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Jonathan Heaps [3]Jonathan R. Heaps [1]
  1.  12
    Bearing the Marks.Jonathan Heaps - 2012 - In Fritz Allhoff & Robert Arp (eds.), Tattoos – Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 135–147.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Fingers Running Up and Down the Back of My Arm Am I Really Free? Determinism Kant, Freedom, and Alternate Natures ‘Nature’ Isn't a System Embodied Freedom: It Develops! The Response Part of Responsibility In the Space Created by that Fluid Emergence.
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  2.  32
    Insight is A Body‐Feeling: Experiencing our Understanding.Jonathan Heaps - 2016 - Heythrop Journal 57 (3):461-472.
    Though Bernard Lonergan is often counted among the so-called “Transcendental Thomists”, this article offers a re-appraisal of his theory of understanding with a renewed emphasis on its a posteriori, rather than a priori, approach. For Lonergan, because understanding is experienced, it can be investigated empirically. It is the further conviction of the author that the experience in which understanding gives itself is a bodily experience. This is the case both in how the experience emerges from biological processes, but also appears (...)
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  3.  76
    Traversing Forgiveness.Jonathan R. Heaps - 2017 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 91 (1):53-72.
    In the epilogue to Memory, History, Forgetting, Paul Ricoeur introduces an overlooked “vertical” axis into the problem of forgiveness. This verticality runs from the “depth” of fault to the “height” of forgiveness. For Ricoeur, forgiveness only appears an impossible “exchange” if one excludes this verticality from the question. Instead, he calls forgiveness “difficult” because it traverses from height to depth. This article argues that Ricoeur’s notion of the horizontal and the vertical in Memory, History, Forgetting is best understood as an (...)
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  4.  1
    Nothing Gained Is Eternal: A Theology of Tradition, by Anne M. Carpenter (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2022. 218 pp.). [REVIEW]Jonathan Heaps - 2022 - Method 36 (2):119-122.
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