Results for 'Louis A. Mancha Jr'

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  1.  44
    Aquinas, Suarez, and Malebranche on Instrumental Causation and Premotion.Louis A. Mancha Jr - 2012 - International Philosophical Quarterly 52 (3):335-353.
    In the analysis of Aquinas, instrumental causation is central to his doctrine of providence, yet their connection is not widely understood. On the one hand, early modern thinkers like Nicolas Malebranche claim that any notion of instrumental causation is unintelligible as a mode of divine operation. Alternatively, certain Thomists commit Aquinas to the doctrine of premotion, which partially resolves the problem of instrumental causation, but only at the cost of eliminating the causal freedom of creatures. In this paper I address (...)
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  2.  46
    A Counterfactual Analysis in Defense of Aquinas's Inference of Omnipotence from Creation Ex Nihilo.Louis A. Mancha Jr - 2005 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 79:145-155.
    There is a traditional view, maintained by Aquinas and others, which holds that there is a mutual entailment between the power to Create Ex Nihilo and the property of omnipotence. In his Metaphysical Disputations, however, Suarez attacks the traditional view by pointing out a seriousflaw in Aquinas’s argument. Suarez claims that there is no reason in principle why God cannot miraculously bestow CEN-power to creatures––albeit in a limitedform––even on the assumption that God cannot make creatures omnipotent. In this paper the (...)
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  3.  31
    Concurrentism: A Philosophical Explanation.Louis A. Mancha - 2003 - Dissertation, Purdue University
    The main focus of this dissertation is the late medieval doctrine of Concurrentism. Concurrentists hold that God is immediately, causally involved in every event in nature, and yet so are creatures: For any natural effect to obtain, both God and creature must make a genuine causal contribution to the effect. Yet the presence of God's immanent activity in nature is claimed to not overdetermine or render otiose the real and necessary causal input of creatures. I develop and defend this view (...)
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  4.  11
    Reach Without Grasping: A Retrospective Appreciation of Anne Carson's Eros the Bittersweet.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2019 - Arion 27 (2):137-168.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reach Without Grasping: A Retrospective Appreciation of Anne Carson’s Eros the Bittersweet LOUIS A. RUPRECHT JR. Everything I know about love and its necessities I learned in that one moment when I found myself thrusting my little burning red backside like a baboon at a man who no longer cherished me. There was no area of my mind not appalled by this action, no part of my body (...)
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  5.  8
    Economy, Society, Tragedy: Moral Reflections in an Age of Crisis and Austerity.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2020 - Arion 28 (2):137-170.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Economy, Society, Tragedy: Moral Reflections in an Age of Crisis and Austerity LOUIS A. RUPRECHT JR. Precisely their tragedies prove that the Greeks were not pessimists... In this sense, I have the right to understand myself as the first tragic philosopher—that is to say, the most extreme antithesis and antipode of a pessimistic philosopher. —Nietzsche, Ecce Homo, “The Birth of Tragedy” Orgiastic religion leads most readily to song (...)
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  6.  21
    Winckelmann and Casanova in Rome: A case study of religion and sexual politics in eighteenth-century Rome.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2010 - Journal of Religious Ethics 38 (2):297-320.
    There are three “scandals” that appear in most discussions of Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717–1768), the so-called father of modern Art History: his allegedly careerist conversion to Catholicism in 1754; his semi-secret homoerotic discourse while under Vatican employ in the early-to-mid 1760s; and his shocking murder in Trieste in 1768. Of the three, Winckelmann's sexuality has garnered the most attention in recent scholarship. A little-known story reported by Casanova during his second visit to Rome in 1761 has something to do with (...)
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  7.  5
    `So you do theory, do you?''.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 1998 - Philosophy Today 42 (4):439-447.
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  8.  8
    Winckelmann and the Vatican's Museo Profano : The Documentary Evidence.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2017 - Arion 25 (2):81.
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  9.  3
    We Never Got the Joke: Comedy and Tragedy in Modern Politics.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2017 - Arion 25 (1):173.
