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261. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Thomas De Koninck Reflexions sur l'intelligence
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Jacques Maritain's concern for the intellect and everything it implies is evident everywhere in his work from the very outset It would be presumptuous and in any case impossible to sketch in one short talk even an outline of such a fundamental theme of his thought or indeed of philosophy. Still, it has become probably more vital today than ever before to awake to what intellect means. This brief paper attempts merely to indicate a few questions worth pursuing anew in the spirit both of Maritain and the chief sources of his thought on the matter. The questions include the following. Why invariably link together human dignity and intellect, as our tradition, no less theological than philosophical, undoubtedly seems to? Objections to this are, prima facie, rather obvious: an excessive cult of rationality; an implicit neglect of other, far more important, values; apparent scorn for the ignorant or the uninstructed; most plainly, forgetting love and the human heart. We face again the question: whence the dignity of intellect? What light can we expect the neurosciences and similar disciplies to shed on the nature of the mind? Are reason and intellect quite the same thing? What is intellectualknow ledge; its relation to existence and the existent; its relation to beauty and to the transcendentals; and its role in creativity? In a word, how is one to interpret Augustine's Intellectum vero valdeama? Or to face the greatest interpretive challenge of all, the famous saying of StJohn of the Cross: "One thought alone of man is worth more than the entire world; hence God alone is worthy of it"?
262. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
John P. Hittinger The Intuition of Being: Metaphysics or Poetry
263. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
John F. X. Knasas How Thomistic is the Intuition of Being?
264. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Charles P. O' Donnell The Christian Existentialist Political Philosophy of Maritain
265. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Bertrand Rioux L'intuition de l'etre chez Maritain
266. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Ralph Nelson Voluntarism in Ethics
267. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Peter Redpath Bergsonian Recollections in Maritain
268. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Michel Legault De I' existence et de l'education
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For John Dewey, philosophy is "the theory of education in its most general aspects." Throughout history we see a close tie between an author's philosophical thought and his educational principles. Jacques Maritain is quite aware of this, and manifests it in his own writing. In Maritain the educational theorist is Maritain the metaphysician. His metaphysics of the human person and of human action, of knowledge and free will, treated in Existence and the Existent, are at the heart of Towards a Philosophy of Education, not only in a general way but even in its practical application, such as the choice of a curriculum and the pedagogical methods used.
269. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
John G. Trapani Foundations of Maritain's Notion of the Artist's "Self"
270. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
John C. Cahalan Making Something Out of Nihilation
271. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Michael Torre The Sin of Man and the Love of God
272. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Roger Duncan Freedom and the Unconscious
273. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Joseph J. Califano Modernization and Human Values
274. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
John W. Cooper Natural Law and Economic Humanism
275. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Desmond FitzGerald Without Me You Can Do Nothing
276. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Laura Westra Freedom, Existence and Existentialism
277. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Deal W. Hudson Can Happiness Be Saved?
278. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
David Higgins Evil in Maritain and Lonergan: The Emerging Possibility of a Synthesis
279. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Raymond Dennehy The Contemporaneity of Maritain's Existence and the Existent
280. Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies: Volume > 4
Jean-Louis Allard "Le temoignage intellectuellement manifesté"