Results for 'Endre Grandpierre'

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  1. Collective fields of consciousness in the golden age.Endre Grandpierre - 2000 - World Futures 55 (4):357-379.
    The present essay is a compact form of the results obtained during many decades of research into the primeval foundations of the collective fields of force, both social and of consciousness. Since everything is determined by their origins, and the collective forces arise from the mind, we had to explore the ultimate origins of mind. We have come to recognize the law of interactions as the law and necessity which determine the primeval origins of mind. It also determines the substance (...)
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  2. The Epistemology of Prejudice.Endre Begby - 2013 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 2 (1):90-99.
    According to a common view, prejudice always involves some form of epistemic culpability, i.e., a failure to respond to evidence in the appropriate way. I argue that the common view wrongfully assumes that prejudices always involve universal generalizations. After motivating the more plausible thesis that prejudices typically involve a species of generic judgment, I show that standard examples provide no grounds for positing a strong connection between prejudice and epistemic culpability. More generally, the common view fails to recognize the extent (...)
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  3. The Fundamental Principles of Existence and the Origin of Physical Laws.Attila Grandpierre - 2002 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 25 (2):127-147.
    Our concept of the universe and the material world is foundational for our thinking and our moral lives. In an earlier contribution to the URAM project I presented what I called 'the ultimate organizational principle' of the universe. In that article (Grandpierre 2000, pp. 12-35) I took as an adversary the wide-spread system of thinking which I called 'materialism'. According to those who espouse this way of thinking, the universe consists of inanimate units or sets of material such as (...)
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  4. Aspects of the Enlightenment: Aesthetics, Politics and Religion, eds. Ferenc Hörcher and Endre Szécsényi.Endre Szécsényi & Ferenc Hörcher (eds.) - 2004 - Budapest, Hungary: Akadémiai Kiadó.
    Introductory essay / Peter Jones -- The usefulness of the arts and the humanities : the case of Descartes / Gábor Boros -- Roads of remembrance : the treatment of imagination and memory in Gerard's Essay on genius / Zsolt Komáromy -- Diderot's untimeliness / László Kisbali ; transl. Márton Dornbach -- Melody vs. harmony : Rousseau, or, The aesthetics of vowels / Mária Ludassy ; transl. Zsolt Komáromy -- Judgement and taste : from Shakespeare to Shaftesbury / Ferenc Hörcher (...)
     
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  5.  57
    Nietzsche als Hermeneut.Tobias Endres - 2025 - Hamburg: Meiner.
    In his essay, Tobias Endres devotes himself to the theoretical philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, which continues to have a reputation for self-contradiction, albeit an affirmed one. While this problem is increasingly losing importance in recent and most recent Nietzsche research, the study attempts to dispel the accusation of performative self-contradiction and genetic fallacy. In contrast to the readings inspired by analytical philosophy, however, Nietzsche's metaphilosophy is not understood exclusively as a contribution to classical epistemology, but as a variant of philosophical (...)
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  6.  62
    Prejudice: A Study in Non-Ideal Epistemology.Endre Begby - 2021 - Oxford University Press.
    Prejudiced beliefs may certainly seem like defective beliefs. But in what sense are they defective? Many will be false and harmful, but philosophers have further argued that prejudiced belief is defective also in the sense that it could only arise from distinctive kinds of epistemic irrationality: we could acquire or retain our prejudiced beliefs only by violating our epistemic responsibilities. It is also assumed that we are only morally responsible for the harms that prejudiced beliefs cause because, in forming these (...)
  7.  13
    Einleitung.Martin Endres - 2014 - In "Poëtische Individualität": Hölderlins Empedokles-Ode. De Gruyter. pp. 1-4.
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  8. Nietzsche i Baeumler, czyli o możliwości pozytywnej metafizyki faszystkowskiej.Endre Kiss - 1986 - Studia Filozoficzne 252 (11).
     
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  9. Lexical norms, language comprehension, and the epistemology of testimony.Endre Begby - 2014 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 44 (3-4):324-342.
    It has recently been argued that public linguistic norms are implicated in the epistemology of testimony by way of underwriting the reliability of language comprehension. This paper argues that linguistic normativity, as such, makes no explanatory contribution to the epistemology of testimony, but instead emerges naturally out of a collective effort to maintain language as a reliable medium for the dissemination of knowledge. Consequently, the epistemologies of testimony and language comprehension are deeply intertwined from the start, and there is no (...)