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  10.  8
    Who Owes What to Whom? Some Classical Reflections on Debt, Greek and Otherwise.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2018 - Arion 26 (1):165.
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  11.  3
    Classics at the Dawn of the Museum Era: The Life and Times of Antoine Chrysostome Quatremère De Quincy.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2014 - Arion 22 (1):133.
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  12.  4
    The Agony of Inclusion: Historical Greece and European Myths.Louis A. Ruprecht Jr - 2016 - Arion 24 (1):65.
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  13.  33
    Book Review Section 2. [REVIEW]Lynn Ilon, Alan J. Deyoung, Thomas R. Bidell, Sally Lubeck, Jean I. Erdman, Christine M. Shea, Anne E. Campbell, Kathryn A. Woolard, Bruce Beezer, Mario D. Fantini, Robert M. Ryan, D. D. Darland, Charles A. Tesconi Jr, Louis A. Petrone, Georgia C. Collins & Manning M. Pattillo Jr - 1987 - Educational Studies 18 (2):279-356.
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  14.  41
    Marxism and Alternatives. By Tom Rockmore, William J. Gavin, James G. Colbert, Jr., and Thomas J. Blakeley. [REVIEW]Louis A. Barth - 1984 - Modern Schoolman 61 (2):139-140.
  15.  16
    Winckelmann at the Vatican Library.Nello Vian & Louis A. Ruprecht - 2008 - Arion 15 (3):165-184.
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  16.  36
    The "Blackness of Blackness": A Critique of the Sign and the Signifying Monkey.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1983 - Critical Inquiry 9 (4):685-723.
    Perhaps only Tar Baby is as enigmatic and compelling a figure from Afro-American mythic discourse as is that oxymoron, the Signifying Monkey.3 The ironic reversal of a received racist image of the black as simianlike, the Signifying Monkey—he who dwells at the margins of discourse, ever punning, ever troping, ever embodying the ambiguities of language—is our trope for repetition and revision, indeed, is our trope of chiasmus itself, repeating and simultaneously reversing in one deft, discursive act. If Vico and Burke, (...)
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  17.  66
    Editor's Introduction: Writing "Race" and the Difference It Makes.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1985 - Critical Inquiry 12 (1):1-20.
    What importance does “race” have as a meaningful category in the study of literature and the shaping of critical theory? If we attempt to answer this question by examining the history of Western literature and its criticism, our initial response would probably be “nothing” or, at the very least, “nothing explicitly.” Indeed, until the past decade or so, even the most subtle and sensitive literary critics would most likely have argued that, except for aberrant moments in the history of criticism, (...)
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  18.  57
    Venetian Drawings XIV-XVII CenturiesJohn Singleton CopleyRufino TamayoJuan Gris: His Life and WorkFlemish Drawings XV-XVI CenturiesGuernicaThe Prints of Joan MiroHorace Pippin: A Negro Painter in AmericaGiovanni SegantiniSpanish Drawings XV-XIX Centuries.Graziano D'Albanella, James Thomas Flexner, Robert Goldwater, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, Juan Gris, Andre Leclerc, Pablo Picasso, Selden Rodman, Gottardo Segantini, Jose Gomez Sicre, Walter Ueberwasser, Robert Spreng, Bruno Adriani, C. Ludwig Brumme, Alec Miller, Jacques Schnier, Louis Slobodkin, Richard F. French, Simon L. Millner, Edward A. Armstrong, Alfred H. Barr Jr, E. K. Brown, R. O. Dunlop, Walter Pach, Robert Ethridge Moore, Alexander Romm, H. Ruhemann, Hans Tietze, R. H. Wilenski, D. Bartling, W. K. Wimsatt Jr, Samuel Johnson & Leo Stein - 1950 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 8 (3):205.
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  19.  65
    Editors' Introduction: Multiplying Identities.Kwame Anthony Appiah & Henry Louis Gates Jr - 1992 - Critical Inquiry 18 (4):625-629.
