Results for 'Shaul Markovitch'

139 found
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  1.  12
    Pruning algorithms for multi-model adversary search.David Carmel & Shaul Markovitch - 1998 - Artificial Intelligence 99 (2):325-355.
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  2.  8
    Optimal schedules for monitoring anytime algorithms.Lev Finkelstein & Shaul Markovitch - 2001 - Artificial Intelligence 126 (1-2):63-108.
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  3.  41
    Will you touch a dirty diaper? Attitudes towards disgust and behaviour.Noam Markovitch, Liat Netzer & Maya Tamir - 2016 - Cognition and Emotion 30 (3):592-602.
  4.  9
    Mortal and Divine in Early Greek Epistemology: A Study of Hesiod, Xenophanes and Parmenides.Shaul Tor - 2017 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book demonstrates that we need not choose between seeing so-called Presocratic thinkers as rational philosophers or as religious sages. In particular, it rethinks fundamentally the emergence of systematic epistemology and reflection on speculative inquiry in Hesiod, Xenophanes and Parmenides. Shaul Tor argues that different forms of reasoning, and different models of divine disclosure, play equally integral, harmonious and mutually illuminating roles in early Greek epistemology. Throughout, the book relates these thinkers to their religious, literary and historical surroundings. It (...)
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  5.  36
    Empedocles the Wandering Daimōn and Trusting in Mad Strife.Shaul Tor - 2022 - Phronesis 68 (1):1-30.
    This article argues that Empedocles’ trust in Strife (DK31 B115.14 = LM22 D10.14) is not, as the prevailing interpretation has it, only a past misjudgement and failure. Rather, trust in Strife still, and to his own lament, infects Empedocles’ mind and informs his life. This detail then offers a fresh perspective on Empedocles’ self-conception and on how, through the daimōn’s cosmic peregrinations, Empedocles raises and pursues questions of agency and responsibility. Furthermore, it sheds light on Empedocles’ understanding of his own (...)
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  6. Parmenides’ Epistemology and the Two Parts of his Poem.Shaul Tor - 2015 - Phronesis 60 (1):3-39.
    _ Source: _Volume 60, Issue 1, pp 3 - 39 This paper pursues a new approach to the problem of the relation between Alētheia and Doxa. It investigates as interrelated matters Parmenides’ impetus for developing and including Doxa, his conception of the mortal epistemic agent in relation both to Doxa’s investigations and to those in Alētheia, and the relation between mortal and divine in his poem. Parmenides, it is argued, maintained that Doxastic cognition is an ineluctable and even appropriate aspect (...)
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  7.  68
    Sextus and Wittgenstein on the End of Justification.Shaul Tor - 2014 - International Journal for the Study of Skepticism 4 (2):81-108.
    Following the lead of Duncan Pritchard’s “Wittgensteinian Pyrrhonism,” this paper takes a further, comparative and contrastive look at the problem of justification in Sextus Empiricus and in Wittgenstein’sOn Certainty. I argue both that Pritchard’s stimulating account is problematic in certain important respects and that his insights contain much interpretive potential still to be pursued. Diverging from Pritchard, I argue that it is a significant and self-conscious aspect of Sextus’ sceptical strategies to call into question large segments of our belief systemen (...)
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  8.  35
    Why There Must Be Something Rather Than Nothing: A New Argument from the PSR.Dylan Shaul - forthcoming - European Journal of Philosophy.
    This article offers a new argument that there must be something rather than nothing, grounded in the PSR. Inspired by the rationalist tradition running from Parmenides to Spinoza and Leibniz, I argue that there must be something rather than nothing because the contrary would constitute a violation of the PSR. In particular, I argue that, if there was nothing, there could be no sufficient reason for it, since nothing at all would exist to serve as a sufficient reason. Therefore, given (...)
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  9.  41
    Hegel and Hitchcock’s Vertigo: On Reconciliation.Dylan Shaul - 2022 - Film-Philosophy 26 (2):196-218.
    This article reconstructs and evaluates a debate between Pippin and Žižek over the proper interpretation of Hitchcock’s Vertigo, in relation to Hegel’s concept of reconciliation. Both Pippin and Žižek agree that Vertigo exemplifies Hegelian reconciliation: Scottie exhibits Hegel’s reconciliatory “negation of negation” when he realizes that his lost love Madeleine had really been Judy all along, thereby losing his original loss. Yet Pippin and Žižek disagree on the precise significance of the concept of reconciliation both for the film and for (...)