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  10. Concepts and Abilities in Anti-Individualism.Endre Begby - 2011 - Journal of Philosophy 108 (10):555-575.
  11.  37
    Aesthetics, Nature and Religion: Ronald W. Hepburn and his Legacy, ed. Endre Szécsényi.Endre Szécsényi, Peter Cheyne, Cairns Craig, David E. Cooper, Emily Brady, Douglas Hedley, Mary Warnock, Guy Bennett-Hunter, Michael McGhee, James Kirwan, Isis Brook, Fran Speed, Yuriko Saito, James MacAllister, Arto Haapala, Alexander J. B. Hampton, Pauline von Bonsdorff, Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson & Arnar Árnason - 2020 - Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press.
    On 18–19 May 2018, a symposium was held in the Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies at the University of Aberdeen to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the death of Ronald W. Hepburn (1927–2008). The speakers at this event discussed Hepburn’s oeuvre from several perspectives. For this book, the collection of the revised versions of their talks has been supplemented by the papers of other scholars who were unable to attend the symposium itself. Thus this volume contains contributions from (...)
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  12.  17
    Emotion Regulation in Current and Remitted Depression: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.Endre Visted, Jon Vøllestad, Morten Birkeland Nielsen & Elisabeth Schanche - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  13. Landscape and Walking: On Early Aesthetic Experience.Endre Szécsényi - 2017 - Journal of Scottish Thought 9:39-74.
  14.  26
    Introduction. The Birth of the Discipline.Endre Szécsényi - 2021 - Aesthetic Investigations 4 (2):140-143.
    Introduction to the special issue, "The Birth of the Discipline", guest edited by Endre Szécsényi with Rob van Gerwen, of Aesthetic Investigations.
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  15. Measurement of collective and social fields of consciousness.Attila Grandpierre - 2001 - World Futures 57 (1):85-94.
    It is possible to reveal and to examine the collective and social fields of consciousness experimentally. An account is given of planned experiments based on quantitative calculations, which indicate that the effects of individual and collective fields of consciousness on matter may elicit directly observable physical results. Moreover, it is shown that collective coherent consciousness fields may enhance the physical effects of consciousness at a significant rate. The predicted results have a significance in our picture of our consciousness, in self-assertion (...)
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  16.  44
    Transcending and attending to difference in the multicultural classroom.Benjamin Endres - 2002 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 36 (2):171–185.
    In this paper, I hope to reconcile two conflicting moral ideals within the multicultural classroom. I argue that increased attention to cultural difference in both education and moral philosophy is vitally important, but that it should not undermine the value of generalised respect, which grounds formal equality. I argue that an intersubjective account of respect explicitly integrates the generalised and particular moral perspectives, and thus serves as an ideal for interactions in the multicultural classroom. Through the analysis of two examples, (...)
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  17. On the fundamental worldview of the integral culture: Integrating science, religion, and art: Part one.Attila Grandpierre - 2003 - World Futures 59 (6):463 – 483.
    In the present essay the author suggests that the main reason why history failed to develop societies in harmony with Nature, including our internal nature as well, is that we failed to evaluate the exact basis of the factor ultimately governing our thoughts. We failed to realize that it is the worldview that ultimately governs our thoughts and through our thoughts, our actions. In this work we consider the ultimate foundations of philosophy, science, religion, and art, pointing out that they (...)
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  18. Die antike Welt wird christlich.Endre von Ivánka - forthcoming - Kairos.
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  19.  6
    A magyar esztétika történetéből: felvilágosodás és reformkor.Endre Nagy - 1983 - [Budapest]: Kossuth.
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  20.  23
    The phenomenology of conversion: The conversions of Karl and Michael Polanyi.Endre Nagy - 2010 - Appraisal 8 (1).
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  21. Rome as an unlaid ghost in sixteenth-eighteenth century Russia : Rome spiritual and Rome secular from the early sixteenth century to 1725.Endre Sashalmi - 2018 - In Wouter Bracke, Jan Nelis & Jan De Maeyer, Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: from the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism. Bruxelles: Academia Belgica.
