Results for 'Jean Mabillon'

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  1. Critical History, Subversion and Self-Subversion: The Curious Cases of Jean Mabillon and Richard Simon (II/II).Veronica Lazăr - 2020 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:149-161.
    Jean Mabillon and Richard Simon were both eminent seventeenth-century scholars who practiced contextualizing critical philology in order to forge unbeatable scientifical instruments against the skeptics and reinforce the authority of historical documents. But Simon’s work produced a mutation of the meaning of authenticity that would prove subversive and would generate outrage. His sociological and institutionalist understanding of the history of sacred texts not only merged both their production and their transmission into a common, ontologically homogenous historical process, but (...)
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  2. Dom Jean Mabillon, moine benedictin et acteur de la Republique des lettres dans l'Europe de Louis XIV.Odon Hurel - 2008 - Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 100 (4):3.
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  3.  1
    Critical History, Subversion and Self-Subversion: The Curious Cases of Jean Mabillon and Richard Simon (I/II).Veronica Lazăr - 2020 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:173-185.
    This paper compares two programmes of historical criticism at the end of the 16th Century – Jean Mabillon’s diplomatics and Richard Simon’s biblical criticism. Although they were both conceived as philological and contextual reconstruction of texts, their relation with the authority of the texts and their engagement with political and institutional stakes were strikingly different.
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  4.  10
    Un nouveau témoin du nécrologe de Cluny. Mabillon et le nécrologe de Souvigny.Jean-Loup Lemaître - 1983 - Frühmittelalterliche Studien 17 (1):445-458.
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  5. Medieval philosophy in the works of Jean Mabillon.Onorato Grassi - 2008 - Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 100 (1):17-31.
     
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  6. La filosofia medievale nell'opera di Jean Mabillon.Onorato Grassi - 2008 - Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 100 (4):17.
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  7.  15
    Document, histoire, critique dans l'érudition ecclésiastique des temps modernes.Jean-Louis Quantin - 2004 - Recherches de Science Religieuse 4 (4):597-635.
    L’une des conséquences indirectes de la rupture de l’unité confessionnelle aux temps modernes, fut une exploration accélérée du passé chrétien. Pour cela, une masse régulièrement accrue de documents venait nourrir deux représentations antagonistes de l’histoire de l’Eglise, lesquelles étaient défendues par des travaux d’érudition au service de deux conceptions de l’histoire, qui étaient aussi bien deux théologies de l’Eglise. Cependant, l’exigence de proximité des sources devait induire un mode particulier d’écriture de l’histoire qui transcenderait les frontières confessionnelles, tout en maintenant (...)
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  8.  27
    Diplomatic Arts: Hickes against Mabillon in the Republic of Letters.Alfred Hiatt - 2009 - Journal of the History of Ideas 70 (3):351-373.
    In his 1705 Thesaurus the English antiquarian George Hickes published lengthy criticisms of the approach to forged documents advocated by Jean Mabillon in his seminal De re diplomatica. Mabillon argued against rash rejection of swathes of documents, and emphasized the mixture of genuine and false material in many archives; Hickes alleged that Mabillon's position would allow even rank forgeries to be defended as genuine. The disagreement between Hickes and Mabillon casts light on the particular intellectual (...)
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  9.  16
    Non enim legimus hoc a regula Benedicti … Benedictines and the University of Paris in the 13th century.Helmut Flachenecker - 2020 - Franciscan Studies 78 (1):5-15.
    When one searches for the origins of an educational connection between Benedictine scholars and the University of Paris, one must reflect for a long time before arriving at even vague answers.1 Perhaps one may find these origins in the career of Jean Mabillon, the French Benedictine who gave diplomatic criticism a scientific foundation in history. The Reform congregation of the Maurists also attempted to make an impressive connection between the monastic life and the pursuit of education and research. (...)
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  10.  6
    The first Scottish enlightenment: rebels, priests, and history.Kelsey Jackson Williams - 2020 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    Traditional accounts of the Scottish Enlightenment present the half-century or so before 1750 as, at best, a not-yet fully realised precursor to the era of Hume and Smith, at worst, a period of superstition and religious bigotry. This is the first book-length study to systematically challenge that notion. Instead, it argues that the era between approximately 1680 and 1745 was a 'First' Scottish Enlightenment, part of the continent-wide phenomenon of early Enlightenment and led by the Jacobites, Episcopalians, and Catholics of (...)
