Results for 'C. Sweeney'

968 found
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  1.  26
    Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2012 - The Catholic University of America Press.
    Eileen C. Sweeney. gap between what faith believes and what reason understands, is also expressed in the attempt to think “that than which none greater can be thought.” For to think it is to reach God via a single, long extension of the mind ...
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  2. Relihan, Joel C. The Prisoner’s Philosophy: Life and Death in Boethius’s Consolation, University of Notre Dame Press, 2007, in Religious Studies Review 36 (3) (2010): 234.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2010 - Religious Studies Review 36 (3):234.
     
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  3. Alan of Lille.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2013 - In Willemien Otten (ed.), The Oxford Guide to the Historical Reception of Augustine. Oxford University Press. pp. 12-14.
  4. The Asymmetry between Language and Being: The Case of Anselm.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2007 - In Jon Burmeister & Mark Sentesy (eds.), On language: analytic, continental and historical contributions. Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 157-177.
  5.  17
    Three Notions of Analysis (Resolutio) and the Structure of Reasoning in Aquinas.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1994 - The Thomist 58 (2):197-243.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:THREE NOTIONS OF RESOLUTIO AND THE STRUCTURE OF REASONING IN AQUINAS 1 EILEEN c. SWEENEY Boston College Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts RESOLUTIO, better known by the English transliteration of its Greek counterpart, "analysis," has been touted as " the conceptual model for some of the most important ideas in the history of philosophy, including the history of the methodology and philosophy of science." 2 But while resolution /analysis may (...)
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  6. Anselm in Dialogue with the Other.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2012 - Plurality of Philosophies in the Middle Ages, Proceedings of the XIIth International Congress, Palermo, 16 – 22 September 2007 (1):159-168.
     
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  7.  35
    Hegel, Idealism, and Robert Pippin, KENNETH R. WESTPHAL.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1993 - International Philosophical Quarterly 33 (3).
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  8. Metaphysics and its Distinction from Sacred Doctrine in Aquinas.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1990 - In Reijo Työrinoja, Anja Inkeri Lehtinen & Dagfinn Føllesdal (eds.), Knowledge and Medieval Philosophy. Annals of the Finnish Society for Missiology and Ecumenics. pp. 162-170.
  9. Anselm on Human Finitude: A Dialogue with Existentialism.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2014 - Saint Anselm Journal 10 (1).
    The paper discusses Anselm's account of human finitude and freedom through his discussion of what it means to receive what we have from God in De casu diaboli. The essay argues that Anselm is considering the same issue as Jean Paul Sartre in his account of receiving a gift as incompatible with freedom. De casu diaboli takes up this same question, asking about how the finite will can be free, which requires that it have something per se, when there is (...)
     
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  10. Anselmian Meditation: Imagination, Aporia and Argument.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2013 - Saint Anselm Journal 9 (1):1-14.
    The claim of this paper is that there is a common form of reflection in Anselm’s prayers and the Proslogion and Monologion. The practice of meditation, of rumination and introspection, is the crucial link between these works, mostly thought of as philosophy or speculative theology, and as opposed to Anselm’s monastic practices of meditative prayer and thoughtful examination of self and scripture. The philosophical meditations are, like the prayers, the product of an imaginative project, in this case of reasoning as (...)
     
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  11.  41
    Roger Bacon and Albert the Great on Aristotle’s Notion of Science.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2015 - Quaestio 15:447-456.
    The paper examines the different uses of and responses to Aristotle’s account of science in the first wave of interpretation of Aristotle’s theory of science and works in natural science and metaphysics in the early 13th century in Roger Bacon and Albert the Great. The author argues that Bacon reduces all the disciplines to mathematics as the most scientific discipline, even as he argues that experimentum is at the center of scientific evidence and conclusions. Albert the Great, by contrast, gives (...)
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  12.  31
    Miner, Robert. Thomas Aquinas on the Passions: A Study of Summa Theologiae Ia2ae 22-48. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009, in The Journal of Religion 91 (2) (2011): 277-78. [REVIEW]Eileen C. Sweeney - 2011 - Journal of Religion 91 (2):277-278.
  13. Ordering Differences: Aquinas vs. the Moderns.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2001 - Aquinas Center of Theology, Occasional Papers on the Catholic Intellectual Life, 4:5-24.
  14. The Anticlaudianus and the 'Proper' Language of Theology.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1987 - Essays in Medieval Studies 4:45-55.
  15. Anselm's Proslogion: The Desire for the Word.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2003 - The Saint Anselm Journal 1:157-177.
     