     
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  22. Remarks on Hannah Arendt’s Political Phenomenology.Endre Szécsényi - 2008 - In Michael Staudigl & Ludger Hagedorn, Über Zivilisation und Differenz: Beiträge zu einer politischen Phänomenologie Europas. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann. pp. 263-275.
    A paper on Hannah Arendt’s lifelong project of the establishment of “a phenomenology with human plurality and human interaction as its focal point", with critical reflections upon her insights concerning the emergence of "the social" in the mirror of some eighteenth-century theories of human sociability.
     
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  23. Biological Autonomy.Attila Grandpierre & Menas Kafatos - 2012 - Philosophy Study 2 (9):631-649.
    We argue that genuine biological autonomy, or described at human level as free will, requires taking into account quantum vacuum processes in the context of biological teleology. One faces at least three basic problems of genuine biological autonomy: (1) if biological autonomy is not physical, where does it come from? (2) Is there a room for biological causes? And (3) how to obtain a workable model of biological teleology? It is shown here that the solution of all these three problems (...)
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  24.  93
    On the Very Idea of Social Construction: Deconstructing Searle’s and Hacking’s Critical Reflections.Martin Endreß - 2016 - Human Studies 39 (1):127-146.
    The starting point of the following inquiry addresses John Searle’s and Ian Hacking’s most prominent critique of contemporary “constructionism” in the 1990s. It is stimulated by the astonishing fact that neither Hacking nor Searle take into account Peter Berger’s and Thomas Luckmann’s classical essay and sociological masterpiece The Social Construction of Reality in their contributions. Critically revisiting Searle’s and Hacking’s critique on the so-called constructivist approach, the article demonstrates that both authors have failed to put forth a sociologically valid understanding (...)
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  25. Evidential Preemption.Endre Begby - 2021 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 102 (3):515-530.
    As a general rule, whenever a hearer is justified in forming the belief that p on the basis of a speaker’s testimony, she will also be justified in assuming that the speaker has formed her belief appropriately in light of a relevantly large and representative sample of the evidence that bears on p. In simpler terms, a justification for taking someone’s testimony entails a justification for trusting her assessment of the evidence. This introduces the possibility of what I will call (...)
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  26.  24
    Gustus Spiritualis: Remarks on the Emergence of Modern Aesthetics.Endre Szécsényi - 2014 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 51 (1):62-85.
    The article considers the concept of gustus spiritualis, in particular its possible historical connection with (aesthetic) taste in the seventeenth century. By ‘aesthetic’, I mean a radically modern phenomenon, attitude, sensibility, and so forth, that is, a new type of experience. Its discourse has many keywords; one of them is taste, an inner faculty by which its possessor is able to make sharp and proper distinctions, and simultaneously to enjoy fine delights. Here, I am obliged to confine myself to the (...)
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  27. Semantic minimalism and the “miracle of communication”.Endre Begby - 2013 - Philosophical Studies 165 (3):957-973.
    According to semantic minimalism, context-invariant minimal semantic propositions play an essential role in linguistic communication. This claim is key to minimalists’ argument against semantic contextualism: if there were no such minimal semantic propositions, and semantic content varied widely with shifts in context, then it would be “miraculous” if communication were ever to occur. This paper offers a critical examination of the minimalist account of communication, focusing on a series of examples where communication occurs without a minimal semantic proposition shared between (...)
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  28. The Origin of Cellular Life and Biosemiotics.Attila Grandpierre - 2013 - Biosemiotics (3):1-15.
    Recent successes of systems biology clarified that biological functionality is multilevel. We point out that this fact makes it necessary to revise popular views about macromolecular functions and distinguish between local, physico-chemical and global, biological functions. Our analysis shows that physico-chemical functions are merely tools of biological functionality. This result sheds new light on the origin of cellular life, indicating that in evolutionary history, assignment of biological functions to cellular ingredients plays a crucial role. In this wider picture, even if (...)
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  29.  54
    Defending humanity: When force is justified and why - by George P. Fletcher and Jens David Ohlin.Endre Begby - 2009 - Ethics and International Affairs 23 (2):213-216.
  30.  12
    A magyar esztétika történetéből, 1849-1919.Endre Nagy - 1987 - [Budapest]: Kossuth.