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  11.  96
    The spontaneity of emotion.Jean Moritz Müller - 2021 - European Journal of Philosophy 29 (4):1060-1078.
    It is a commonplace that emotions are characteristically passive. As we ordinarily think of them, emotions are ways in which we are acted upon, that is, moved or affected by aspects of our environment. Moreover, we have no voluntary control over whether we feel them. In this paper, I call attention to a much-neglected respect in which emotions are active, which is no less central to our pretheoretical concept of them. That is, in having emotions, we are engaged with the (...)
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  12.  63
    The World-Directedness of Emotional Feeling: Affective Intentionality and Position-Taking.Jean Moritz Müller - 2022 - Emotion Review 14 (4):244-253.
    Emotion Review, Volume 14, Issue 4, Page 244-253, October 2022. This article is a précis of my 2019 monograph The World-Directedness of Emotional Feeling: On Affect and Intentionality. The book engages with a growing trend of philosophical thinking according to which the felt dimension and the intentionality of emotion are unified. While sympathetic to the general approach, I argue for a reconceptualization of the form of intentionality that emotional feelings are widely thought to possess and, accordingly, of the kind of (...)
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  13.  11
    Political Writings.Jean François Lyotard, Bill Readings & Kevin Paul Geiman - 1993 - Taylor & Francis.
    The political writings of Jean-Francois Lyotard, the prophet of the postmodern, are presented here as both the missing dimension of his work and the key to understanding his position within contemporary debate.
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  14. (1 other version)Sketch for a Theory of the Emotions.Jean-Paul Sartre - 1939 - Routledge. Edited by Philip Translator: Mairet.
    "A driving force in all Sartre's writing is his serious desire to change the life of his reader." -- Iris Murdoch.
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  15.  24
    On rules with existential variables: Walking the decidability line.Jean-François Baget, Michel Leclère, Marie-Laure Mugnier & Eric Salvat - 2011 - Artificial Intelligence 175 (9-10):1620-1654.
  16.  14
    Computational challenges to test and revitalize Claude Lévi-Strauss transformational methodology.Jean-François Santucci, Laurent Capocchi & Albert Doja - 2021 - Big Data and Society 8 (2).
    The ambition and proposal for data modeling of myths presented in this paper is to link contemporary technical affordances to some canonical projects developed in structural anthropology. To articulate the theoretical promise and innovation of this proposal, we present a discrete-event system specification modeling and simulation approach in order to perform a generative analysis and a dynamic visualization of selected narratives, aimed at validating and revitalizing the transformational and morphodynamic theory and methodology proposed by Claude Lévi-Strauss in his structural analysis (...)
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  17. Existentialism and Humanism.Jean Paul Sartre & Philip Mairet - 1948 - Methuen.
     
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  18.  8
    Marxisme et sens chrétien de l'histoire: essai philosophique.Jean Borella - 2016 - Paris: L'Harmattan.
    La doctrine de Marx continue, alors même qu'elle n'a cessé d'être critiquée, de susciter l'intérêt voir l'adhésion d'un nombre croissant d'intellectuels. L'idée d'un "sens de l'Histoire", notamment, nourrit une littérature de recherche et un combat politique importants. Mais qu'en est-il réellement? A-t-on bien lu Marx? Jean Borella, qui cherche à tisser des liens entre philosophie et foi chrétienne, travaille dans cet ouvrage à sortir des sentiers battus du marxisme orthodoxe pour mettre en regard les conceptions matérialistes et christiques de (...)
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  19.  23
    L'herméneutique.Jean Grondin - 2006 - Presses Universitaires de France.
    Née d'une réflexion sur l'art d'interpréter les textes et sur la vérité des sciences humaines, l'herméneutique est devenue, grâce à Dilthey, Nietzsche et Heidegger, une philosophie universelle de l'interprétation. Elle a connu ses développements les plus conséquents et les plus influents dans les pensées de Hans-Georg Gadamer et Paul Ricœur , récemment disparus. En se penchant sur ses origines, ses grands auteurs et les débats qu'ils ont suscités, mais aussi sur le sens de son universalité, cet ouvrage offre la première (...)
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  20.  61
    Forms of Authority and the Real Ad Verecundiam.Jean Goodwin - 1998 - Argumentation 12 (2):267-280.
