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1. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Phil Mullins

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2. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
J. W. Stines

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3. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1

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4. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1

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5. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Benjamin Ladner

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6. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Phil Mullins, Walter Gulick

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7. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Bruce Haddox

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This paper examines the dominant Western image of Being as presence. It then explores William Poteat's alternative picture of our mindbodily inherence in a world and its relevance for a more adequate understanding of our lived existence.

8. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Dale Cannon

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This paper essays an account of William H. Poteat's teaching--both what he taught and how he taught--as an effort to bring his students to a realization of the bankruptcy of the modern critical sensibility and help them negotiate a transition to a post-critical intellectual sensibility. Enigmatic aspects of his teaching become intelligible through considering them in light of traditional disciplines of spiritual formation.

9. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
Walter B. Mead

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Using the metaphor of a circle with its center, periphery, and radius, this essay explores William Poteat's understanding of the self, or "mindbody," in its dynamic and creative relation to the larger world, or cosmos, identifying the mindbody's prereflective radix with the "center," its boundary or point of interface with the larger world with the "periphery," and its dialectical evolution and articulation of a sense of coherence and meaning in terms of a pretensive and retrotensive "radius."

10. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1

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11. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1
E. M. Adams

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While agreeing with Poteat that the modern Western culture has gone awry in a humanly destructive way, the paper contends tha the culprit was not, as Poteat claims, Enlightenment critical philosophy, but the materialistic values of the bourgeois form of life and the puritanical view of knowledge and the naturalistic worldview that they generated. Accordingly, the solution proposed is not Poteat's unreflected experience and commonsense worldview but a shift to a humanistic culture-generating stance and a critical humanistic philosophy.

12. Tradition and Discovery: The Polanyi Society Periodical: Volume > 21 > Issue: 1

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