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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Richard Liddy
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Brian Traska
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3.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Christopher Friel
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4.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Glenn Hughes
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5.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
David A. Nordquest, Stephen T. Frezza
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Bernard Lonergan’s account of the polymorphic character of consciousness provides a basis for distinguishing the common sense, scientific, artistic, and ethical elements present in engineering. These elements regard “the same real objects,” but do so from fundamentally different standpoints. In relating these standpoints to the underlying “procedures of the human mind,” Lonergan’s work provides a valuable tool for mapping both the unity and diversity of engineering.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Eileen De Neeve
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7.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Harold Petersen
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8.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Chia-Hua Wei
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9.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Stephen Ferguson
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10.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
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11.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
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12.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
Bernard Lonergan
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13.
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The Lonergan Review:
Volume >
8
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