101.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
22
Nikolaj Zunic
Method in Philosophy: Maritain’s Engagement with Modernity
|
|
|
102.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
22
Daniel Gallagher
Maritain, Eco, and the History of Philosophical Aesthetics
|
|
|
103.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
22
Robbie Moser
St. Thomas, John Haldane and Mind
|
|
|
104.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
22
Will Brown
Socialism, the Self and the State
|
|
|
105.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
22
François F. Savard
Some Reflections on Thomism, Modern Chemistry, and the Four Causes
|
|
|
106.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
26
Leonard Ferry
The Framework of Deference: Obedience as a Political Virtue
|
|
|
107.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
26
Leslie Armour
Nicolas of Cusa and The Coming of Modernity: Infinity and Creativity, The Power of Language and the Paradoxes of Separation
|
|
|
108.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
26
David Bellusci
Gasparo Contarini: From Scholasticism to Renaissance Humanism
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
This paper examines the shift from Scholasticism to Renaissance humanism by focussing on the Italian humanist, Gasparo Contarini (1483-1542). The politico-religious climate of 15th-16th century Italy represents the arena in which Contarini developed his philosophy. His studies at the University of Padova where Padovan Aristotelianism dominated reflected the basis of his intellectual formation. The Platonic revival of Renaissance Italy also made its way into Contarini’s humanist philosophy.
|
|
|
109.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
26
Brendan Hennigan
Common Estimation and Fairness in Exchange: The Neglected Contribution of Scholastic Economic Thought
|
|
|
110.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
26
James G. Hanink
The Metaphysics of Moral Evil: Context, Truth and Character
|
|
|
111.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
26
Iva Apostalova
Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia and Margaret Cavendish: The Feminine Touch in 17th Century Epistemology
|
|
|
112.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
Leslie Armour
Cultural Interaction and Christian Paradox
|
|
|
113.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
Gabor Csepregi
Intercultural Approach to Philosophical Anthropology
|
|
|
114.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
Jason P. Blahuta
The Prospects for Philosophy as a Means of Intercultural Dialogue
|
|
|
115.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
R. A. Ventresca
Brothers-in-Arms: Jacques Maritain and Yves R. Simon: Moral Knowledge and Political Action in Interwar Europe
|
|
|
116.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
Christopher S. Morrissey
Aquinas’s Third Way as a Reply to Stephen Hawking’s Cosmological Hypothesis
|
|
|
117.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
Anthony Mansueto
Philosophy and Theology in Intercultural Deliberation
|
|
|
118.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
David Bellusci
Christian Morality: Pelagius and St. Augustine
|
|
|
119.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
27
John Liptay
Natural Law and/as Intercultural Philosophy
|
|
|
120.
|
Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies:
Volume >
3
Ralph Nelson
Classes, Elites and Parties in the Perspective of Integral Humanism
|
|
|