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  16. Anselm und der Dialog. Distanz und Versoehnung.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1999 - In Gunter Narr Verlag (ed.), Gespraeche lesen. Philosophische Dialoge im Mittelalter. pp. 101-124.
  17. Speculative Theology and the Transformation of Separation and Longing.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2003 - In Chris Schlauch & William Meissner (eds.), Psyche and Spirit -Dialectics of Transformation. University of America Press. pp. 199-224.
  18.  18
    Aquinas' Three levels of Divine Predication in Dante's Paradiso.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1985 - Comitatus 16:29-45.
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  19. New Standards for Certainty: The Reception of Aristotle's Posterior Analytics in the late 12th and early 13th centuries.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2014 - In Dallas G. Denery Ii, Kantik Ghosh & Nicolette Zeeman (eds.), Uncertain Knowledge: Scepticism, Relativism, and Doubt in the Middle Ages. Brepols Publishers. pp. 37-62.
  20.  68
    Reasoning about Nature in Virtue, Action and Law: The Path from Principles to Practice.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2013 - Diametros 38:175-190.
    This paper argues that the role of nature in Aquinas’s account of virtue, action and law does not require the kind of adherence to Aristotle’s ‘metaphysical biology’ that is refuted by Darwin because of the way Aquinas transforms nature as applied to a rational being and as an analogy to elucidate virtue, habit and law. Aquinas’s grounding of ethics and law in the notion of nature is also not a kind of intuitionism designed to answer all moral questions and stop (...)
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  21. From Determined Motion to Undetermined Will and Nature to Supernature in Aquinas.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1992 - Philosophical Topics 20 (2):189-214.
    This essay will focus on analogies drawn from Aristotle’s account of natural motion and change which Thomas Aquinas uses to construct responses and explanations of free choice and its characteristic act, i.e. creation for God, and acts of virtue for human beings. Though these analogies to natural change recur throughout the Thomistic corpus, my analysis will focus on their use in the Summa Theologiae, where they consistently bear the weight of Aquinas’s account of the divine and human will and their (...)
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  22.  20
    Anselm as Teacher.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2024 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 98 (2):179-194.
    The essay examines Anselm’s De libertate arbitrii and De casu diaboli, arguing that the points made about the will and free choice are mirrored in the questions and struggles of the student interlocutor in the dialogues. In contrast to Plato and Aristotle, who want to bring us to see that virtue is the path to happiness, Anselm wants to show that we have free choice and are responsible for not choosing rightly (i.e., choosing justice for its own sake), and that (...)
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  23. The Problem of Philosophy and Theology in Anselm of Canterbury.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2011 - In Kent Emery & Russell Freidman (eds.), Medieval Philosophy and Theology in the Long Middle Ages. A Tribute to Stephen F. Brown. Studien und Texte zur Geistesgeschichte des Mittelalters. pp. 487-514.
  24.  26
    Abelard and the Jews.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2014 - In Babette S. Hellemans & E. J. Brill (eds.), Rethinking Abelard: A Collection of Critical Essays. Boston: Brill Academic. pp. 37-50.
  25.  61
    Aquinas & Sartre: On freedom, personal identity, and the possibility of happiness (review).Eileen C. Sweeney - 2011 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (1):130-131.
    This well-written volume consists of paired chapters on human being, understanding, freedom, and happiness on Aquinas and Sartre. Stephen Wang's project is to use Sartre to reveal the more "radical" aspects of Aquinas's thought and to use Aquinas to "unlock the meaning" of Sartre's more radical claims . There is a great deal that is fresh and illuminating in this rapprochement between two thinkers most would not join together. Because the aim is to bring the thinkers into conversation, Wang avoids (...)
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  26.  58
    Hugh of St. Victor: The Augustinian Tradition of Sacred and Secular Reading Revised.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1995 - In Edward D. English (ed.), Reading and Wisdom: The De Doctrina Christiana of Augustine in the Middle Ages. University of Notre Dame Press. pp. 61-83.
  27.  20
    When Is It Wrong? Models of Argument and Interpretation from the 12th to the 13th Century.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2018 - In Andreas Speer & Maxime Mauriège (eds.), Irrtum – Error – Erreur (Miscellanea Mediaevalia Band 40). Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 19-38.
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  28.  25