    This paper provides a typology of appeals to authority, identifying three distinct types: that which is based on a command; that which is based on expertise; and that which is based on dignity. Each type is distinguished with respect to the reaction that a failure to follow it ordinarily evokes. The rhetorical roots of Locke's ad verecundiam are traced to the rhetorical practices of ancient Rome.
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  21. Contracts and choices: Does Rawls have a social contract theory?Jean Hampton - 1980 - Journal of Philosophy 77 (6):315-338.
  22.  33
    Reverting to a hidden interactional order: Epistemics, informationism, and conversation analysis.Jean Wong & Michael Lynch - 2016 - Discourse Studies 18 (5):526-549.
    This article critically examines the relations between epistemics in conversation analysis and linguistic and cognitivist conceptions of communicative interaction that emphasize information and information transfer. The epistemic program adheres to the focus on recorded instances of talk-in-interaction that is characteristic of CA, explicitly identifies its theoretical origins with ethnomethodology, and points to implications of its research for the social distribution of knowledge. However, despite such affiliations with CA and ethnomethodology, the EP is cognitivist in the way it emphasizes information exchange (...)
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  23. Generalized paths.Jean Mark Gawron - unknown
    (1) a. The fog extended from London toward Paris. (the state reading is an extent reading (Jackendoff 1990)) b. Debris covered the outfield. c. Water filled the glass.
     
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  24.  21
    The time-course of visual threat processing: High trait anxious individuals eventually avert their gaze from angry faces.Jean-Christophe Rohner - 2002 - Cognition and Emotion 16 (6):837-844.
  25.  22
    The Ontology and Syntax of Stoic Causes and Effects.Jean-Baptiste Gourinat - 2018 - Rhizomata 6 (1):87-108.
    The ontology of Stoic causes and effects was clearly anti-platonic, since the Stoics did not want to admit that any incorporeal entity could have an effect. However, by asserting that any cause was the cause of an incorporeal effect, they returned to Plato’s syntax of causes in the Sophist, whose doctrine of the asymmetry of nouns and verbs identified names with the agents and verbs with the actions. The ontological asymmetry of causes and effects blocked the multiplication of causes by (...)
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  26. (1 other version)Psychogenèse et Histoire des Sciences.Jean Piaget & Rolando Garcia - 1987 - Philosophy of Science 54 (2):315-317.
     
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  27.  38
    Le doute comme jeu suprême – Descartes sceptique.Jean-Luc Marion - 2021 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 136 (1):5-36.
    Le doute cartésien – théorique, généralisé, hyperbolique et volontaire – reprend et renforce tout d’abord les raisons sceptiques traditionnelles de douter, afin de mettre pour la première fois en doute tout le sensible, mais aussi de montrer que ces raisons buttent sur les naturae simplicissimae et la certitude de la mathesis universalis. Descartes forge alors un nouvel argument sceptique : le « Dieu qui peut tout », qui permet de penser que, lorsque je me rends à l’évidence des natures simples, (...)
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  28.  40
    Comments on `Rhetoric and Dialectic from the Standpoint of Normative Pragmatics'.Jean Goodwin - 2000 - Argumentation 14 (3):287-292.
  29.  38
    The Vital Illusion.Jean Baudrillard - 2000 - Columbia University Press.
    Aren't we actually sick of sex, of difference, of emancipation, of culture? With this provocative taunt, the indomitable sociologist Jean Baudrillard challenges us to face up to our deadly, technologically empowered renunciation of mortality and subjectivity as he grapples with the complex issues that define our postmillennial world. What does the advent and proliferation of cloning mean for our sense of ourselves as human beings? What does the turn of the millennium say about our relation to time and history? (...)
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  30. Is the mind Bayesian? The case for agnosticism.Jean Baratgin & Guy Politzer - 2006 - Mind and Society 5 (1):1-38.
    This paper aims to make explicit the methodological conditions that should be satisfied for the Bayesian model to be used as a normative model of human probability judgment. After noticing the lack of a clear definition of Bayesianism in the psychological literature and the lack of justification for using it, a classic definition of subjective Bayesianism is recalled, based on the following three criteria: an epistemic criterion, a static coherence criterion and a dynamic coherence criterion. Then it is shown that (...)
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  31.  36
    Science, Technology and Democracy.Jean-Jacques Salomon - 2000 - Minerva 38 (1):33-51.
