Results for 'consecrating science'

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  1.  29
    Reacting to Consecrating Science: What Might Amateurs Do?Sarah E. Fredericks - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):354-381.
    In Consecrating Science: Wonder, Knowledge, and the Natural World, Lisa H. Sideris makes a compelling case that a new cosmology movement advocates for a new, universal, creation story grounded in the sciences. She fears the new story reinforces elite power structures and anthropocentrism and thus environmental degradation. Alternatively, she promotes genuine wonder which occurs in experiences of the natural world. As Sideris focuses on the likely logical outcome of the assumptions and arguments of the new cosmologies, she does (...)
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  2.  28
    The Shape of This Wonder? Consecrated Science and New Cosmology Affects.Courtney O'Dell-Chaib - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):387-395.
    In response to Lisa Sideris's provocative new book Consecrating Science: Wonder, Knowledge and the Natural World and in conversation with voices from feminist technoscience, this article challenges the deracinated wonder of new cosmology encounters in two senses. First, by tracing how it is uprooted from critical perspectives on scientific knowledge production. And second, by contending deracinated wonder is ripped from cultural and historical contexts thus erasing embodied inequalities. Deracinated wonder attached to uncritical forms of science, I argue, (...)
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  3.  34
    Lame Science? Blind Religion?Holmes Rolston - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):351-353.
    In Consecrating Science, Lisa Sideris argues that an anthropocentric and science‐based cosmology encourages human arrogance and diminishes a sense of wonder in human experience immersed in the natural world, as found in diverse cultural and religious traditions. I agree with her that science elevated to a commanding worldview, scientism, is a common and contemporary mistake, to be deplored, a lame science. But I further argue that science has introduced us to the marvels of deep (...)
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  4. The consecration of virgins in the Frankish Church from the seventh to ninth centuries.R. Metz - 1957 - Revue des Sciences Religieuses 31 (1):105-121.
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  5.  31
    Mere Science: Mapping the Land Bridge Between Emotion, Politics, and Ethics.Donovan O. Schaefer - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):382-386.
    Lisa Sideris's Consecrating Science: Wonder, Knowledge, and the Natural World (2017) proposes that the call by some science advocates for a new moral framework based on scientific wonder is flawed. Sideris develops a typology of “wonder” with two separate affective axes: “true wonder” that is the prerogative of a sort of dwelling with the overwhelming mystery of life, and “curiosity” that presses to resolve puzzles and break through into a space of total clarity. The former, Sideris writes, (...)
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  6.  27
    Journey of the Universe: Weaving Science with the Humanities.Mary Evelyn Tucker - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):409-425.
    This article discusses Journey of the Universe as a project that consists of a film, book, conversation series, online classes, and a website. It describes how the creators worked to integrate science and humanities, not privilege or elevate science. It refutes arguments made in Lisa Sideris's Consecrating Science: Wonder, Knowledge, and the Natural World that suggest that Journey overlooks religion and distorts wonder. The article observes that Journey does not dismiss religion but includes it in explicit (...)
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  7.  32
    Wonder Sustained: A Reply to Critics.Lisa H. Sideris - 2019 - Zygon 54 (2):426-453.
    A set of science‐inspired cosmic narratives referred to as the Epic of Evolution and the Universe Story or, collectively, the new cosmology, proposes to bring humans closer to nature by placing us into the broader narrative of the cosmos. This article responds to commentary and critique on my book Consecrating Science: Wonder, Knowledge, and the Natural World, which critically examines these science‐based cosmic narratives and their particular and problematic modes and objects of wonder. Themes include the (...)
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  8. The crown and the ring in the consecration of virgins.R. Metz - 1954 - Revue des Sciences Religieuses 28 (2):113-132.
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  9.  31
    Science, Ethos, and Transcendence in the Anatomy of Nicolaus Steno.Frank Sobiech - 2015 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 15 (1):107-126.
    The anatomist Nicolaus Steno, a key figure of the Scientific Revolution and founder of modern geology, engaged in research on human procreation and proved for the first time that women have ovaries and not so-called female testicles. Steno took the view of “simultaneous animation” of the embryo and demythologized malformations of the embryo by appealing to original sin. His sexual ethics presages the pastoral constitution Gaudium et spes. Steno, who was later ordained a priest and consecrated a bishop, was a (...)
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  10.  27
    Sociology as Reflexive Science.Derek Robbins - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (5):77-98.