    A literary historian might very well characterize the eighties as the period when race, class, and gender became the holy trinity of literary criticism. Critical Inquiry’s contribution to this shift in critical paradigms took the form of two special issues, ”Writing and Sexual Difference,” and “‘Race,’ Writing and Difference.” In the 1990s, however, “race,” “class,” and “gender” threaten to become the regnant clichés of our critical discourse. Our object in this special issue is to help disrupt the cliché-ridden discourse of (...)
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  20.  18
    A la Recherche de l'Etre. Par Manoel Joaquim De Carvalho Jr La Colombe, éditions du Vieux Colombier, Paris, 1961.Louis Lachance - 1963 - Dialogue 2 (1):105-106.
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  21.  8
    Shaper, thinker and visionary: A problem in aesthetics.Louis W. Flaccus - 1942 - In Francis Palmer Clarke & Milton Charles Nahm (eds.), Philosophical essays in honor of Edgar Arthur Singer, jr. London,: H. Milford, Oxford university press. pp. 238.
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  22.  38
    Hume's Moral Sentiments and the Structure of the Treatise.Louis E. Loeb - 1977 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 15 (4):395.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Hume's Moral Sentiments and the Structure of the Treatise LOUIS E. LOEB ACCORDING TO NORMAN KEMP SMITH and Thomas Hearn, Hume classified moral sentiments as direct passions.' According to Pb.II A,rdal, Hume classified the basic moral sentiments of approval and disapproval of persons as indirect passions. if either of these interpretations is correct, there is an intimate connection between Books II and 111 of Hume's Treatise. This is (...)
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  23.  21
    A History of Industrial Power in the United States, 1780-1930. Volume I: Waterpower in the Century of the Steam Engine. Louis C. Hunter. [REVIEW]Edwin Layton Jr - 1981 - Isis 72 (2):311-312.
  24. Louis A. Ruprecht, Jr., Symposia: Plato, The Erotic, And Moral Value Reviewed by.Roderick Nicholls - 2000 - Philosophy in Review 20 (2):148-149.
     
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  25. Schizophrenia, consciousness, and the self.Louis A. Sass & Josef Parnas - 2003 - Schizophrenia Bulletin 29 (3):427-444.
    In recent years, there has been much focus on the apparent heterogeneity of schizophrenic symptoms. By contrast, this article proposes a unifying account emphasizing basic abnormalities of consciousness that underlie and also antecede a disparate assortment of signs and symptoms. Schizophrenia, we argue, is fundamentally a self-disorder or ipseity disturbance that is characterized by complementary distortions of the act of awareness: hyperreflexivity and diminished self-affection. Hyperreflexivity refers to forms of exaggerated self-consciousness in which aspects of oneself are experienced as akin (...)
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  26.  86
    Affectivity in schizophrenia: A phenomenological view.Louis A. Sass - 2004 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (10-11):127-147.
    Schizophrenia involves profound but enigmatic disturbances of affective or emotional life. The affective responses as well as expression of many patients in the schizophrenia spectrum can seem odd, incongruent, inadequate, or otherwise off-the-mark. Such patients are, in fact, often described in rather contradictory terms: as being prone both to exaggerated and to diminished levels of emotional or affective response. According to Ernst Kretschmer, they actually tend to have both kinds of experience at the same time. This paper attempts to explain (...)
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  27.  59
    Frontal brain electrical activity distinguishes valence and intensity of musical emotions.Louis A. Schmidt & Laurel J. Trainor - 2001 - Cognition and Emotion 15 (4):487-500.
  28. Heidegger, schizophrenia and the ontological difference.Louis A. Sass - 1992 - Philosophical Psychology 5 (2):109 – 132.
    This paper offers a phenomenological or hermeneutic reading—employing Heidegger's notion of the 'ontological difference'—of certain central aspects of schizophrenic experience. The main focus is on signs and symptoms that have traditionally been taken to indicate either 'poor reality-testing' or else 'poverty of content of speech' (defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders III-R as: “speech that is adequate in amount but conveys little information because of vagueness, empty repetitions, or use of stereotyped or obscure phrases"). I argue (...)
