View - OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
... moralists have every right to hold the agent accountable. Free will assumes that the strong can choose to become weak, and if they do not, then the strong may be justifiably punished. Regarding component (2), the notion of a transparent or stable ‘self’ undermines the ...
... moralists have every right to hold the agent accountable. Free will assumes that the strong can choose to become weak, and if they do not, then the strong may be justifiably punished. Regarding component (2), the notion of a transparent or stable ‘self’ undermines the ...
HpS Read to %%% This is just a wonderful text. Would like so, so
... neither regardeth he the praises of men. If I knew all the things that are in the world, and were not in charity, what should it help me before God, who is to judge me according to my deeds? 2. Rest from inordinate desire of knowledge, for therein is found much distraction and deceit. Those who have ...
... neither regardeth he the praises of men. If I knew all the things that are in the world, and were not in charity, what should it help me before God, who is to judge me according to my deeds? 2. Rest from inordinate desire of knowledge, for therein is found much distraction and deceit. Those who have ...
rtf - Books4free
... sight; neither regardeth he the praises of men. If I knew all the things that are in the world, and were not in charity, what should it help me before God, who is to judge me according to my deeds? 2. Rest from inordinate desire of knowledge, for therein is found much distraction and deceit. Those w ...
... sight; neither regardeth he the praises of men. If I knew all the things that are in the world, and were not in charity, what should it help me before God, who is to judge me according to my deeds? 2. Rest from inordinate desire of knowledge, for therein is found much distraction and deceit. Those w ...
Nietzsche`s Conception of Friendship
... - Introduction Perhaps more than many other philosophers, Friedrich Nietzsche wove his personality and feelings throughout his philosophy, reminding his readers that philosophy is not simply books, ideas and abstractions. Rather philosophy should pervade the daily routines, the most casual interacti ...
... - Introduction Perhaps more than many other philosophers, Friedrich Nietzsche wove his personality and feelings throughout his philosophy, reminding his readers that philosophy is not simply books, ideas and abstractions. Rather philosophy should pervade the daily routines, the most casual interacti ...
THE PHILOSOPHIES OF HISTORY OF HERDER AND
... action on Earth and throughout history much more important. It is to link human reason to a source that awaits our response, our use of the very gift that makes us so different from the other animals: it is to measure our ends against the possibility of a greater, invisible end, and thus to force a ...
... action on Earth and throughout history much more important. It is to link human reason to a source that awaits our response, our use of the very gift that makes us so different from the other animals: it is to measure our ends against the possibility of a greater, invisible end, and thus to force a ...
Walker Percy and the Magic of Naming
... named, he believed that, unless it has a name, it can never be known, never experienced. Naming (specifically) and symbolization (more generally) make us qualitatively different from our animal cousins. It is the doorway to our humanity. Walker Percy wanted to find a cohesive and decisive explanator ...
... named, he believed that, unless it has a name, it can never be known, never experienced. Naming (specifically) and symbolization (more generally) make us qualitatively different from our animal cousins. It is the doorway to our humanity. Walker Percy wanted to find a cohesive and decisive explanator ...
devotions upon emergent occasions
... various wheels in the faculties of the soul, and in the organs of the body, and leave out grace, that should move them? or will God make a spring, and not wind it up? Infuse his first grace, and not second it with more, without which we can no more use his first grace when we have it, than we could ...
... various wheels in the faculties of the soul, and in the organs of the body, and leave out grace, that should move them? or will God make a spring, and not wind it up? Infuse his first grace, and not second it with more, without which we can no more use his first grace when we have it, than we could ...
RTF - Third Millennium Ministries
... Watson is very great indeed, and that of the subscribers to the series is, I believe, hardly less. For the translator of Hilary has before him a very difficult task. It has not been with this as with other volumes of the series, where an excellent translation already existed and careful revision was ...
... Watson is very great indeed, and that of the subscribers to the series is, I believe, hardly less. For the translator of Hilary has before him a very difficult task. It has not been with this as with other volumes of the series, where an excellent translation already existed and careful revision was ...
new Nietzsche
... porary readers were few indeed . To construct a text , much less to have it understood , on some basis other than the reactive tradition of theology, ...
... porary readers were few indeed . To construct a text , much less to have it understood , on some basis other than the reactive tradition of theology, ...
