Displaying: 41-60 of 346 documents

0.174 sec

41. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 76 > Issue: 3
Lewis S. Ford Can Thomas and Whitehead Complement Each Other?
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Two essays relating Thomas and Whitehead have recently appeared. Coming To Be by James W. Felt, S.J., modifies Thomas by replacing his substantial form with Whitehead’s notion of subjective aim, the essencein-the-making introduced by God to guide the occasion’s act of coming into being. Felt also substitutes subjective aim for matter as the means of individuation. This is one of Whitehead’s individuating principles, although a case can be made that matter (the multiplicity of past actualities as proximate matter) is another. “God and Creativity” by Stephen T. Franklin develops a reconciliation of these two ultimates by conceiving of God as the source of creativity, and seeing creativity in terms of the Thomistic esse. In my reflections on this project I explore four alternativeswith respect to the source of creativity: (a) creativity as derived from the past; (b) creativity as inherent in the present; (c) God as the source of transitional creativity (Franklin); (d) God as the source of concrescent creativity (Ford). The last two differ with respect to being’s relation to becoming. Does being undergird becoming, or does becoming bring about being, such that apart from it there would be no being? Our theory of creation depends upon this question.
42. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 80 > Issue: 4
Dennis L. Sepper After Fascism, After the War: Thresholds of Thinking in Contemporary Italian Philosophy
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
This article offers a detailed review of Filosofi italiani contemporanei, a book that presents overviews of seven contemporary Italian philosophers and philosopher/theologians—Luigi Pareyson, Emanuele Severino, Italo Mancini, Gianni Vattimo, Vincenzo Vitiello, Massimo Cacciari, and theologian Bruno Forte. Not intended as a comprehensive survey of the contemporary Italian philosophical scene, the book presents thinkers influential during the last three decades who have focused on tradition, post-metaphysical conceptions of being, origin, and principle, and the openness of philosophy to religion. Although eccentric by Anglo-American standards, the selection does not misrepresent recent Italian philosophizing, which has been more thoroughgoingly shaped by neo-scholasticism, idealism, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and nihilism than most English-language work. Open to international philosophy as well as to its own traditions, Italian thinkers work within a complex ethos that has produced significant recent philosophizing and holds great promise for the future.
43. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 19 > Issue: 1
Bernard Flynn Dominique Janicaud’s Powers of the Rational
44. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 28 > Issue: 2
Edward P. Butler On Dialogue
45. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 28 > Issue: 2
Elena Tzelepis Key Writings
46. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 47 > Issue: 1
Mette Lebech Reading Stein—Some Guidelines for the Perplexed: A Review of Edith Stein by Sarah Borden and of Edith Stein: A Philosophical Prologue, 1913–1922 by Alasdair MacIntyre
47. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1
James Bernauer, S.J. Foucault’s Political Analysis
48. International Philosophical Quarterly: Volume > 54 > Issue: 2
Barry David Theophany: The Neoplatonic Philosophy of Dionysius The Areopagite. By Eric Perl
49. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 39 > Issue: 2
Niklas Forsberg Philosophy, Literature, and the Burden of Theory: Review of Toril Moi’s Revolution of the Ordinary: Literary Studies after Wittgenstein, Austin, and Cavell
50. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 39 > Issue: 2
Jonathan Havercroft Review of Andrew Norris’ Becoming Who We Are: Politics and Practical Philosophy in the Work of Stanley Cavell
51. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 31 > Issue: 2
Robert Pippin Hegel’s Practical Philosophy
52. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 32 > Issue: 1
Angelica Nuzzo Mourning Sickness: Hegel and the French Revolution
53. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 32 > Issue: 1
Mitchell Miller Dialectic and Dialogue
54. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 33 > Issue: 1
Jeffrey Stout The Spirit of Pragmatism: Bernstein’s Variations on Hegelian Themes
55. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 34 > Issue: 2
Richard Polt Nailing It Down: Haugeland’s Heidegger
56. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 35 > Issue: 1/2
Helmuth Plessner Review of Eric Voegelin’s Race and State
57. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 35 > Issue: 1/2
Tommy J. Curry Empirical or Imperial?: Issues in the Manipulation of Du Bois’ Intellectual Historiography in Kwame Anthony Appiah’s Lines of Descent
58. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 36 > Issue: 1
Sarin Marchetti Problematize and Reconstruct: Foucault, Genealogy, and Critique
59. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 36 > Issue: 2
Eric Schliesser Review of Omri Boehm’s Kant’s Critique of Spinoza
60. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 97 > Issue: 7
Isaac Levi The Foundations of Causal Decision Theory