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1. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 33 > Issue: 3
Chenyang Li What-Being: Chuang Tzu versus Aristotle
... the same unity; it is not the case that there is a statue and a chunk of bronze ... question of whether the time stage is substantially and primarily a time stage of an ox ... not deny that there is a little difference between “three every morning and four ...
2. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Thomas Gwozdz Derrida, Maritain, and Deconstruction
... essentially a logocentrism. Difference is at the heart of Maritain's metaphysics. There ... deconstruction, there is a critique of Western logocentrism and the revelation of difference ... Derrida's critique of the Western metaphysics of presence and logos is in fact a ...
3. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 25 > Issue: 2
Briankle G. Chang The Eclipse of Being: Heidegger and Derrida
... time and is in time) manifests the ontological difference; that the existence of ... and the outside of philosophy—that is of the West—there is produced a certain ... the Western metaphysics not “deconstructive?” Why and how is Derrida’s critique of ...
4. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 51 > Issue: 3
Paul Symington Metaphysics Renewed: Kant’s Schematized Categories and the Possibility of Metaphysics
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This article considers the significance of Kant’s schematized categories in the Critique of Pure Reason for contemporary metaphysics. I present Kant’s understanding of the schematism and how it functions within his critique of the limits of pure reason. Then I argue that, although the true role of the schemata is a relatively late development in Kant’s thought, it is nevertheless a core notion, and the central task of the first Critique can be sufficiently articulated in the language of the schematism. A surprising result of Kant’s doctrine of the schematism is that a limited form of metaphysics is possible even within the parameters set out in the first Critique. To show this, I offer contrasting examples of legitimate and illegitimate forays into metaphysics in light of the condition of the schematized categories.
... the boundaries of reason itself and as such is devoid of any content (A55 / B79 ... ” (A140 / B179). The transcendental condition of time is sufficiently general ... given under the schemata of time and space (A146 / B185 ...
5. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 20 > Issue: 2
John D. Caputo Heidegger’s “Dif-ference” and the Distinction between Esse and Ens in St. Thomas
... is a step back out of the difference (Differenz) between Being and beings into ... within the horizon of the difference between esse and ens, and there is nothing more ... a distinction between its esse and its ens, for the ens is a way of having esse ...
6. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 36 > Issue: 3
Jeremy Smith Husserl, Derrida, Hegel, and the Notion of Time
... between A and B. This difference is one example of what Derrida apparently means by ... preserves the differences between A, A as retained, and B, then there is no such ... to assert that there is any time between the now and its retention, that the now ...
7. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 6 > Issue: 3
Magda King Heidegger Reinterpreted
... becomes a problem in Being and Time. The existential analysis of man is not there ... crux of the matter: does Being and Time in fact raise a problem which is different ... , (the first theme of Being and Time), is that it has a primary ontological “horizon ...
8. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 3 > Issue: 3
Emerich Coreth The Problem and Method of Metaphysics
... the same time, however, a difference is affirmed between being and knowing, a ... a problem and method of metaphysics? Is it to be taken for granted that ... metaphysics itself is a problem and has a method? In ancient Greece and during the ...
9. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 35 > Issue: 2
James L. Marsh Post-Modernism: A Lonerganian Retrieval and Critique
... project. In the grip of such a Ratio being tends to be covered over, and difference ... obscures reality, the only alternative is an overcoming of metaphysics, a transcendence ... conditioned, a link between the conditions and the conditioned, and the fulfillment of the ...
10. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 23 > Issue: 4
Carlos G. Noreña Heidegger on Suárez: The 1927 Marburg Lectures
... philosophy,” and formulated a division of the science of metaphysics, “which lasted ... there is a composition of two realities (zweier Realitaten), essence and existence ... between the reality of the essence and existence, which is the essence’s mode ...
11. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 48 > Issue: 3
J. Noel Hubler Locating the Cosmos in the Divine and the Body in the Soul: A Plotinian Solution to Two of the Great Dualisms of Modern Philosophy
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For Plotinus, although the One and the Intellect are transcendent sources of the cosmos, they are also omnipresent within it. At first, the mutual omnipresence and transcendence of the One and the Intellect seem contradictory, but their omnipresence and transcendence are perfectly consistent outcomes of the relation of the cosmos to the One and the Intellect. For the perfection of the One entails both that the One has power to generate and that it is mutually transcendent and omnipresent in the universe. Plotinus extends his principles of perfection, transcendence, and omnipresence to include the relation of the body to the soul by explaining that the soul can transcend the body while the body is within it. Hence, Plotinus is able to fashion an efficient and consistent metaphysics in which Godcontains the universe and the soul contains the body without denying the transcendent perfection of either.
... that would force us to choose between a god that is part of the ... Being is something other than the perfect One, it bears a mark of difference from ... a firm and impermeable boundary between the human soul and God ...
12. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 37 > Issue: 4
Kevin M. Staley Being and the Between
...Desmond's Being and the Between is a long and difficult work in metaphysics ... or aspect of itself. Being and the Between is a thoughtful and genuinely original ... : "the determination of the indetermination is a process of self-othering in which ...
13. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1
James A. Keller Some Basic Differences between Classical and Process Metaphysics and Their Implications for the Concept of God
... is a very different idea of the causal relation in process metaphysics, and this ... vividly and completely. A third consequence of the difference between classical and ... consideration, there is no likelihood of ever resolving the issues between the two ...
14. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 48 > Issue: 1
John Russon Temporality and the Future of Philosophy in Hegel’s Phenomenology
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In “Sense-Certainty” Hegel establishes “the now that is many nows” as the form of experience. This has implications for the interpretation of later figures within the Phenomenology of Spirit: specifically, the thing (from chapter 2), the living body (from chapter 4), and the ethical community (from chapter 6) are each significantly different forms of such a “now” in which the way that past and future are held within the present differs. Comparing these changing “temporalities” allows us to defend Hegel’s distinction between nature and spirit, and his claim that only spirit has a history. This comparison also allows us to see how it is that phenomenological philosophy, and the “end of history” that it announces, is a stance of openness to the future.
... spirit and a time of nature. Our concern about her is that the time of nature, which ... phenomenological philosophy, and the “end of history” that it announces, is a stance of ... and property: the determinacy of this moment is a property of this reading. 7 ...
15. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 40 > Issue: 4
Elizabeth Murray Morelli Becoming a Self: A Reading of Kierkegaard’s Concluding Unscientific Postscript
... second of two elements being many times longer than the first” (59). Is there a ... , the limitations of Climacus as a pseudonym and of his account of Religiousness B ... ; and second, the potential conflict between the critique of the metaphysics of ...
16. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 60 > Issue: 1
Alexander Earl Lovable and Love and Love of Himself: Intimations of Trinitarian Theology in the Metaphysics of Plotinus
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Current trends in scholarship—epitomized in the works of, inter alia, Lewis Ayres, Adrian Pabst, and Rowan Williams—argue for a metaphysics of relationality at the heart of Christian thought that is at its root Platonic. This metaphysic is in turn typified by its commitment to divine simplicity and its corresponding apophatic grammar, which serve as useful points of contact with Plotinus’s own thought. Examination of key texts in Plotinus’s Enneads demonstrates a shared trinitarian grammar when speaking about the first principle. These connections prompt a need to articulate trinitarian dogma as an important step in the history of philosophy, and not just theology, especially for resolving the perennial problem of the one and the many. This “Christian Platonism” has been in a necessary process of recovery and re-articulation, of which the above is put forward as a contribution.
... there is a special kind of identity between the plant and its shadow, there is also ... between the Christian Trinity and the Plotinian One. A helpful summary of the ... of the content of thought, a union between the subject that thinks and the object ...
17. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 48 > Issue: 4
Ben Levey Truth, Identity, and Correspondence in Hegel’s Critique of Judgment
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Hegel, it has been claimed, conceives of truth as material. Such a conception of truth was far from dominant in the nineteenth century, and Hegel’s championing of it might be misinterpreted as indicating a willfully anachronistic, pre-Critical streak in his thought. I argue that this is not the case by exploring a principal motivating factor for Hegel’s position on truth. This factor is a problem concerning the general form of judgment—a problem that, for Hegel, precludes object-based correspondence from functioning as truth. Far from being willfully anachronistic or pre-Critical, Hegel’s conception of truth proves to be intimatelylinked to and informed by Kant’s Critical project.
....e., in perception, intuition and so forth.27 Here there is a rejection of the ... thing and intellect” in De veritate, q. 1, a.1., is a classical statement of the ... here is that the essential difference of the relata (reality and idea) required ...
18. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 57 > Issue: 4
Joseph W. Koterski, S.J. The Principle of Non-Contradiction in Plato’s Republic: An Argument for Form. By Laurence Bloom
... that there is a contradiction between the fourth and the tenth books ... parts of the soul in book four at 436b9–c2 and is explicitly ... , Bloom urges that there is a difference in the aspect under which the soul is being ...
19. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 45 > Issue: 2
William Desmond Is There Metaphysics after Critique?
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This paper offers two related refl ections on the questions of metaphysics after critique. The first is an analysis of the project of critique since Kant and its influence on the disputed status of metaphysics. It explores the theoretical and practical aspects of this by claiming that an understanding of thinking as negativity, whether in Hegelian form as determinate negation or in more radical deconstructive forms, lies at the heart of this disputed status. Not least, the relation of philosophy to religion and to previous practices of metaphysics is at stake. The paper argues that there is more at work in critique than critique can account for through itself. In a second reflection, the arguments bearing on this “more” are explored in a more constructive spirit. On the basis of an account of the sources of metaphysical thinking beyond the resources of critique alone, the lineaments of what is needed for a metaxological metaphysics after critique are sketched.
... philosophy to religion and to previous practices of metaphysics is at stake. The paper ... philosophy to religion and to previous practices of metaphysics is at stake. The paper ... following: an alternation in our inhabitation of the ethos of being, in which there is a ...
20. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Silvia Carli The Most Complete Activity
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This paper provides an interpretation of Aristotle’s claim that activities (energeiai) such as seeing, which are complete (teleiai) in form, can nevertheless be more or less complete depending on the condition of the faculty and the character of the object on which the faculty acts (Nicomachean Ethics 10.4.1174b14–20). After reviewing and criticizing current interpretations, it argues that activities that are complete in form are more or less complete in that they can attain their end to a lesser or greater degree. The notion of degrees of completeness is then used to show that Aristotle’s seemingly conflicting claims on the possibility of acting virtuously in the Nicomachean Ethics are elements of a unified picture in which actions display different degrees of virtue or excellence.
... CARLI between the two extremes there is a whole range of cases ... an end (since that for the sake of which is a principle and ... . What, then, is the relation between the active exercise of the capacity and its ...