Text - McGill University
... Translating Byron’s despair as romantic melancholy into the philosophical language of existentialism is vindicated given the way a critic like Thomas Pfau has approached Keats’s melancholy, for instance, both in terms of pre-Enlightenment epistemology and Heideggerian existentialism. Pfau insists th ...
... Translating Byron’s despair as romantic melancholy into the philosophical language of existentialism is vindicated given the way a critic like Thomas Pfau has approached Keats’s melancholy, for instance, both in terms of pre-Enlightenment epistemology and Heideggerian existentialism. Pfau insists th ...
Heidegger, Žižek and Revolution
... revolutionary change is necessary, but at the same time emphasise the role of careful and painstaking thought. The work of both thinkers is shot through with an urgent awareness of crisis, propelling them to untiring and unyielding philosophical resistance. In the 1950’s and 1960’s Heidegger speaks ...
... revolutionary change is necessary, but at the same time emphasise the role of careful and painstaking thought. The work of both thinkers is shot through with an urgent awareness of crisis, propelling them to untiring and unyielding philosophical resistance. In the 1950’s and 1960’s Heidegger speaks ...
Kierkegaard`s Ethic of Love: Divine Commands and Moral Obligations
... morality would be fundamentally transformed if we came to believe that there were no such things as moral duties. If moral duties do depend on God in some significant way, this is not a trivial matter. There are several ways that God and moral duties might be linked. The most fundamental way is onto ...
... morality would be fundamentally transformed if we came to believe that there were no such things as moral duties. If moral duties do depend on God in some significant way, this is not a trivial matter. There are several ways that God and moral duties might be linked. The most fundamental way is onto ...
Some Observations on Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, Book Five
... Interpretation of the Tabernacle,” in: Studia Patristica 31, 1997, 415-416, 418-419, argues that Clement responds to Valentinians in this passage, but the references she adduces to support this point are not convincing. Moreover, the view that faith concerns the Son, as opposed to knowledge which co ...
... Interpretation of the Tabernacle,” in: Studia Patristica 31, 1997, 415-416, 418-419, argues that Clement responds to Valentinians in this passage, but the references she adduces to support this point are not convincing. Moreover, the view that faith concerns the Son, as opposed to knowledge which co ...
Romans 5:10 - Third Millennium Ministries
... Lord Bacon. He dedicated his work to Sir Nathaniel, and speaks of him a having been a hearer of what he published when delivered from the pulpit. f2 His style is that of his age, and appear quaint now; but his thoughts are often very striking an truly excellent, and his sentiments are wholly in acco ...
... Lord Bacon. He dedicated his work to Sir Nathaniel, and speaks of him a having been a hearer of what he published when delivered from the pulpit. f2 His style is that of his age, and appear quaint now; but his thoughts are often very striking an truly excellent, and his sentiments are wholly in acco ...
Kierkegaard and Carl Schmitt
... Führer Protects the Law”13. In the same year, due mostly to his Weimar past, Catholic background, and diverse factionalism within the Party, he did lose his government and party appointments after an inquiry, but kept his job and his life, protected by none other than Herman Göring 1893-1946). In 19 ...
... Führer Protects the Law”13. In the same year, due mostly to his Weimar past, Catholic background, and diverse factionalism within the Party, he did lose his government and party appointments after an inquiry, but kept his job and his life, protected by none other than Herman Göring 1893-1946). In 19 ...
Living Under God`s Law: Christian Ethics
... may also be impressed by the rigorousness of Scripture, the high cost of discipleship. They want to teach an ethic that does not compromise with worldliness, a radical ethic of discipline and self-control. We tend to describe the first type of ethic as liberal, the second as conservative. Down throu ...
... may also be impressed by the rigorousness of Scripture, the high cost of discipleship. They want to teach an ethic that does not compromise with worldliness, a radical ethic of discipline and self-control. We tend to describe the first type of ethic as liberal, the second as conservative. Down throu ...
Theory and Praxis in Leibniz`s Theological Thought
... sophistication of Leibniz’s writings on issues specific to Christian theology, and to their relevance to and impact on his philosophical views.6 In the light of this recent scholarship, this paper will re-assess the place of theology in Leibniz’s thought focusing on the relationship between theory ...