    Science and the institutions of science are far from democratic systems,and yet they are the most democratic of regimes. This essay examinesthe demand for transparency and public participation. One can distinguishseveral levels of public influence. Their function suggests thatdecision-makers, both scientists and technocrats, are being obligedto accept and work with rules which are no longer laid down by themselves.
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  32.  55
    Cicero's authority.Jean Goodwin - 1999 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 34 (1):38-60.
    In this paper I propose to continue the analysis of the appeal to authority begun at the last OSSA conference. I proceed by examining the well-documented use of the appeal made by the ancient Roman advocate, Cicero. The fact that Cicero expressed his opinion was expectably sufficient to give his auditors--responsible citizens all--reason to do as he desired. But why? The resolution of this puzzle points to a strong sense in which arguments can be called rhetorical , for the rational (...)
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  33.  66
    International Justice as Equal Regard and the Use of Force.Jean Bethke Elshtain - 2003 - Ethics and International Affairs 17 (2):63-75.
    Have we any obligations beyond our own borders? What form do these take? These questions are addressed through a concept of comparative justice indebted to the just war tradition and the equal moral regard of persons.
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  34.  26
    Pragmatics in the False-Belief Task: Let the Robot Ask the Question!Jean Baratgin, Marion Dubois-Sage, Baptiste Jacquet, Jean-Louis Stilgenbauer & Frank Jamet - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:593807.
    The poor performances of typically developing children younger than 4 in the first-order false-belief task “Maxi and the chocolate” is analyzed from the perspective of conversational pragmatics. An ambiguous question asked by an adult experimenter (perceived as a teacher) can receive different interpretations based on a search for relevance, by which children according to their age attribute different intentions to the questioner, within the limits of their own meta-cognitive knowledge. The adult experimenter tells the child the following story of object-transfer: (...)
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  35.  45
    Universal Ethics: Organized Complexity as an Intrinsic Value.Jean-Paul Delahaye & Clément Vidal - 2019 - In G. Georgiev, C. L. F. Martinez, M. E. Price & J. M. Smart (eds.), Evolution, Development and Complexity: Multiscale Evolutionary Models of Complex Adaptive Systems. Springer. pp. 135-154.
    ABSTRACT: How can we think about a universal ethics that could be adopted by any intelligent being, including the rising population of cyborgs, intelligent machines, intelligent algorithms or even potential extraterrestrial life? We generally give value to complex structures, to objects resulting from a long work, to systems with many elements and with many links finely adjusted. These include living beings, books, works of art or scientific theories. Intuitively, we want to keep, multiply, and share such structures, as well as (...)
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  36.  54
    The precautionary principle and enlightened doomsaying.Jean-Pierre Dupuy - 2012 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 76 (4):577.
    Résumé Le principe de précaution est une réponse apportée à un vrai problème. Les menaces auxquelles l’humanité se trouve confrontée aujourd’hui, et dont la mise en système pourrait mettre sa survie en danger, requièrent une forme de prudence radicalement nouvelle. Ni la phronêsis des Anciens ni le calcul des chances des Modernes ne conviennent. Le principe de précaution apparaît cependant incapable de relever ce défi, tant ses fondements conceptuels sont faibles et inadéquats. Il se trompe en particulier de cible en (...)
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  37.  10
    Durkheim propagandiste ou la justification sociologique de la guerre.Jean-Christophe Marcel - 2022 - Revue de Synthèse 144 (1-2):7-30.
    Résumé Cet article se propose d’examiner comment la notion de « culture de guerre », avancée par certains historiens pour qualifier l’engagement des intellectuels français dans l’Union sacrée contre l’Allemagne dès 1914, se décline dans le cas de Durkheim. À travers l’exemple de son texte de propagande le plus connu : L’Allemagne au-dessus de tout, on se propose de débusquer les arguments sociologiques plus ou moins implicites qu’il mobilise pour dénoncer la « mentalité allemande ». Il en résulte qu’au regard (...)
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  38.  7
    Die Kunst, Fragment.Jean-Luc Nancy - 2012 - Naharaim 6 (2):286-307.
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  39.  17
    L’histoire culturelle des circulations musicales au prisme des Sound Studies : réflexions théoriques et retours de terrain.Jean-Sébastien Noël - 2019 - Diogène n° 258-259-258 (2-4):168-182.
