Results 161 to 170 of about 258,425 (224)
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Philosophical Anthropology, 2023
The journal continues to publish translations of individual chapters of the book by the famous phenomenologist Michael Marder “The Philosopher’s Plant. An Inteellectual Herbarium”.
M. Marder
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The journal continues to publish translations of individual chapters of the book by the famous phenomenologist Michael Marder “The Philosopher’s Plant. An Inteellectual Herbarium”.
M. Marder
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Augustine's Theology of the Resurrection
, 2023In this volume, Augustine M. Reisenauer, O.P. provides a comprehensive study of Augustine's theology of the resurrection, the human return from death to life.
Augustine M. Reisenauer
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Rising Costs: Augustine Revisited
, 2020Rising military equipment costs were famously identified by Norman Augustine with forecasts of a single aircraft air force by 2054. This paper presents and analyses an original data set for UK military aircraft.
K. Hartley
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Between Presumption and Despair: Augustine's Hope for the Commonwealth
American Political Science Review, 2018Many political theorists dismiss Augustine as a pessimist about politics, assuming his “otherworldly” account of love precludes hope for this-worldly politics.
M. Lamb
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Speculum, 2018
The first time Augustine wrote to Jerome (Ep. 28), he voiced displeasure with Jerome’s assertions that Paul deliberately lied when rebuking Peter (Gal. 2.14) and that this lie had pedagogical value for Christian readers.
Erika T. Hermanowicz
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The first time Augustine wrote to Jerome (Ep. 28), he voiced displeasure with Jerome’s assertions that Paul deliberately lied when rebuking Peter (Gal. 2.14) and that this lie had pedagogical value for Christian readers.
Erika T. Hermanowicz
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“Shameless”: Augustine, After Augustine, and Way After Augustine
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 2014The pejorative “shameless,” applied liberally to religious and intellectual antagonists until quite recently, now has a distinct period feel, and has frequently and casually been taken to justify diagnosing those who use it as “anxious.” The essay shows that the accusation of shamelessness has a precise and fairly stable sense from antiquity through ...
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