    The article focuses on the fact that the consequence of Bourdieu’s death is that we now have to respond specifically to the texts that he produced between 1958 and 2002, rather than to the impact of writing and political action in combination, which was his goal during his life. The article raises general questions about the status of social texts in relation to the practices of philosophy and social scientific enquiry to which Bourdieu must have returned in preparing his final (...)
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  11. The myth and the meaning of science as a vocation.Adam J. Liska - 2005 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 28 (2):149-164.
    Many natural scientists of the past and the present have imagined that they pursued their activity according to its own inherent rules in a realm distinctly separate from the business world, or at least in a realm where business tended to interfere with science from time to time, but was not ultimately an essential component, ‘because one thought that in science one possessed and loved something unselfish, harmless, self-sufficient, and truly innocent, in which man’s evil impulses had no (...)
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  12.  26
    University and science in Serbia in context of Europe’s integration.Marinko Lolic - 2006 - Filozofija I Društvo 2006 (31):115-126.
    Author considering, appearing and existing modern idea about university like one of the most important institution of knowledge which is arise in modern epoch. In this work particular attention will be initiated on considered different ideas and conception university which were before so-called Himbolt?s idea of university which has global disposition and which is in the last two centuries regardless on period of crisis, had dominant position in contemporary high school education.. The second part of work is consecrated on analysis (...)
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  13.  16
    Essai sur les principes des sciences mathématiques.Louis Delègue - 1908 - Paris,: Vuibert et Nony.
    Excerpt from Essai sur les Principes des Sciences Mathematiques A Briancon, dans le calme des longues soirees d'hiver, j'ai trouve a ces etudes un interet passionnant. En occupant mes loisirs, elles m'ont permis d'echapper au desoeuvrement et a l'ennui. Aussi, meme si la theorie a laquelle elles m'ont con duit ne devait pas recevoir la consecration officielle du succes, je leur en saurai toujours un gre infini. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. (...)
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  14. Speculation.Arran Gare - 2021 - In Vlad Petre Glăveanu, The Palgrave Encyclopedia of the Possible. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1-9.
    ‘Speculation’ originally meant ‘reflective observation’. It came to mean ‘conjecture’ or ‘mere conjecture’ as philosophers strove for certainty, consecrating science as rigorously acquired knowledge accumulated through application of the scientific method and devalued the cognitive status of other discourses. The present conventional meaning of speculation, where the place of observation has disappeared, is a by-product of this consecration. In this entry I show how through efforts to defend the status of these other discourses, the original meaning of ‘speculation’ (...)
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  15.  11
    La gauche américaine en France: la réception de John Rawls et des théories de la justice (1971-2010).Mathieu Hauchecorne - 2019 - Paris: CNRS éditions.
    La réception de John Rawls et des théories de la justice Souvent présenté comme un des plus grands théoriciens politiques du XXe siècle, John Rawls est aujourd'hui un philosophe consacré en France, communément perçu comme le porte-parole d'un " libéralisme égalitaire ", alliant défense de la démocratie, du marché et de la justice sociale. La réception de John Rawls et des théories de la justice Souvent présenté comme un des plus grands théoriciens politiques du XXe siècle, John Rawls est aujourd'hui (...)
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  16.  78
    Logic as Metaphysics.James W. Allard - 2003 - Bradley Studies 9 (1):26-39.
    In his Autobiography John Stuart Mill said that his motivation in writing A System of Logic was to meet his opponents, those who held “the German or a priori view” of human knowledge, on their own terms. “The notion that truths external to the mind may be known by intuition or consciousness, independently of observation and experience,” he continued, “is … in these times, the great intellectual support of false doctrines and bad institutions…. There never was such an instrument devised (...)
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  17.  24
    Heritage Building in Mathematics (18th-20th Centuries).Caroline Bruneau Ehrhardt - 2022 - Philosophia Scientiae 26:5-17.
    La notion de patrimoine est aujourd’hui très présente, tant dans l’espace public qu’en sciences humaines et sociales, si bien que rien ne semble échapper à la « consécration patrimoniale » [Jeudy 2008], un phénomène qu’a accentué la définition par l’Unesco en 2003 de la catégorie de Patrimoine Culturel immatériel. La conservation et la valorisation du patrimoine ancien sont devenues une préoccupation importante pour la plupart des institutions de savoirs. Le patrimoine scientifique est alors...
