discovering new qualitative features about the world and expressing them in novel forms, as exemplified in art. I call the philosophy that endorses the reality of this dimension Transcendentalist Aesthetics. The term "Transcendentalist" recalls the philosophy of New England Transcendentalism with its core in Ralph (...)
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