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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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About Our Contributors
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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K. Gover
The Overlooked Work of Art in “The Origin of the Work of Art”
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In this essay I call attention to the fact that there is a work of art in Heidegger’s “The Origin of the Work of Art,” and yet almost no one talks about it: the C. F. Meyer poem “Roman Fountain.” This critical silence is all the more ironic, since (1) it is a self-sufficient artwork, and not just described or mentioned in the text; and (2) the poem’s fountain, as man-made spring, seems to speak to—if not speak of—Heidegger’s thesis concerning the Ur-sprung of the artwork itself. I argue that the poem illuminates a central problem or question concerning the status of art as mimesis, and I suggest that the reason why this poem tends to be overlooked amid the “obsessive” critical attention that it otherwise attracts can be found within the essay itself.
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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H. O. Mounce
Nature and Ethics
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The first part of this paper deals with Mill’s influential criticism of the natural law tradition. According to Mill, this tradition is based on a mistaken conception of nature. This essay argues that Mill’s own view of nature is misconceived and that this misconception leads him to misrepresent the tradition itself. The second part deals with those modern philosophers who reject the natural law tradition but who nevertheless attempt to account for morality as being based on human nature. Certain criticisms are made of their views. The chief criticism is that their views are based on an idea of nature that is no different from Mill’s.
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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John Peterson
Is there Natural Purpose?
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In human beings, choice and action require a cause of a different kind to link them. Otherwise a vicious regress breaks out. This is cause in the sense of end or purpose. It stands between choice and action, making a reciprocative causal triad. Yet apart from our projects, this triad obtains in nature too, and for the same reason. In reproduction, as in choice and action, means are activities that are directed to the replication of pre-existing patterns as ends. Further, when agents are taken not as active but as capable of certain activities, the latter are not means as in reproduction but themselves ends. In this sense, it can be said that persons have a natural end as persons, a thesis for which two arguments are proposed.
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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John R. White
Divine Light and Human Wisdom:
Transcendental Elements in Bonaventure’s Illumination Theory
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This paper argues that structural elements of Bonaventure’s illumination theory significantly parallel Kantian transcendental philosophy. The question of whetherand what elements of transcendental thought can be found in Bonaventure’s philosophy is potentially instructive both for understanding medieval influences on transcendental philosophy and for raising the philosophical question of why substantially similar premises and thought-patterns result in substantially different solutions. After defining what I mean by “transcendental philosophy” and justifying that definition I turn to Bonaventure’s illumination theory and highlight thought patterns parallel to Kantian transcendental philosophy that emerge in Bonaventure’s epistemology. Finally, I discuss how their differences help us to understand the variations in medieval and modern solutions to what is sometimes termed “the transcendental problem.”
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Richard D. Winfield
How Should Essence Be Determined?:
Reflections on Hegel’s Two Divergent Accounts
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Hegel presents two very different accounts of the initial categorization of essence in his Science of Logic and his later Encyclopedia Logic, thereby raising the question of whether this discrepancy undermines the univocal necessity of systematic logic. A close examination of these arguments reveals that the Science of Logic account captures a necessary ordering that is incompletely presented in the Encyclopedia. The details are provided for comprehending why the logic of essence must begin with a contrast of the essential and the unessential, how this reverts to illusory being (whose determining entails three successive forms of reflection), and why identity depends upon the transformation of refl ection from being positing to being external to being determining in character. Significantly, the self-developing nature of these logical developments calls into question the foundationalism entailed by any privileging of the categories of essence.
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Eric LaRock
Is Consciousness Really a Brain Process?
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I argue on the basis of recent findings in neuroscience that consciousness is not a brain process, and then explore some alternative, non-reductive options concerning the metaphysical relationship between consciousness and the brain, such as weak and strong accounts of the emergence of consciousness and the constitution view of consciousness. I propose an Aristotelian account of the strong emergence of consciousness. This account motivates a wider ontology than reductive physicalism and makes reference to formal causation as a way explaining the causal power of consciousness. What is meant by formal causation, in thiscontext, is that consciousness has the causal power to organize or control neuronal activity. This notion of causation is elaborated and supported by recent findings in the neurosciences. An advantage of this empirically informed approach is that proponents of the irreducibility of consciousness no longer need to rely upon conceptually based arguments alone, but can build a case against reductive physicalism that has a significant empirical foundation.
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feature book discussion |
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Linda Martín Alcoff
Surviving Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality by Jorge J. E. Gracia; Mapping the Boundaries of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Lucius T. Outlaw, Jr.
Surviving Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality by Jorge J. E. Gracia; Writing a Check that “Philosophy” Can’t Cash?
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Jorge J. E. Gracia
Surviving Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality by Jorge J. E. Gracia; The Foundations of a Philosophy of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality
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book reviews and notices |
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Bas C. van Fraassen
Philosophical Perspectives on Infinity—Graham Oppy
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Gregory J. Kerr
Why Politics Needs Religion:
The Place of Religious Arguments in the Public Square—Brendan Sweetman
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Andrew Jaspers, S.J.
Double-Effect Reasoning—T.A. Cavanaugh
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Clyde Lee Miller
Master of Learned Ignorance:
Eriugena, Eckhart, Cusanus—Donald F. Duclow
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Bradley C.S. Watson
Lectures on the History of Political Philosophy—John Rawls, ed. Samuel Freeman
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Yunus Tuncel
The Aesthetic Paths of Philosophy:
Presentation in Kant, Heidegger, Lacoue-Labarthe, and Nancy—Alison Ross
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Curtis L. Hancock
Praeambula Fidei:
Thomism and the God of the Philosophers—Ralph McInerny
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Joseph W. Koterski, S.J.
Aims:
A Brief Metaphysics for Today—James W. Felt
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Daniel N. Field
Book Notices
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books received |
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International Philosophical Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Books Received
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