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  31.  15
    Kollektivität und Humanität als Grundprinzip der sozialistischen Moral.Endre Parkas - 1977 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 25 (8):958.
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  32. Filozófiatörténeti szöveggyűjtemény. Simon, Endre & [From Old Catalog] (eds.) - 1966 - Budapest: Tankönyvkiadó.
     
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  33.  1
    A modern esztétika feltalálása: Megjegyzések a brit esztétika kora modern történetéhez [Inventing Modern Aesthetics: Remarks on the Early Modern History of British Aesthetics].Endre Szécsényi - 2024 - Budapest: Gondolat Kiadó.
    This e-book written in Hungarian seeks to reconstruct “the aesthetic” in the modern sense of the word, from the mid-17th century to the 1730s, through the texts of mainly British authors such as John Dennis, Lord Shaftesbury, Joseph Addison, Richard Steele, Francis Hutcheson, George Berkeley, sometimes using their Spanish and French predecessors for contextualization. It assumes that “the aesthetic” is an unprecedented type of experience that had to be discovered, or rather invented; it is therefore more than a discussion of (...)
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  34.  22
    The regard of the first man: on Joseph Addison’s aesthetic categories.Endre Szécsényi - 2017 - History of European Ideas 43 (6):582-597.
    This study examines the sources that could inspire Joseph Addison’s influential ‘aesthetic’ triad of ‘great’, ‘uncommon’, and ‘beautiful’, as elaborated in his essay-series The Pleasures of the Imagination in 1712. After identifying a philological problem in the interpretative tradition which gives rise to Addison’s triad from a section of Ps Longinus’ Peri Hypsous, further three seventeenth-century texts – Thomas Burnet’s Telluris theoria sacra, Dominique Bouhours’ Les entretiens d’Ariste et d’Eugène, and Baltasar Gracián’s El Criticón – are presented in order to (...)
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  35.  77
    The Ethics of War. Part I: Historical Trends1.Endre Begby, Gregory Reichberg & Henrik Syse - 2012 - Philosophy Compass 7 (5):316-327.
    This article surveys the major historical developments in Western philosophical reflection on war. Section 2 outlines early development in Greek and Roman thought, up to and including Augustine. Section 3 details the systematization of Just War theory in Aquinas and his successors, especially Vitoria, Sua´rez, and Grotius. Section 4 examines the emergence of Perpetual Peace theory after Hobbes, focusing in particular on Rousseau and Kant. Finally, Section 5 outlines the central points of contention following the reemergence of Just War theory (...)
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  36. From Belief Polarization to Echo Chambers: A Rationalizing Account.Endre Begby - 2024 - Episteme 21 (2):519-539.
    Belief polarization (BP) is widely seen to threaten havoc on our shared political lives. It is often assumed that BP is the product of epistemically irrational behaviors at the individual level. After distinguishing between BP as it occurs in intra-group and inter-group settings, this paper argues that neither process necessarily reflects individual epistemic irrationality. It is true that these processes can work in tandem to produce so-called “echo chambers.” But while echo chambers are often problematic from the point of view (...)
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  37.  22
    Can Chinese Harmonism Help Reconcile the Clash of Civilizations?Attila Grandpierre - 2021 - Process Studies 50 (2):270-275.
    This short article discusses the Chinese concept of harmonism as developed in a book by Zhihe Wang titled Process and Pluralism: Chinese Thought on the Harmony of Diversity. This book develops themes in Whitehead's philosophy as they illuminate the concept of harmonism and constructive postmodernism.
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  38.  2
    Man, as the ontological mean.Josef Endres - 1965 - New York,: Desclee Co..
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  39.  8
    Erkenntnis als mächtigster Affekt.Endre Kiss - 2003
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  40.  62
    Fate-Generations and Generation Fates: Writers of Jewish Origin in Modern Hungarian Culture.Endre Kiss - 2005 - The European Legacy 10 (7):717-723.
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  41.  9
    Modern művészetszociális művészet: adalékok a marxista esztétikai gondolkodás és kritika magyarországi kezdeteihez.Endre Nagy - 1977 - Budapest: Magvető.