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  10.  39
    Deny, dismiss and downplay: developers’ attitudes towards risk and their role in risk creation in the field of healthcare-AI.Shaul A. Duke - 2022 - Ethics and Information Technology 24 (1).
    Developers are often the engine behind the creation and implementation of new technologies, including in the artificial intelligence surge that is currently underway. In many cases these new technologies introduce significant risk to affected stakeholders; risks that can be reduced and mitigated by such a dominant party. This is fully recognized by texts that analyze risks in the current AI transformation, which suggest voluntary adoption of ethical standards and imposing ethical standards via regulation and oversight as tools to compel developers (...)
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  11.  16
    Kant on the ‘Wise Adaptation’ of Our Cognitive Faculties: The Limits of Knowledge and the Possibility of the Highest Good.Dylan Shaul - forthcoming - Kantian Review:1-21.
    This article provides a new reconstruction and evaluation of Kant’s argument in §IX of the second Critique’s Dialectic. Kant argues that our cognitive faculties are wisely adapted to our practical vocation since their failure to supply theoretical knowledge of God and the immortal soul is a condition of possibility for the highest good. This new reconstruction improves upon past efforts by greater fidelity to the form and content of Kant’s argument. I show that evaluating Kant’s argument requires settling various other (...)
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  12.  26
    “In war or in peace:” The technological promise of science following the First World War.Shaul Katzir - 2017 - Centaurus 59 (3):223-237.
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  13.  18
    Pursuing frequency standards and control: the invention of quartz clock technologies.Shaul Katzir - 2016 - Annals of Science 73 (1):1-39.
    ABSTRACTThe quartz clock, the first to replace the pendulum as the time standard and later a ubiquitous and highly influential technology, originated in research on means for determining frequency for the needs of telecommunication and the interests of its users. This article shows that a few groups in the US, Britain, Italy and the Netherlands developed technologies that enabled the construction of the new clock in 1927–28. To coordinate complex and large communication networks, the monopolistic American Telephone and Telegraph Company, (...)
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  14.  17
    Early Greek Philosophy.Shaul Tor - 2024 - Phronesis 70 (1):119-127.
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  15.  75
    Mortal and Divine in Xenophanes' Epistemology.Shaul Tor - 2013 - Rhizomata 1 (2):248-282.
  16.  48
    Faith in/as the Unconditional: Kant, Husserl, and Derrida on Practical Reason.Dylan Shaul - 2019 - Derrida Today 12 (2):171-191.
    This article tracks Derrida's readings of Kant and Husserl as they explore the relation between, on the one hand, faith and knowledge, and on the other, theory and practice. Kant had to limit the scope of theoretical knowledge in order to make room for a practical faith in the rational ideas of the unconditioned, generated through the unconditionality of the moral law. Husserl deployed the figure of ‘the Idea in the Kantian sense’ at those crucial moments in the exposition of (...)
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  17.  37
    Thermodynamic deduction versus quantum revolution: The failure of Richardson's theory of the photoelectric effect.Shaul Katzir - 2006 - Annals of Science 63 (4):447-469.
    Summary Between 1911 and 1914, Owen Richardson formulated a theory of photoelectricity based on thermodynamics and statistical reasoning. Although this theory succeeded in accounting for most of the relevant phenomena and despite the lack of competing causal or descriptive accounts of the phenomena, it failed to attract other physicists. This paper seeks the reasons for the neglect of this theory in contemporary cultures of photoelectric research. Four main causes of neglect are identified: the relatively high number and the nature of (...)
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  18.  48
    Plato and Descartes in Levinas’s Totality and Infinity.Dylan Shaul - 2023 - Idealistic Studies 53 (1):53-74.
    This article investigates Levinas’s readings of Plato and Descartes in Totality and Infinity, in relation to the question of teaching. Levinas identifies Plato’s Form of the Good and Descartes’s idea of the infinite as two models for his own conception of the Other. Yet while Levinas lauds Descartes’s theory of teaching, he is highly critical of Plato’s. Plato’s theory of teaching as recollection or maieutics is judged by Levinas to display merely the circular return of the Same to its own (...)