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  18.  19
    Thomas Manlevelt: God in Logic.Alfred van der Helm - 2019 - Logica Universalis 13 (4):467-476.
    This paper was presented at the Second World Congress on Logic and Religion on the sub-topic of logics vis-à-vis illogicalities in religion. It deals with fourteenth-century-logician Thomas Manlevelt’s Ockhamist approach to logic (the ars vetus, strictly speaking) and its ontological outcome: rejection of the existence of substance. Although God, the Trinity, the Blessed Virgin, the Antichrist and the consecrated host keep popping up within the domain of logic, it is argued that Manlevelt kept clear water between logic and theology. Things (...)
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  19.  12
    Civil society elites: managers of civic capital.Anders Sevelsted & Håkan Johansson - 2024 - Theory and Society 53 (4):933-951.
    The article takes the first steps towards a general theory of civil society elites, a concept not fully developed in either elite or civil society research. This conceptual gap hampers academic and public understanding of the dynamics at the top of civil society. To address this, the authors rely on the theoretical framework of Pierre Bourdieu to build a theory of civil society elites as managers of civic capital. This role is illustrated through examples from the differently institutionalised UK and (...)
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  20.  15
    Writers and politics: Gisèle Sapiro’s advances within the Bourdieusian sociology of the literary field.Bridget Fowler - 2021 - Theory and Society 50 (6):867-889.
    This article undertakes a critical analysis of the work of Gisèle Sapiro, with reference to sociology of literature. From 1999 (Sapiro, 2014a), Sapiro has developed the Bourdieusian research tradition, amplifying especially Bourdieu’s theory of crisis. Focusing on the antagonisms between literary “prophets” and “priests”, she has drawn on a rich sample of 184 writers to elucidate the struggles inherent in World War II between writers from different field positions and literary habitus. Further, her historical analyses of the ethical commitments of (...)
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  21.  33
    Patterns of engagement: identities and social movement organizations in Finland and Malawi.Eeva Luhtakallio & Iddo Tavory - 2018 - Theory and Society 47 (2):151-174.
    Based on interviews with climate-change activists and NGO workers in Finland and Malawi, this article reconsiders the ways in which the coordination of identity projects and action is approached in social movement scholarship. Rather than beginning with personal and collective identities, we take our cue from recent work by Laurent Thévenot and trace actors’ forms of engagement—the various ways actors produce commonality. As we show, doing so in vastly different social contexts allows us to see permutations in such forms afforded (...)
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  22.  34
    Impulsive Forces In and Against Words.Alphonso Lingis - 2005 - Diacritics 35 (1):60-70.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Impulsive Forces in and Against WordsAlphonso Lingis (bio)In his lecture "Nietzsche, le polythéisme et la parodie" given at the Collège de Philosophie in 1957 and published in 1963 in his Un si funeste désir, Pierre Klossowski explicated certain radical passages from Nietzsche's The Gay Science, a work he had newly translated into French (two prior translations existed). In the philosophical world of France where perception seemed to have (...)
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  23.  8
    Réhabilitation D’Une Notion Aristotélicienne Negligée : La Lysis.Michel Bastit - 2010 - Méthexis 23 (1):103-111.
    During the last fifty years, a large part of aristotelian commentarism has been consecrated to Aristotle’s methodology as well in Metaphysics as in Physics. However the last step of Aristotelian research, that is to discover and say the solution of the problem, has been very neglected. This paper wishes to show the philosophical importance of the use of Aristotelian λύσις and her link with dialectic in some cases, but also with science in the most part of the cases.
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  24.  25
    Professors and politics: Noam Chomsky’s contested reputation in the United States and Canada.Neil McLaughlin & James Lannigan - 2017 - Theory and Society 46 (3):177-199.
    There is an extensive literature comparing the politics, sociology and economics of the United States and Canada, but very little work comparing the role that public intellectuals play in the space of public opinion and how their ideas are received in both nations simultaneously. Noam Chomsky provides a theoretically useful example of an established academic and public intellectual whose reputation is deeply contested in both countries. Our comparative case study offers leverage to contribute to debates on the sociology of knowledge, (...)
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  25.  24
    O clamor dos pobres: uma interpelação à consciência religiosa e à fé cristã.João Luiz Correia Júnior & Drance Elias da Silva - forthcoming - Horizonte:1503-1503.