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  29. The Truth-Taking-Stare: A Heideggerian Interpretation of a Schizophrenic World.Louis A. Sass - 1990 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 21 (2):121-149.
  30. Delusion: The Phenomenological Approach.Louis A. Sass & Elizabeth Pienkos - 2012 - In K. W. M. Fulford (ed.), Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry. Oxford University Press. pp. 632–657.
     
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  31.  44
    Schizophrenia, self-consciousness, and the modern mind.Louis A. Sass - 1998 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 5 (5-6):5-6.
    This paper uses certain of Michel Foucault's ideas concerning modern consciousness (from The Order of Things) to illuminate a central paradox of the schizophrenic condition: a strange oscillation, or even coexistence, between two opposite experiences of the self: between the loss or fragmentation of self and its apotheosis in moments of solipsistic grandeur. Many schizophrenic patients lose their sense of integrated and active intentionality; even their most intimate thoughts and inclinations may be experienced as emanating from, or under the control (...)
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  32. Delusions and double book-keeping.Louis A. Sass - 2013 - In Thomas Fuchs, Thiemo Breyer & Christoph Mundt (eds.), Karl Jaspers’ Philosophy and Psychopathology. New York: Springer. pp. 125–147.
     
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  33.  16
    Schizophrenia: A disturbance of the thematic field.Louis A. Sass - 2004 - In Lester Embree (ed.), Gurwitsch's Relevancy for Cognitive Science. Springer. pp. 59--78.
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  34.  70
    Self-disturbance in schizophrenia: hyperreflexivity and diminished self-affection.Louis A. Sass - 2003 - In Tilo Kircher & Anthony S. David (eds.), The Self in Neuroscience and Psychiatry. Cambridge University Press. pp. 870539117.
  35.  68
    Lacan: the mind of the modernist.Louis A. Sass - 2015 - Continental Philosophy Review 48 (4):409-443.
    This paper offers an intellectual portrait of the French psychoanalyst, Jacques Lacan, by considering his incorporation of perspectives associated with “modernism,” the artistic and intellectual avant-garde of the first half of the twentieth century. These perspectives are largely absent in other alternatives in psychology, psychiatry, and psychoanalysis. Emphasis is placed on Lacan’s affinities with phenomenology, a tradition he criticized and to which he is often seen as opposed. Two general issues are discussed. The first is Lacan’s unparalleled appreciation of the (...)
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  36.  96
    "My So-Called Delusions": Solipsism, Madness, and the Schreber Case.Louis A. Sass - 1994 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 25 (1):70-103.
    This paper offers a critique of a central psychopathological concept, the notion of "poor reality-testing. "Using ideas from the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, I consider the nature of delusions in schizophrenia, largely through examining Daniel Paul Schreber's famous Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. Many schizophrenic individuals do not in fact mistake their fantasies for reality, as is traditionally assumed. Rather, I argue, they engage in a solipsistic mode of experience, a felt subjectivization of the lived world that is associated with a (...)
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  37. Phenomenology, context, and self-experience in schizophrenia.Louis A. Sass & Peter J. Uhlhaas - 2003 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (1):104-105.
    Impairments in cognitive coordination in schizophrenia are supported by phenomenological data that suggest deficits in the processing of visual context. Although the target article is sympathetic to such a phenomenological perspective, we argue that the relevance of phenomenological data for a wider understanding of consciousness in schizophrenia is not sufficiently addressed by the authors.
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  38.  14
    Philosophy East/Philosophy West: A Critical Comparison of Indian, Chinese, Islamic, and European Philosophy.Louis A. Barth - 1980 - Philosophy East and West 30 (2):278-281.
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  39.  70
    Madness and Melancholia.Louis A. Sass & Elizabeth Pienkos - 2013 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 20 (2):161-164.
