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Noûs, 1985
Even though George the IV wished to know whether the author of Waverely was Scott, Russell was certain that the first gentleman of Europe didn't take any interest in trivial matters. A. Church looked at his majesty's predicament from the contrapositive angle, pointing out that we can't really accept the suggestion that whenever the emperor didn't ...
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Even though George the IV wished to know whether the author of Waverely was Scott, Russell was certain that the first gentleman of Europe didn't take any interest in trivial matters. A. Church looked at his majesty's predicament from the contrapositive angle, pointing out that we can't really accept the suggestion that whenever the emperor didn't ...
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Form is Content, Content is Form: Between Rituals and Sacraments
2017for martin buber religious rituals are the frozen enactments of what in its origin was a moment of spiritual inception. we cannot recover the moment by reenacting a ritual, we can only seek that moment by an act of immediate and renewed relationship with a being. the ritual is a frozen form, but what we need is the fresh encounter. take the case of the
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2020
A remarkable demonstration of the contempt literary theory has had for content appears in the various reference dictionaries of literary terms. Almost invariably, they offer lengthy definitions of form, while usually failing to include an entry at all for content.
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A remarkable demonstration of the contempt literary theory has had for content appears in the various reference dictionaries of literary terms. Almost invariably, they offer lengthy definitions of form, while usually failing to include an entry at all for content.
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1997
Abstract It is generally, though not universally, agreed that if I am asked about the style of your performance of a certain act, I am being asked not what you did but how you did it.1 If, however, I am to give a truly informative answer to the question and not take refuge in some jocular adverb such as ‘reluctantly’ or ‘superbly’, I ...
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Abstract It is generally, though not universally, agreed that if I am asked about the style of your performance of a certain act, I am being asked not what you did but how you did it.1 If, however, I am to give a truly informative answer to the question and not take refuge in some jocular adverb such as ‘reluctantly’ or ‘superbly’, I ...
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