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Displaying: 21-29 of 29 documents


philosophical anthropogenesis
21. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Feorillo P. A. Demeterio III Foucauldian Reexamination of the Aristotelian, Aquinian, and Contemporary Roman Catholic Theories of Hominization
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Hominization theory speculates on the process and chronology of a human embryo’s ensoulment. Aristotle, a key ancient Greek thinker, presented his own hominization theory based on his hylemorphic metaphysics and pioneering researches in embryology. Thomas Aquinas, a medieval philosopher and theologian, built his Christian and Catholic hominization theory on the foundations laid down by Aristotle. The contemporary Roman Catholic Church, with its own prolife, anti-abortion and anticontraception agenda, modified the Aristotelian and Thomistic hominization theories by allegedly benchmarking on recent developments in human embryology. This paper uses the archeological and genealogical methods, as developed by the French poststructuralist and postmodernist philosopher Michel Foucault, in reexamining these three hominization theories as discourses, in comparing and contrasting their epistemic contexts, and in peering into their respective genealogies. Contrary to common assumptions, these three hominization theories have very few elements in common and are actually divergent. The underpinning intention of this paper is to demonstrate the strengths and weaknesses of the contemporary Roman Catholic Church’s hominization theory.
philosophy of mind
22. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Emmanuel Ifeanyi Ani Questioning an Epiphenomenalist Syllogism
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I focus on a certain epiphenomenalist syllogism summarized by Sarah Patterson. Contemporary epiphenomenalists believe that (A) mental properties are distinct from physical properties, (B) the physical properties of mental events are causally sufficient for the physical effects of those events, (C) given (B), no properties of mental events distinct from their physical properties are causally efficacious in bringing about their physical effects, and (D) the mental properties of mental events are therefore not causally efficacious in bringing about the physical effects of those events. I argue that (C) is at tension with the principle of nomological necessity supposedly binding supervening to subvenient properties, and I argue that (B), upon which (C) is based, is contradicted by the reality of intentionality, a reality that I demonstrate through, among other ways, a thought experiment about a counterfactual involving the possibility of changes in society at the removal of morality and law.
philosophy of religion
23. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Olusegun Noah Olawoyin Philosophical Basis for Nigerian Religious Pluralism
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Nigeria is one of the most religious countries in the world. The major religions are Islam, Christianity, and African traditional religion. Nigeria is also notorious for ethno-religious conflicts, especially in the North eastern part of the country. Many factors have been identified as causes of the conflicts, including religious intolerance, desertification, poverty, cultural differences, foreign influences, and political differences. This paper argues that, although the conflicts were usually triggered by flimsy incidents, the protagonists’ exclusivistic attitude as regards value is the root cause of the conflicts. Each of the protagonists in the conflict, the ethnic and religious groups, regards its own worldview as the only true one. Using conceptual analytical method to analyse the Nigerian situation, this paper uses process philosophical concept of truth to propose that differences in value may not necessarily lead to conflicts. In fact, it may lead to deeper religion, beauty, and depth of personality. “Deep” or “Complementary” pluralism is thus recommended for tolerance and peace in Nigeria.
political philosophy
24. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Brendan Howe Civic Virtue: the Rights and Duties of Citizenship
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Civic virtue is a bulwark against authoritarianism, but also against the worst excesses of democracy. It has been appropriated by the proponents of republicanism and communitarianism, focusing upon duties rather than rights, and the collective rather than the individual. This paper demonstrates, however, that republicanism and community values are not mutually exclusive with the concept of universal individual human rights. It considers traditional interpretations of civic virtue from both West and East, then introduces a conceptualization of the relationship between rights and responsibilities which alienates neither the liberal concept of individuals as universal human rights bearers, nor the communitarian perspectives.
book review
25. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Wilfried M. A. Vanhoutte Giacomo Borbone and Krzysztof, Brzechczyn. Idealization 14: Models in Science
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book note
26. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Noelle Leslie dela Cruz Kamel Daoud. The Meursault investigation (Translated by John Cullen)
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27. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Book Notices
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28. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Books and Journals Received
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29. Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1
Notes on Contributors
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