    The cry of the poor, the theme of this work, challenges the humanitarian consciousness of the people and is a strong questioning of the religious conscience and the Christian faith. Nevertheless, the preferential option for the poor, consecrated in the Final Document of the Episcopal Conference held in Puebla of Los Angeles, is still the cause of much controversy inside and outside the Church. Bearing in mind this context, this article aims to present the resonance of the cry of the (...)
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  26.  49
    The Role of Memory in the Historiography of the French Revolution.Patrick H. Hutton - 1991 - History and Theory 30 (1):56-69.
    The works of three well-remembered French historians- Jules Michelet, Alphonse Aulard, and François Furet - raise the issue of memory's relationship to history, but each treats it in a different way. History for Michelet concerned the sustaining of tradition. His conceptions of the past grew directly out of a living tradition, from which he established comparatively little distance. For Aulard, history meant consecrating its events in the guise of science. History for Furet demanded the deconstruction of the commemorative (...)
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  27.  69
    In Memoriam: Hans Blumenberg (1920-1996), An Unended Quest.Elías José Palti - 1997 - Journal of the History of Ideas 58 (3):503-524.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:In Memoriam: Hans Blumenberg (1920–1996), An Unended QuestElías José PaltiAt 76, after a long intellectual career spanning more than thirty years, first as Professor of Philosophy at Giessel, then at Bochum, and finally at Münster until his retirement in 1985, Hans Blumenberg has died.1 He leaves behind an incredibly vast oeuvre2 covering the most diverse subjects, from an interpretation of Bach’s The Passion of St Matthew to the history (...)
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  28.  6
    l'état pluriculturel et les droits aux différences: colloque organisé à Nouméa du 3 au 5 juillet 2002.Paul de Deckker & Jean Yves Faberon (eds.) - 2003 - Bruxelles: Bruylant.
    L'État pluriculturel est devenu un concept majeur du début du XXIe siècle, tant au Nord qu'au Sud de la planète. La plupart des États sont confrontés à l'éveil ou à l'affirmation des différentes cultures des différentes communautés en leur sein. Pour nos sociétés plurielles, voici venu le temps des droits aux différences. En réalité, devant ce phénomène universel, les positions de l'État varient : il aménage la coexistence des communautés culturelles ; ou il ne veut pas les connaître. Entre ces (...)
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  29.  20
    Patrimonialisation des mathématiques.Caroline Bruneau Ehrhardt - 2022 - Philosophia Scientiae 26:5-17.
    La notion de patrimoine est aujourd’hui très présente, tant dans l’espace public qu’en sciences humaines et sociales, si bien que rien ne semble échapper à la « consécration patrimoniale » [Jeudy 2008], un phénomène qu’a accentué la définition par l’Unesco en 2003 de la catégorie de Patrimoine Culturel immatériel. La conservation et la valorisation du patrimoine ancien sont devenues une préoccupation importante pour la plupart des institutions de savoirs. Le patrimoine scientifique est alors...
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  30.  24
    Über drei Erscheinungen von Unterschied in der Mathematik.Michael Friedman - 2016 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 39 (1):7-35.
    On Three Appearances of Difference in Mathematics. This article proposes to examine three types of relations between man and equality, as they are embodied in the relation to the minimal condition of the mathematical: the sentence of identity: I=I. Starting our examination from the current common conception of science and mechanism, we aim to reveal that behind the dominating logic of identity there are two other systems of logic, which have arisen during the history of humanity and that of (...)
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  31.  14
    Après le relativisme: de Socrate à la burqa.Emmanuel-Juste Duits - 2016 - Paris: Les Éditions du Cerf.
    Le multiculturalisme a échoué. La postmodernité a failli. Le libéralisme a succombé. Comment en sommes-nous arrivés là? Comment s'en extirper? Comment ressusciter du relativisme moral, social et religieux? Pour Emmanuel-Juste Duits, la cause de ces maux est claire : à la recherche de la vérité, les pays européens ont préféré la consécration de la diversité ; à la pensée, l'opinion ; au "nous", le "je". Et à Socrate, la burqa. Comment retrouver notre héritage, réapprendre notre histoire, se réconcilier avec notre (...)
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  32.  10
    L'interêt général et le libéralisme politique: entre droits et interêts particuliers (XVIIe-XIXe siècles).Florence Perrin - 2012 - Clermont-Ferrand: Fondation Varenne.
