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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
18 >
Issue: 1/4
C. W. Spinks
Literary Semiotics:
A Critical Approach
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 1/4
Corey Anton
The Metalinguistics of Subjectivity:
Benjamin Lee’s Talking Heads
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 1/4
Boulou Ebanda
Narratology and Text:
A Review and Author Interview
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 1/4
Kristian Bankov
“Redrawing the Map and Setting the Agenda in Philosophy”
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
28 >
Issue: 3/4
John Deely
Analytic Philosophy and The Doctrine of Signs:
Semiotics or Semantics: What Difference Does It Make?
abstract |
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Thomas A. Sebeok (†2001) considered Charles Peirce as “our lodestar” in the contemporary semiotic development, and what he called “the Dominican tradition” (the Thomistic works of Aquinas, Poinsot, and Maritain in particular) as ‘a vein of pure gold’ yet to be mined in the contemporary semiotic development. By contrast, many contemporary authors look to what is called “Analytic philosophy” (as if there were such a thing as “non-analytic philosophy”) for their interpretation both of Peirce and of Sebeok’s “Dominican tradition”. Tzvetan Todorov, however, has pointed out that semiotics as the doctrine of signs in fact compromises the very foundation upon which the ‘founding fathers’ of “Analytic philosophy” relied in their linguistic reduction of philosophical analysis. Using the works of two contemporary authors, one from the Peircean side (Thomas Short) and one claiming to represent Thomistic thought (John O’Callaghan), this review essay explores the distortive consequences for semiotics that result from adopting the standpoint of Analytic philosophy when treating matters of semiosis. Hence the sub-title “Semiotics or Semantics: What Difference Does It Make [for the doctrine of signs]?”
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
37 >
Issue: 1/2
Dario Dellino
People and Words Reciprocally Educate Each Other:
Semiotic Theory of Learning
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 2/3
Teresa Porzecanski
Ideologies of Development:
A Report from South America
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 2/3
Emery M. Roe
Folktale Development
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9.
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American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly:
Volume >
87 >
Issue: 3
Gregory R. Beabout
Kierkegaard Amidst the Catholic Tradition
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To mark the 200th anniversary of the birth of Søren Kierkegaard, I review in this essay the relationship between Kierkegaard and the Catholic tradition. First, I look back to consider both Kierkegaard’s encounter with Catholicism and the influence of his work upon Catholics. Second, I look around to consider some of the recent work on Kierkegaard and Catholicism, especially Jack Mulder’s recent book, Kierkegaard and the Catholic Tradition, and the many articles that examine Kierkegaard’s relation to Catholicism in the multi-volume Kierkegaard Research series edited by Jon Stewart. Finally, I look ahead to consider possible directions in which the conversation between Catholics and Kierkegaardians might continue.
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10.
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American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly:
Volume >
91 >
Issue: 4
Rocco Buttiglione
Reflections on Dietrich von Hildebrand’s My Battle Against Hitler
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The Chesterton Review:
Volume >
38 >
Issue: 1/2
Brian Morton
Tintin and the eternal search
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12.
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The Chesterton Review:
Volume >
39 >
Issue: 3/4
M. D. Aeschliman
Mind and Cosmos. Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False by M. D. Aeschliman
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The Chesterton Review:
Volume >
39 >
Issue: 3/4
Benjamin B. Alexander
Flannery O’Connor: Looking in from the Outside by Brad Gooch
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14.
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Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume >
16 >
Issue: 1
David Braybrooke
Marxism and Technical Change:
Nicely Told, but not the Full Contradictory Story
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15.
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Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume >
21 >
Issue: 2
James Robert Brown
Latour’s Prosaic Science
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Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume >
40 >
Issue: 2
Stephen Davies
Functional Beauty Examined
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The CLR James Journal:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1
Paget Henry
Wilson Harris and Caribbean Philosophies of Art: A Review Essay
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18.
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The Chesterton Review:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 1
Karl Keating
"The Servile State" and "Hilaire Belloc: Edwardian Radical"
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Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
17
Ernest A. Greco
Review Essay: Pius XII and the Battle for Rome
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Robert Katz’s The Battle for Rome (2003) is an unfair indictment of Pope Pius XII. Through various distortions and oversights, Katz faults Pius’s “open city” strategy and his anti-communism for failing to protect the Jews and other Italians during the German occupation of Rome in World War II. In truth, the pope’s strategy was as successful as could reasonably be expected under the circumstances.
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20.
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Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Dominic A. Aquila
Catholicism, Liberalism, & Communitarianism:
The Catholic Intellectual Tradition and the Moral Foundations of Democracy
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