    It is a Pleasure to comment on Somogy Varga’s intriguing paper, which offers welcome insight into the historical sources, changing uses, and underlying assumptions pertaining to the concept of ‘melancholia,’ especially in relationship to ‘depression.’ We found Varga’s discussion of the relationship between affect and cognition in past discussions of melancholia and depression to be illuminating, especially given the emphasis on cognitive distortions in contemporary psycho-pathology. His explanation of the gradual evolution of the depression concept from melancholia sheds interesting light (...)
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  40. Civilized madness: schizophrenia, self-consciousness and the modern mind.Louis A. Sass - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (2):83-120.
  41. Delusions and double book-keeping.Louis A. Sass - 2013 - In Thomas Fuchs, Thiemo Breyer & Christoph Mundt (eds.), Karl Jaspers’ Philosophy and Psychopathology. New York: Springer. pp. 125–147.
     
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  42.  54
    Delusion, Reality, and Excentricity: Comment on Thomas Fuchs.Louis A. Sass - 2020 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 27 (1):81-83.
    In "Delusion, Reality, and Intersubjectivity," Thomas Fuchs offers a superb presentation of an enactive/phenomenological approach to schizophrenic delusions—an approach that is clearly superior to the poor-reality-testing formula that has dominated thinking about delusion in psychiatry, psychoanalysis, and cognitive-behavioral theory. As he convincingly argues, two key tendencies go a long way toward accounting for the distinctive features of delusion in schizophrenia: 1) withdrawal from practical, sensori-motoric interaction with the physical environment; and 2) failure to experience reality in intersubjective terms—as a realm (...)
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  43.  86
    Michel Foucault and the contradictions of modern thought.Louis A. Sass - 2008 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 28 (2):323-335.
    The present paper offers a sympathetic yet critical examination of Michel Foucault's discussion of the contradictions inherent in the self-consciousness of the modern or post-Kantian mind. Foucault's account of the “empirico-transcendental doublet” of modern thought is shown to provide a useful mapping of humanist, anti-humanist, and postmodern responses to the reflexivity of the modern “ episteme”. Foucault is criticized for his insufficiently critical treatment of structuralism . Foucault is also defended against the charge that he undermines his own position through (...)
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  44.  6
    The Land of Unreality: On the Phenomenology of the Schizophrenic Break.Louis A. Sass - 1988 - New Ideas in Psychology 6 (2):223–242.
    This study in comparative phenomenology offers a description of the lived-world of the Stimmung, an experience especially characteristic of early stages of schizophrenia. In this state, the patient will stare transfixed at an alienated perceptual world that may have one or more of several anomalous characteristics. The world may seem strangely unreal; objects may seem fragmented, or devoid of standard pragmatic meanings and manifesting instead their sheer existence; or objects and events may seem imbued with a tantalizing but ineffable quality (...)
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  45.  52
    The middle way: Charles Taylor on knowledge and the self.Louis A. Sass - 1986 - Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 6 (1):49-54.
    Reviews the books, Philosophical papers, volume I: Human agency and language by Charles Taylor and Philosophical papers, volume II: Philosophy and the human sciences by Charles Taylor. Professor Taylor of McGill University is one of a number of thinkers who are attempting the difficult and important task of taking the social sciences "beyond objectivism and relativism." One of the foremost philosophers of his generation, Taylor has long devoted himself to study of the foundations of the social sciences, especially psychology and (...)
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  46. Madness and Modernism : Insanity in the Light of Modern Art, Literature, and Thought vol. 1.Louis A. Sass - 1992 - New York: BasicBooks.
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  47. Verse: En Arke.Louis A. Haselmayer - 1960 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 41 (4):470.
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  48.  28
    Art objects as people: A new paradigm for the psychology of art.Louis A. Moffett - 1975 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 5 (2):215–223.
  49.  43
    Promoting prosocial actions: The importance of culture and values.Louis A. Penner - 2000 - Journal of Social Philosophy 31 (4):477–487.
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  50.  14
    Lived Aspects of Natural Scientific Method.Louis A. Perrott - 1979 - Duquesne Studies in Phenomenological Psychology 3:97-110.
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