    Il est courant de déplorer la perte d’un horizon politique fédérateur apte à mobiliser les membres de nos sociétés dans la poursuite de l’intérêt général. Entre autres responsables de la dissolution du lien politique et de l’affaiblissement du devoir civique, est convoquée la philosophie libérale dont la portée individualiste aurait rendu inconcevable le sacrifice des intérêts particuliers au nom de l’intérêt général. Il s’agit d’éclaircir cette critique en montrant que la reformulation moderne du bien commun par le libéralisme a surtout (...)
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  33.  2
    Je est une autre.Justine Muller - 2024 - Simone de Beauvoir Studies 35 (1-2):186-203.
    Résumé Cet article s’interroge sur la façon dont le roman autobiographique L’Invitée traduit, par le biais du personnage de Françoise, la tension de Beauvoir au départ de sa relation avec Sartre entre sa tendance à la dépendance et sa volonté d’acquérir une autonomie personnelle et littéraire. La consécration de cette autonomie se marque par le déploiement d’une esthétique qui ne repose pas sur celle de Sartre, mais qui s’inspire des techniques de divers auteurs anglo-saxons afin de dévoiler une subjectivité féminine.
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  34.  34
    The portraiture of the honourable Robert Boyle, F.R.S.R. E. W. Maddison - 1959 - Annals of Science 15 (3-4):141-214.
    “To whom is the Consecration of Medal, Stature or even Pyramid more jusly due, than to … the late Illustraious Boyle? … for the happy Improvement of Otto Guericks Magdeburg Exhausterm and for his Profound and Noble Researches into all the abstruser Parts and Recesses of the most useful Philosophy … I have named the Illustrious Boyle, and fix his Trophy here.”John Evelyn, Numismata, 1697.
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  35.  34
    The Role of Knowledge in Western Religion. [REVIEW]K. B. L. - 1959 - Review of Metaphysics 12 (3):493-493.
    Noting the shift from the old science-vs.-religion conflicts to the cooler query, "In what sense and to what extent, if any, does religion involve knowledge?" Randall surveys the history of the question on the way to developing his thesis. Religion is socially indispensable, he holds; in it beliefs function not primarily as expressions of truth but as non-cognitive symbols directing the group's "organized expression of the feelings, actions, and beliefs... centering around the emotionally significant and valuable elements of their (...)
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  36.  41
    The Scandal of Truth. [REVIEW]Richard T. De George - 1964 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 13:322-323.
    This is a series of connected essays by an eminent French Jesuit theologian. The English translation is very readable; but in style and feeling the book remains thoroughly French. Daniélou confronts the attitude of despair of many contemporary French thinkers with faith in the worthwhileness of human existence and in the truth of Christianity. The essays are often suggestive and illuminating; sometimes ‘tantamount to dogmatism’. Daniélou traces the crisis of truth to an over-wrought confidence in science, to the largely (...)
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  37.  13
    Galileo Heretic (review). [REVIEW]Maurice A. Finocchiaro - 1990 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 28 (1):130-131.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:13o JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 28:1 JANUARY 1990 ceived scope of philosophy in the Renaissance, in comparison with the Middle Ages and early modern periods. Most impressive of all, aside from the extremely high quality of all its parts, is this volume's fidelity to its subject and the placement of that subject in an accurate historical context. For that we have to thank each contributor, and, most (...)
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  38.  16
    Regulating Estrangement: Human–Animal Chimeras in Postgenomic Biology.Amy Hinterberger - 2020 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 45 (6):1065-1086.
    Why do laws and regulations marking boundaries between humans and other animals proliferate amid widespread proclamations of the waning of the species concept and the consensus that life is a continuum? Here I consider a recent spate of new guidelines and regulations in the United Kingdom and United States that work to estrange human bodies from other animals in biomedicine. Using the idea of a bioconstitutional moment to understand how state institutions deliberate over “human–animal chimeras,” I address how nations differently (...)
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  39.  53
    Le problème de l'extension du Canon des Écritures.Alain Le Boulluec - 2004 - Recherches de Science Religieuse 1 (1):45-87.
    L’examen du « canon des Ecritures », après la consécration de l’expression par Athanase au IVe siècle, révèle d’abord une époque où une certaine fluidité caractérisait la réflexion sur l’extension des Ecritures et sur leurs limites. A partir du IVe siècle, une mutation décisive se produit, à laquelle il faut adjoindre une autre évolution sémantique préparée de longue date à travers l’emploi de diatèkè, traduit en latin par testamentum. Ainsi apparaissent deux temps forts dans l’histoire des Ecritures aux premiers siècles (...)