    Par l’attention qu’ils portent aux modalités sociales, économiques, politiques et culturelles – et non seulement techniques – de production du son, les travaux regroupés depuis une quinzaine d’année sous la dénomination de Sound Studies interrogent la pratique historienne dans ses hypothèses et dans la circonscription de son territoire. Alors qu’une partie des chercheurs issus de ce champ entend affranchir le sonore du musical, ce texte propose d’inverser la perspective et de mesurer l’apport de ces réflexions pour l’enquête historienne consacrée aux (...)
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  40.  15
    Les causes de l’adhésion aux théories du complot.Jean-Bruno Renard - 2016 - Diogène n° 249-250 (1):107-119.
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  41.  3
    La philosophie première de Descartes : le temps et la cohérence de la métaphysique.Jean-Marie Beyssade - 1979 - Flammarion.
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  42.  13
    Fonctions de la statue dans la Grèce archaïque : kouros et kolossos.Jean Ducat - 1976 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 100 (1):239-251.
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  43.  21
    Random conjoint measurement and loudness summation.Jean-Claude Falmagne - 1976 - Psychological Review 83 (1):65-79.
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  44.  15
    Temperance, Humility and Hospitality: Three Virtues for the Anthropocene Moment?Jean-Philippe Pierron - 2023 - Philosophies 9 (1):5.
    As social and ecological transition and climate change raise issues that go far beyond individual responses, how can these challenges be balanced with ethical and political responses? This article intends to show that the strength of virtue ethics lies in the fact that it translates these abstract issues into concrete biographical events that shape lifestyles. The search for the good life in these matters then finds in temperance, humility and hospitality three virtues, private and social, to operate this translation. Humility (...)
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  45.  30
    Philosophy of Biology: An Historico-critical Characterization.Jean Gayon - unknown
    Literally speaking, "Philosophy of biology" is a rather old expression. William Whewell coined it in 1840, at the very time he introduced the expression "philosophy of science". Whewell was fond of creating neologisms, like Auguste Comte, his French counterpart in the field of the philosophical reflection about science. Historians of science know that a few years earlier, in 1834, Whewell had generated a small scandal when he proposed the word "scientist" as a general term by which "the students of the (...)
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  46.  59
    Utility conditionals as consequential arguments: A random sampling experiment.Jean-François Bonnefon - 2012 - Thinking and Reasoning 18 (3):379 - 393.
    Research on reasoning about consequential arguments has been an active but piecemeal enterprise. Previous research considered in depth some subclasses ofconsequential arguments, but further understanding of consequential arguments requires that we address their greater variety, avoiding the risk of over-generalisation from specific examples. Ideally we ought to be able to systematically generate the set of consequential arguments, and then engage in random sampling of stimuli within that set. The current article aims at making steps in that direction, using the theory (...)
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  47. The confronted community.Jean-Luc Nancy - 2009 - In Andrew J. Mitchell & Jason Kemp Winfree (eds.), The Obsessions of Georges Bataille: Community and Communication. Albany: State University of New York Press.
     
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  48.  12
    Hybrid space: constituting the hospital as a home space for patients.Jean A. Gilmour - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (1):16-22.
    A growing body of nursing writing is engaged in reviewing the material and relational world of nursing using geographical concepts. This paper draws upon research undertaken in hospital settings where nurses constituted the hospital as a home space for patients. Nurses’ practices created an equitable and patient‐centred use of physical space in the hospital ward, along with the intimate, extended and personal relationships associated by patients with a caring and homely environment. It is suggested that this constitution of space resonates (...)
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  49.  39
    Les horizons marxistes de l'éthique de la reconnaissance.Jean-Philippe Duranty - 2005 - Actuel Marx 38 (2):159-178.
    The genesis of Axel Honneth's ethics of recognition shows that it represents the attempt to critically rejuvenate historical materialism through an emphasis on the normative dimensions and the anthropological preconditions of social interaction. By making explicit this project to redefine a theory of praxis, the exact theoretical stance and the full practical potential of Honneth's social theory can be stressed. However, by contrast to its initial formulation, the mature theory of recognition appears to have interpreted praxis in a narrow interpersonalist (...)
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  50.  18
    Moral Woman and Immoral Man: A Consideration of the Public-Private Split and Its Political Ramifications.Jean Bethke Elshtain - 1974 - Politics and Society 4 (4):453-473.
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