41.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Λήϴη
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42.
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2006
Julio César Díaz
Kóρος
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43.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Renderings
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44.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
The Minotaur
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45.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
The Libertador
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46.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
The History of Ontology
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47.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Traveler's Journals
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48.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Acknowledgments
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49.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Zeno
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50.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Images of Cruelty
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51.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
The Question of Being
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52.
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2006
Julio César Díaz
At Delphi
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53.
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2006
Julio César Díaz
Notes
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54.
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2006
Julio César Díaz
Cruelty as Imperative
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55.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Family Pictures
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56.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2006
Julio César Díaz
Mintage
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57.
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2006
Julio César Díaz
Assertions
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58.
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2006
Julio César Díaz
Gestures
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59.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2009
Stephen David Ross
Diachrony
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A giving which gives only its gift, but in the giving holds itself back and withdraws, . . . . (Heidegger, TB, 8)the Forgotten is . . . the Law. (Lyotard, “HJ," 147)how could this thought (Heidegger’s), a thought so devoted to remembering that a forgetting (of Being) takes place in all thought, in all art, in all “representation” of the world, how could it possibly have ignored the thought of [that] which, in a certain sense, thinks, tries to think, nothing but that very fact? . . . to the point of suppressing and foreclosing to the very end the horrifying (and inane) attempt at exterminating, at making us forget forever what, in Europe, reminds us, ever since the beginning, that “there is” the Forgotten? (Lyotard, HJ, 4)[I]n witnessing, one also exterminates. The witness is a traitor. (Lyotard, I, 204)The Other becomes my neighbour precisely through the way the face summons me, calls for me, begs for me, and in so doing recalls my responsibility, and calls me into question.. . . as if I had to answer for the other’s death even before being. (83)
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60.
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International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:
2009
Stephen David Ross
Bibliography
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