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  19.  37
    Berlin Roots Zionist Incarnation: The Ethos of Pure Mathematics and the Beginnings of the Einstein Institute of Mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.Shaul Katz - 2004 - Science in Context 17 (1-2):199-234.
    Officially inaugurated in 1925, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem was designed to serve the academic needs of the Jewish people and the Zionist enterprise in British Mandatory Palestine, as well as to help fulfill the economic and social requirements of the Middle East. It is intriguing that a university with such practical goals should have as one of its central pillars an institute for pure mathematics that purposely dismissed any of the varied fields of applied mathematics. This paper tells of (...)
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  20.  39
    Scientific research and agricultural innovation in Israel.Shaul Katz & Joseph Ben-David - 1975 - Minerva 13 (2):152-182.
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  21.  40
    Repentance and God's Pardon in Spinoza's Theological-Political Treatise: On the Truth of Doctrine 7 of Universal Faith.Dylan Shaul - 2022 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 60 (4):591-608.
    Abstractabstract:This article argues for an interpretation of doctrine 7 of universal faith in Spinoza's Theological-Political Treatise—that God pardons the sins of those who repent—that renders it true in the terms set by Spinoza's Ethics. Though categorized in the Ethics as a vice, repentance nevertheless has a positive political function as the lesser of two evils, supplanting the greater evils of unrepentant pride and shamelessness. The philosopher can understand God's pardon as the natural advantage conferred by repentance itself insofar as it (...)
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  22.  26
    The use of the conservation of living force before Helmholtz.Shaul Katzir - 2023 - Annals of Science 80 (4):337-356.
    In his recent authoritative Helmholtz and the Conservation of Energy, Kenneth Caneva has claimed that earlier authors had invoked the principle of conservation of living force only in cases of a system returning to an earlier state, or of one without Newtonian forces. Relaying on texts in the tradition of the French Analytical Mechanics form Lagrange to Coriolis, I argue that this was not the case, and that the principle had been formulated and used for cases where living force proper (...)
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  23.  34
    Levinas, Adorno, and the Light of Redemption: Notes on a Critical Eschatology.Dylan Shaul - 2021 - Puncta 4 (2):43-62.
    It seems natural to suppose that the burgeoning field of critical phenomenology would come to bear at least some affinities or resemblances (whether implicitly or explicitly) to critical theory, insofar as both are deeply concerned with directing a rigorous critical eye towards the most pressing political, economic, cultural, and social issues of our time. Yet critical theory has also had its share of critics of phenomenology itself, not least of which was the foremost member of the first-generation Frankfurt School critical (...)
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  24. Reaḥ mayim: rishme ʻiyun be-miḳraʼot uve-midrashot.Elimelech Bar-Shaul - 1967 - Reḥovot: Bar-El.
     
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  25.  14
    Cinema of choice: optional thinking and narrative movies.Nitzan S. Ben-Shaul - 2012 - New York: Berghahn Books.
    Introduction -- Closed mindedness in movies -- Failed alternatives to optional thinking -- Optional thinking in movies -- Conclusion.
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  26.  27
    "Working with AI: Real Stories of Human-Machine Collaboration." Davenport, T. H. & Miller, S. M., 2022, MIT Press.Shaul Duke - 2022 - Journal of Ethics and Emerging Technologies 32 (1):1-3.
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  27. One, few, infinity: linear and nonlinear processing in the visual cortex.Shaul Hochstein & Hedva Spitzer - 1985 - In David Rose & Vernon G. Dobson, Models of the Visual Cortex. New York: Wiley. pp. 341--350.
  28.  51
    Reciprocal effects of attention and perception: comments on anne treisman's "how the deployment of attention determines what we see".Shaul Hochstein - 2012 - In Jeremy Wolfe & Lynn Robertson, From Perception to Consciousness: Searching with Anne Treisman. Oxford University Press. pp. 278.
  29. Peraḳim be-maḥshevet Yiśraʼel: leḳeṭ meḳorot le-verur ʻiḳre hashḳafat ha-Yahadut..Shaul Israeli (ed.) - 1973 - Pardes-Ḥanah: Midrashiyat Noʻam.
     
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  30.  16
    Der Komet in der Entladungsröhre Eugen Goldstein, Wilhelm Foerster und die Elektrizität im Weltraum - by Michael Hedenus.Shaul Katzir - 2010 - Centaurus 52 (2):158-160.