... sophistication of Leibniz’s writings on issues specific to Christian theology, and to their relevance to and impact on his philosophical views.6 In the light of this recent scholarship, this paper will re-assess the place of theology in Leibniz’s thought focusing on the relationship between theory ...
alarmed by the voice of jack deere
... success, as recounted anecdotally, to sound plausible. So, who is and who is not believable? And, how does one tell? In our age of rampant spiritual deceit, one cannot be too careful (Acts 17:11). Jack Deere has followed up his previous work Surprised by the Power of the Spirit (Zondervan, 1993)2 wi ...
... success, as recounted anecdotally, to sound plausible. So, who is and who is not believable? And, how does one tell? In our age of rampant spiritual deceit, one cannot be too careful (Acts 17:11). Jack Deere has followed up his previous work Surprised by the Power of the Spirit (Zondervan, 1993)2 wi ...
A Companion to Philosophy in the Middle Ages
... but also one of the richest and more complex. Its roots go back to ancient philosophy and we are still living with some of its consequences today. Indeed, a very large part of our philosophical vocabulary, whether in English, Spanish, or any other western European language, was developed in the Midd ...
... but also one of the richest and more complex. Its roots go back to ancient philosophy and we are still living with some of its consequences today. Indeed, a very large part of our philosophical vocabulary, whether in English, Spanish, or any other western European language, was developed in the Midd ...
Eschatology in a Secular Age - Scholar Commons
... philosophical achievements and offers an “eschatological metaphysics.” He distinguishes eschatology from teleology arguing against teleology, noting that only a “personalist” eschatology can solve the problems of dualism and objectification. Blumenberg differs from Heidegger and Berdyaev by offering ...
... philosophical achievements and offers an “eschatological metaphysics.” He distinguishes eschatology from teleology arguing against teleology, noting that only a “personalist” eschatology can solve the problems of dualism and objectification. Blumenberg differs from Heidegger and Berdyaev by offering ...
as a PDF
... philosophical achievements and offers an “eschatological metaphysics.” He distinguishes eschatology from teleology arguing against teleology, noting that only a “personalist” eschatology can solve the problems of dualism and objectification. Blumenberg differs from Heidegger and Berdyaev by offering ...
... philosophical achievements and offers an “eschatological metaphysics.” He distinguishes eschatology from teleology arguing against teleology, noting that only a “personalist” eschatology can solve the problems of dualism and objectification. Blumenberg differs from Heidegger and Berdyaev by offering ...
Recovering Play: On the Relationship Between Leisure and
... tion (Entwurf) forward into future possibilities. Projection captures the way in which our existence is always ahead-of-itself as we ceaselessly press into already available social roles, practices, and commitments until our greatest ownmost (eigenst) possibility, death. As such, the self should not ...
... tion (Entwurf) forward into future possibilities. Projection captures the way in which our existence is always ahead-of-itself as we ceaselessly press into already available social roles, practices, and commitments until our greatest ownmost (eigenst) possibility, death. As such, the self should not ...
acts of vileness that kenyan church leaders must
... When God unleashes His plagues or any other form of His judgments, He does it in such a way that men cannot undo what is being brought forth by God. Because the “so called Christians” of this generation have been very lazy about seeking God and His will, they have called down the wrath of God upon t ...
... When God unleashes His plagues or any other form of His judgments, He does it in such a way that men cannot undo what is being brought forth by God. Because the “so called Christians” of this generation have been very lazy about seeking God and His will, they have called down the wrath of God upon t ...
Word format - Robert J. Dunzweiler Memorial Library at IBRI.org
... facts which come into use in the more advanced disciplines, especially in the way of the manifold experiments that have been made during the ages in Christian organization, worship, living, and creed-building, as well as of the sifted results of the reasoned thinking and deep experience of Christian ...
... facts which come into use in the more advanced disciplines, especially in the way of the manifold experiments that have been made during the ages in Christian organization, worship, living, and creed-building, as well as of the sifted results of the reasoned thinking and deep experience of Christian ...
Theology of Hope by Jurgen Moltmann Chapter 1
... to the brim with future hope of a messianic kind for the world, -- owing to this, hope emigrated as it were from the Church and turned in one distorted form or another against the Church. In actual fact, however, eschatology means the doctrine of the Christian hope, which embraces both the object ho ...
... to the brim with future hope of a messianic kind for the world, -- owing to this, hope emigrated as it were from the Church and turned in one distorted form or another against the Church. In actual fact, however, eschatology means the doctrine of the Christian hope, which embraces both the object ho ...