    Pinches, Charles R. Theology and Action: After Theory in Christian Ethics, W.B. Eerdmans, 2002 in Theological Studies 65 (2004): 205-7. [REVIEW]Eileen C. Sweeney - 2004 - Theological Studies 65:205-7.
  29.  64
    Seeing Double.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2009 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 83 (3):389-420.
    This essay focuses on three interpretations of Aquinas influenced by Continental philosophy, those of John Caputo, Jean-Luc Marion, and John Milbank/Catherine Pickstock. The essay considers the well-worn question, whether Aquinas is an onto-theologian in Heidegger’s sense, but looks more broadly at the point of contact common to these interpretations: Aquinas’s relationship to modernity.As Continental thought has put into question the nature of philosophy through a critical look at modern philosophy—questioning its self-representation as progress and characterizing the present as post-modern—Aquinas is (...)
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  30.  70
    Thomas Aquinas’ Double Metaphysics of Simplicity and Infinity.Eileen C. Sweeney - 1993 - International Philosophical Quarterly 33 (3):297-317.
  31.  20
    The Jewish Temple: A Non-Biblical Sourcebook.Marvin A. Sweeney & C. T. R. Hayward - 1999 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (1):147.
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  32.  24
    What Is a Person? Realities, Constructs, Illusions by John M. Rist.Eileen C. Sweeney - 2021 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 59 (2):345-346.
    John Rist's What Is a Person? is a scholarly, rich, and trenchant study of the history of the concept of personhood in Western thought. However, its sharp critique of modern and postmodern accounts of personhood, though thought-provoking, also uses jarringly polemical language, which further undermines the book's flawed overall argument. The first section, "Constructing the Mainline Tradition," carefully mines ancient and medieval sources, tracing with nuance and complexity the different threads in the notion of person. The threads are religious, philosophical, (...)
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  33.  29
    Boethius's In Ciceronis Topica. [REVIEW]Eileen C. Sweeney - 1991 - Review of Metaphysics 45 (1):152-153.
    This companion volume to Stump's earlier translation of Boethius's De topicis differentiis contains Stump's translation of Boethius's lengthy commentary on Cicero's Topica, extensive explanatory notes, and a short, basic explanation of ancient and medieval notions of the categories and predicables. Much of this volume depends on the earlier one; most of the introduction on Boethius is repeated from the earlier work, and many of the explanatory notes refer the reader to the earlier volume. Though the two Boethian texts have the (...)
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  34.  39
    Abelard in Four Dimensions: A Twelfth-Century Philosopher in His Context and Ours by John Marenbon. [REVIEW]Eileen C. Sweeney - 2015 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 53 (3):547-548.
  35.  93
    Matter, E. Ann and Lesley Smith, eds., From Knowledge to Beatitude: St. Victor, Twelfth-Century Scholars, and Beyond. Essays in Honor of Grover A. Zinn, Jr. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2013, in H-France Review Vol. 14 (May 2014), No. 79, pp. 1-4. [REVIEW]Eileen C. Sweeney - 2014 - H-France Review 14 (79):1-4.
  36.  45
    Abelard’s Progress: From Logic to Ethics. Review of John Marenbon, The Philosophy of Peter Abelard. [REVIEW]Eileen C. Sweeney - 2000 - International Philosophical Quarterly 40 (3):367-376.
  37.  30
    Boiling the Frog Slowly: The Immersion of C-Suite Financial Executives into Fraud.Ikseon Suh, John T. Sweeney, Kristina Linke & Joseph M. Wall - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 162 (3):645-673.
    This study explores how financial executives retrospectively account for their crossing the line into financial statement fraud while acting within or reacting to a financialized corporate environment. We conduct our investigation through face-to-face interviews with 13 former C-suite financial executives who were involved in and indicted for major cases of accounting fraud. Five different themes of accounts emerged from the narratives, characterizing executives’ fraud immersion as a meaning-making process by which the particulars of the proximal social context and individual motivations (...)
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  38. Soul as Substance and Method in Aquinas’ Anthropological Writings.Michael J. Sweeney - 1999 - Archives d'Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge 66:143-188.
    B.-C. Bazán a déterminé récemment que les Questiones de anima de Thomas d’Aquin le conduisaient à s’éloigner de la représentation de l’âme comme substance, et qu’elles étaient antérieures à la Summa theologiae I Pars. Cette étude examine l’idée d’âme comme substance chez Thomas d’Aquin et éclaire les résultats de Bazán en montrant que Thomas utilise deux méthodes anthropologiques différentes, l’une philosophique et l’autre théologique.
     