  42. Doxastic Morality.Endre Begby - 2018 - Philosophical Topics 46 (1):155-172.
    Beliefs can cause moral wrongs, no doubt, but can they also constitute moral wrongs in their own right? This paper offers some grounds to be skeptical of the idea that there are moral norms which operate directly on belief, independently of any epistemic norms also operating on belief. The resultant skepticism is moderate in the following sense: it holds that the motivations underlying the doxastic morality approach should not be dismissed lightly; they are genuine insights and serve to bring to (...)
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  43.  57
    Davidson’s Derangement Revisited: Guest Editors’ Introduction.Endre Begby & Bjørn Torgrim Ramberg - 2016 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 59 (1):1-5.
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  44. A Role for Coercive Force in the Theory of Global Justice?Endre Begby - 2014 - In Thom Brooks, New Waves in Gobal Justice. Basingstoke: Palgrave-MacMillan.
    The first wave of philosophical work on global justice focused largely on the distribution of economic resources, and on the development or reformation of institutions relevant thereto. More recently, however, the horizon has broadened significantly, to also include a concern with the global spread of the right to live under reasonable legal institutions and representative forms of government (cf. “a human right to democracy”). Thus, while the first wave was focused primarily on international (non-territorial) institutions, later work has also brought (...)
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  45.  17
    Asymmetries and Climate Futures: Working with Waters in an Indigenous Australian Settlement.Yasunori Hayashi, Endre Dányi & Michaela Spencer - 2019 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 44 (5):786-813.
    This paper focuses on a water management project in the remote Aboriginal community of Milingimbi, Northern Australia. Drawing on materials and experiences from two distinct stages of this project, we revisit a policy report and engage in ethnographic storytelling in order to highlight a series of sensing practices associated with water management. In the former, a working symmetry between Yolngu and Western water knowledges is actively sought through the practices of the project. However, in the latter, recurrent asymmetries in the (...)
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  46.  32
    Process based functionalism instead of structural functionalism is needed.Endre E. Kadar & M. T. Turvey - 1997 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (3):533-533.
    Latash & Anson's intention to describe only the regularities of motor behavior is compromised by the homunculus paradigm. Although we concur on the need to redefine in atypical populations, we contend that this enterprise requires a process based functionalism. We argue for accommodating movement control and perceptual processes with physical and task constraints in a natural setting.
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  47.  7
    Szépség és szabadság: eszmetörténeti tanulmányok [Beauty and Freedom: Studies in Intellectual History].Endre Szécsényi - 2009 - Budapest: L'Harmattan.
    The volume "Beauty and Freedom" contains five papers in Hungarian: “On Aesthetic Freedom: Wit and Humour in the Augustan Age”, “Aphrodite and Eros: Eroticism and Aesthetics in the Eighteenth Century”, “Beautiful Image and Sublime Appeal: Berkeley and Burke on Language”, “Beauty and Freedom: John Macmurry”, and “Freedom or Beauty: Hannah Arendt”.
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  48.  11
    Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi.Endre Zibolen - 1984 - Budapest: Tankönyvkiadó.
  49.  9
    Ernst Cassirer: Forms and transformations of the philosophical concept of truth (1929).Tobias Endres & Simon Truwant - 2024 - Continental Philosophy Review 57 (3):289-303.
    This special issue focuses on two related topics in Ernst Cassirer’s thought: objectivity and truth. Through this lens, the guest editors attempt to illuminate (a) the historical and systematic value of Cassirer’s philosophical project, (b) the continuing relevance of his account of the plurality and universality of human understanding in view of the crisis of truth that currently permeates Western culture, and (c) the way Cassirer’s style can inspire contemporary scholars who wish to evade the analytic-continental divide. Tobias Endres and (...)
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  50.  47
    The aesthetics of the invisible: George Berkeley and the modern aesthetics.Endre Szécsényi - 2022 - History of European Ideas 48 (6):731-743.
    ABSTRACT George Berkeley is usually not discussed in the canonical histories of modern aesthetics. Similarly, Berkeley scholars do not seem to have paid attention to his possible contribution to modern aesthetics. Berkeley exploited certain theoretical potentials of the emerging aesthetic experience that was invented and formulated especially by his contemporaries like Joseph Addison, Richard Steele and Lord Shaftesbury. He applied these elements in shaping a theologico-aesthetic language in the very same period when Francis Hutcheson and Alexander Baumgarten wrote their widely (...)
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