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  31.  9
    From ultrasonic to frequency standards: Walter Cady’s discovery of the sharp resonance of crystals.Shaul Katzir - 2008 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 62 (5):469-487.
    In 1918–1919 Walter G. Cady was the first to recognize the significant electrical consequences of the fact that piezoelectric crystals resonate at very sharp, precise and stable frequencies. Cady was also the first to suggest the employment of these properties, first as frequency standards and then to control frequencies of electric circuits—an essential component in electronic technology. Cady’s discovery originated in the course of research on piezoelectric ultrasonic devices for submarine detection (sonar) during World War I. However, for the discovery (...)
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  32.  28
    Introduction: Physics, Technology, and Technics during the Interwar Period.Shaul Katzir - 2018 - Science in Context 31 (3):251-261.
    Historians, philosophers, and physicists portray the 1920s and 1930s as a period of major theoretical breakthrough in physics, quantum mechanics, which led to the expansion of physics into the core of the atom and the growth and strengthening of the discipline. These important developments in scientific inquiry into the micro-world and light have turned historical attention away from other significant historical processes and from other equally important causes for the expansion of physics. World War II, on the other hand, is (...)
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  33.  65
    Measuring constants of nature: confirmation and determination in piezoelectricity.Shaul Katzir - 2003 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 34 (4):579-606.
    Exact measurements are a central practice of modern physics. In certain cases, they are essential for determining values of coefficients, for confirming theories, and for detecting the existence of effects. The history of piezoelectricity at the end of the nineteenth century reveals two different methods of exact measurement: a mathematical versus an “artisanal” approach. In the former, a scientist first carried out the experiment and later employed mathematical methods to reduce error. In the latter, a scientist physically manipulated the experimental (...)
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  34.  24
    Scientific Practice for Technology: Hermann Aron's Development of the Storage Battery.Shaul Katzir - 2013 - History of Science 51 (4):481-500.
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  35.  19
    The Discovery of the Piezoelectric Effect.Shaul Katzir - 2003 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 57 (1):61-91.
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  36.  22
    The Shaping of Interwar Physics by Technology: The Case of Piezoelectricity.Shaul Katzir - 2018 - Science in Context 31 (3):321-350.
    ArgumentConcentrating on the important developments of quantum physics, historians have overlooked other significant forces that shaped interwar physics, like that of technology. Based on the case of piezoelectricity, I argue that interests of users of technics (i.e. devices of methods) channeled research in physics into particular fields and questions relevant for industrial companies and governmental agencies. To recognize the effects of such social forces on physics, one needs to study the content of the scientific activity (both experimental and theoretical) of (...)
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  37.  33
    Moral Dilemma in the War against Terror: Political Attitudes and Regular Versus Reserve Military Service.Shaul Kimhi - 2014 - Ethics and Behavior 24 (1):1-15.
    The current study examines moral dilemmas related to the war against terror: the amounts of force used to arrest or harm a “most wanted” terrorist: the greater the use of force, the higher the risk for harming civilians and the lower the risk to the soldiers and vice versa. The study focuses on the association between moral decisions, confidence, and level of difficulty in making the decisions and political attitudes among Israeli Defense Forces soldiers. In addition, the study examines the (...)
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  38.  17
    Prediction of Hope and Morale During COVID-19.Shaul Kimhi, Yohanan Eshel, Hadas Marciano & Bruria Adini - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The current study uses a repeated measures design to compare two-time points across the COVID-19 pandemic. The first was conducted at the end of the “first wave” [T1] and the second was carried out on October 12-14 2020 in Israel. The participants completed the same questionnaire at both time points. The study examined the predictions of hope and morale at T2 by psychological and demographic predictors at T1. Results indicated the following: The three types of resilience significantly and positively predicted (...)
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  39.  21
    An Ethics of Unseen Consequences: Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav's Sefer Ha‐Middot.Shaul Magid - 2022 - Journal of Religious Ethics 50 (3):508-539.
    This essay is a close examination of one of Nahman of Bratslav's early and largely unexamined texts, Sefer ha‐Middot. The question it addresses is whether one can call this a study of “ethics” or, in Jewish nomenclature, musar, a work that seeks to cultivate human behaviors and describe ethical formation. In addition, it asks whether Sefer ha‐Middot can be called a text of “virtue ethics” given its focus on virtues and their enactment. The essay argues that Nahman's peculiar metaphysical notion (...)