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  39. Rosaire Bergeron, S. C., "La Vocation de la Liberté dans la Philosophie de Paul Ricoeur". [REVIEW]Robert D. Sweeney - 1977 - The Thomist 41 (2):297.
     
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  40.  28
    "One and Many in Presocratic Philosophy," by Michael C. Stokes. [REVIEW]Leo Sweeney - 1974 - Modern Schoolman 51 (2):190-194.
  41.  80
    Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word by Eileen C. Sweeney (review).Toivo J. Holopainen - 2013 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 51 (2):314-315.
    In this highly useful book, Eileen Sweeney offers an overall interpretation of Anselm’s thought and output. Her method is to go through Anselm’s treatises and other writings in roughly chronological order, dividing them into seven groups, each to be discussed in its own chapter. In doing so, the author draws attention to material that is often neglected in discussions of Anselm’s thought. This is particularly the case with chapters 1 and 2, in which Anselm’s prayers and letters are discussed, (...)
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  42.  29
    A Sociology of Spirituality. Edited by Kieran Flanagan and Peter C. Jupp, Pp. xiv, 269, index, Farnham, Surrey, Ashgate, 2007, $33.72. [REVIEW]James Sweeney - 2017 - Heythrop Journal 58 (5):819-821.
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  43.  32
    "Les Corps celestes dans Vunivers de saint Thomas d'Aquin," by Thomas Litt, O.C.S.O. [REVIEW]Leo Sweeney - 1966 - Modern Schoolman 43 (3):283-287.
  44.  26
    "Phenomenology and Metaphysics," by William A. Luijpen, O.S.A., trans. Henry J. Koren, C.S.Sp. [REVIEW]Leo Sweeney - 1968 - Modern Schoolman 45 (3):259-261.
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  45.  43
    "The Infinite God and the 'Summa Fratris Alexandri,'" by Meldon C. Wass, O.F.M. [REVIEW]Leo Sweeney - 1966 - Modern Schoolman 43 (3):310-312.
  46.  26
    Gerald Sweeney, fighting for the good cause: Reflections on Francis galtons legacy to american hereditarian psychology. Transactions of the american philosophical society, 91, part 2. philadelphia: American philosophical society, 2001. Pp. X+136. Isbn 0-87169-912-5. $18.00. [REVIEW]John C. Waller - 2003 - British Journal for the History of Science 36 (2):247-248.
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  47. Logic, theology, and poetry in Boethius, Abelard, and Alan of lille: Words in the absence of things. [REVIEW]C. J. Mews - 2007 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 45 (2):327-328.
    C. J. Mews - Logic, Theology, and Poetry in Boethius, Abelard, and Alan of Lille: Words in the Absence of Things - Journal of the History of Philosophy 45:2 Journal of the History of Philosophy 45.2 327-328 Muse Search Journals This Journal Contents Reviewed by Constant J. Mews Monash University Eileen C. Sweeney. Logic, Theology, and Poetry in Boethius, Abelard, and Alan of Lille: Words in the Absence of Things. The New Middle Ages. London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2006. Pp. xii (...)
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  48.  42
    Logic, Theology, and Poetry in Boethius, Abelard, and Alain of Lille: Words in the Absence of Things. By Eileen C. Sweeney[REVIEW]Giorgio Pini - 2012 - International Philosophical Quarterly 52 (2):252-254.
  49.  53
    Getting Expression‐Based Semantics Right: Its Proper Objects of Evaluation and Limits.David C. Spewak Jr - 2016 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 54 (3):393-410.
    Often those attempting to resolve the answering machine paradox appeal to Kaplan's claim that the objects of semantic evaluation are expression-types evaluated with respect to indices, instead of utterances, as part of their solution. This article argues that Dylan Dodd and Paula Sweeney exemplify the kind of mistakes theorists make in applying such expression-based semantic theories in that they conflate what is asserted with semantic content, and they take their approach to utterance interpretation as having semantic significance. In light (...)
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  50.  15
    Sweeney, Eileen C., Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word. [REVIEW]Burcht Pranger - 2014 - Review of Metaphysics 68 (1):206-208.
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