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  40.  37
    Erich Przywara et Edith Stein : de l’analogie de l’être à une analogie de la personne.Francesco Valerio Tommasi - 2015 - Revue des Sciences Philosophiques Et Théologiques 99 (2):267-279.
    La question de l’analogie – fondamentale pour toute la néoscolastique, de Gilson à Maritain – trouva sa consécration en 1932 dans le fameux Analogia entis d’Erich Przywara. À la suite de l’influence de Przywara, l’analogie a eu un rôle décisif aussi dans la pensée d’Edith Stein. Mais en décrivant la dialectique phénoménologique entre être fini et être éternel Stein confère à l’analogie de l’être une tournure que l’on peut qualifier de « personnelle ». Il s’agit du rapport entre deux « (...)
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  41.  36
    From employment exchange to Jobcentre Plus: the changing institutional context of unemployment.Matthew Cole - 2007 - History of the Human Sciences 20 (4):129-146.
    The importance of employment exchanges in the governance of mass unemployment in the 1930s presented social researchers with a rich site for the investigation of the meaning of unemployment from a governmental perspective, or more precisely, of how that meaning is encoded into social spaces. Comparing writing from the 1930s and earlier with my own contemporary research in Jobcentres, Benefits Agencies and Jobcentre Plus offices facilitates an understanding of how that meaning, and its literally concrete means of deployment, has shifted. (...)
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  42.  10
    Tempos in Science and Nature: Structures, Relations, and Complexity.C. Rossi & New York Academy of Sciences - 1999
    This text addresses the problems of complex systems in understanding natural phenomena and the behaviour of systems related to human activity, from a science and humanities perspective. It discusses molecular behaviour and structures, and offers examples of ecological and environmental modelling.
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  43.  23
    Politics and Modernity: History of the Human Sciences Special Issue.Irving History of the Human Sciences, Robin Velody & Williams - 1993 - SAGE Publications.
    Politics and Modernity provides a critical review of the key interface of contemporary political theory and social theory about the questions of modernity and postmodernity. Review essays offer a broad-ranging assessment of the issues at stake in current debates. Among the works reviewed are those of William Connolly, Anthony Giddens, J[um]urgen Habermas, Alasdair MacIntyre, Richard Rorty, Charles Taylor and Roy Bhaskar. As well as reviewing the contemporary literature, the contributors assess the historical roots of current problems in the works of (...)
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  44. Fragmentation and Wholeness in Science and Society Transcript of a Seminar Sponsored by the Science Council of Canada, Ottawa 10 May 1983.David Bohm & Science Council of Canada - 1984 - Science Council of Canada.
     
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  45. Centripetal in the Sciences.Gerard Radnitzky & International Conference on the Unity of the Sciences - 1987 - Paragon House Publishers.
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  46. Mediating models A review of Models as Mediators: Perspectives on Natural and Social Sciences, MS Morgan and M. Morrison (eds). [REVIEW]R. N. Science Without Laws Giere - 1999 - Journal of Economic Methodology 8 (1):139-144.
     
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  47.  10
    Computer Science Logic: 11th International Workshop, CSL'97, Annual Conference of the EACSL, Aarhus, Denmark, August 23-29, 1997, Selected Papers.M. Nielsen, Wolfgang Thomas & European Association for Computer Science Logic - 1998 - Springer Verlag.
    This book constitutes the strictly refereed post-workshop proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Computer Science Logic, CSL '97, held as the 1997 Annual Conference of the European Association on Computer Science Logic, EACSL, in Aarhus, Denmark, in August 1997. The volume presents 26 revised full papers selected after two rounds of refereeing from initially 92 submissions; also included are four invited papers. The book addresses all current aspects of computer science logics and its applications and thus (...)
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  48.  3
    Carl Menger on the Role of Induction in Economics: A Critical Reassessment.Pierluigi Barrotta & London School of Economics and Political Science - 1997 - Lse Centre for the Philosophy of the Natural and Social Sciences.
  49.  7
    Just Tradeoffs in Health Research Decision-Making: A Gap in the Common Rule.Health Sciences - 2025 - American Journal of Bioethics 25 (2):80-82.
    Volume 25, Issue 2, February 2025, Page 80-82.
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    Hermeneutics and Science.Márta Fehér, Olga Kiss, L. Ropolyi & International Society for Hermeneutics and Science (eds.) - 1999 - Kluwer Academic Publishers.
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