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  40. Chapter 8. Jewish and other Zionisms : reflections on race, ethnocentrism, and nationalism.Shaul Magid - 2023 - In Julie Cooper & Samuel Hayim Brody, The king is in the field: essays in modern Jewish political thought. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  41.  27
    Christian Supersessionism, Zionism, and the Contemporary Scene.Shaul Magid - 2017 - Journal of Religious Ethics 45 (1):104-141.
    Postliberal theology has been a topic of considerable theological debate over the past few decades. In his 2011 book Another Reformation, Peter Ochs deploys a postliberal theological model for the purpose of developing a sophisticated understanding of the future of interreligious relations. Ochs argues that postliberal theology is a reparative theology focusing on alleviating human suffering. He argues that the Christian idea of supersessionism may be the most challenging for Christians to confront as they explore avenues for making interreligious dialogue (...)
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  42.  32
    Defining Christianity and Judaism from the Perspective of Religious Anarchy.Shaul Magid - 2017 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 25 (1):36-58.
    _ Source: _Volume 25, Issue 1, pp 36 - 58 This essay explores Martin Buber’s rendering of Jesus and the Ba‘al Shem Tov as two exemplars of religious anarchism that create a lens through which to see the symmetry between Judaism and Christianity. The essay argues that Buber’s use of Jesus to construct his view of the Ba‘al Shem Tov enables us to revisit the “parting of the ways” between Judaism and Christianity through the category of the religious anarchist.
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  43.  17
    Gershom Scholem.Shaul Magid - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  44.  64
    “Gershom Scholem's Ambivalence Toward Mystical Experience and His Critique of Martin Buber in Light of Hans Jonas and Martin Heidegger”.Shaul Magid - 1995 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 4 (2):245-269.
  45.  11
    Loving Judaism through Christianity.Shaul Magid - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (1):88-124.
    This contribution to the Common Knowledge symposium on xenophilia examines the life choices of two Jews who loved Christianity. Elijah Zvi Soloveitchik, born into an ultra-Orthodox, nineteenth-century rabbinic dynasty in Lithuania, spent much of his life writing a Hebrew commentary on the Gospels in order to document and argue for the symmetry or symbiosis that he perceived between Judaism and Christianity. Oswald Rufeisen, from a twentieth-century secular Zionist background in Poland, converted to Catholicism during World War II, became a monk, (...)
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  46.  23
    The Afterlives of Meir Kahane: A Response.Shaul Magid - 2022 - Journal of Religious Ethics 50 (2):318-325.
    In this response to the essays in the symposium on my book Meir Kahane: The Public Life and Political Thought of an American Jewish Radical I tried to clarify and expand some of the thoughtful and astute themes in the remarks of my interlocutors, especially about how the book was not intended to be about one figure but rather an intervention into postwar American and Israeli Judaism through the lens of a maligned figure who is ignored by most American Jews (...)
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  47.  21
    Self-deception, war, and the quest for the appropriate prophylactic.Shaul Mitelpunkt - 2020 - Ethics and Global Politics 13 (4):48-55.
  48.  30
    A Dictionary of Aramaic Ideograms in PahlaviFrahang i PahlavīkFrahang i Pahlavik.Shaul Shaked, Bo Utas & Henrik Samuel Nyberg - 1993 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 113 (1):75.
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  49.  40
    Adorno on Kierkegaard on Love for the Dead.Dylan Shaul - 2019 - Idealistic Studies 49 (2):189-213.
    This article employs Freud’s distinction between mourning and melancholia to clarify Adorno’s reading of Kierkegaard. Adorno finds in Kierkegaard’s view of love for the dead both the consummate reified fetish of our instrumentalizing exchange society, and the only unmutilated relation left to us in our otherwise thoroughly damaged lives. Adorno’s negative dialectics emerges as the melancholy science resulting from a disfigured mourning’s present impossibility, upholding a material moral motive rooted in the unmournability of historical catastrophe. Yet this very melancholia also (...)
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  50.  9
    Duty Without/Beyond Duty.Dylan Shaul - 2018 - Journal of Indian Philosophy and Religion 23:105-116.
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