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Results for 'Jean-Luc Bennahmias'

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  1.  5
    Résolument démocrate, et toujours écologiste!Jean-LucBennahmias -2010 - Gap: Yves Michel.
    Comment une formation politique répond-elle, au XXIème siècle, à son électorat? Comment faire face aux défis futurs autrement que par le biais d'un débat politique bipolarisé? Cela passe nécessairement par la mise en avant d'un discours résolument démocrate... et toujours écologiste! A chaque instant, la recherche du positionnement juste doit être notre fil conducteur. Sur l'équité, la solidarité et l'engagement en faveur d'une transformation réelle de notre société, nous avons tous notre mot à dire afin de préparer l'avenir! Tel est (...) l'enjeu! Aux niveaux européen, national, régional et local, nous sommes invités à réagir. Parfois pour saluer certaines avancées courageuses, souvent pour rappeler l'existence de certaines lignes rouges déjà allègrement franchies et dénoncer les égarements des responsables politiques en place. Doucement mais sûrement, une autre voie se dessine! Cet ouvrage se propose de mettre en lumière les thèmes sur lesquels les démocrates français et européens doivent désormais avancer de manière significative. Sans avoir la prétention d'apporter toutes les réponses,Jean-LucBennahmias contribue au débat à travers des textes, réflexions et entretiens récents faisant sens dans son parcours politique. Il rappelle un certain nombre de ses prises de position historiques sur des questions essentielles, telles que l'action à mener envers les jeunes, les libertés, les minorités ou bien encore l'Union européenne. Et il réaffirme la vigueur de son combat pour une écologie omniprésente dans nos politiques publiques. (shrink)
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  2.  38
    (1 other version)Interview mitJean-Luc Nancy.Jean-Luc Nancy,Nathalie Eder,Lilly Kroth &Martin Eleven -2017 -Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 8 (1):79-84.
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  3.  39
    Technology and French Thought: a Dialogue BetweenJean-Luc Nancy and François-David Sebbah.François-David Sebbah &Jean-Luc Nancy -2022 -Philosophy and Technology 35 (3):1-14.
    This paper is not an article in a regular sense. It is a dialogue between François-David Sebbah, one of the two editors of this topical collection, andJean-Luc Nancy, one of the most eminent representatives of the contemporary French Thought. This dialogue took place in the first half of 2022 in a written form, because of the sanitary restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic and because Nancy was heavily sick. Sebbah sent to Nancy a text, corresponding to Section 2.1, (...) and Nancy responded to it with another text, corresponding to Section 2.2. Unfortunately, Nancy died on August 23, 2022, and could not revise his own text nor pursue the dialogue, as it was originally planned. For this reason, an introductory clarification by Sebbah, corresponding to Section 1, has been added. The purpose of such clarification is to introduce the reader to Nancy’s philosophy of technology—although technology never had a central role in Nancy’s reflections. In Section 2.1, Sebbah proposes a distinction between “French Theory,” “French Thought,” and “French Philosophy.” He also proposes a list of twelve possible intersections between the French Thought and the philosophy of technology. In Section 2.2, Nancy criticizes the use of expressions such as “French Thought.” He also insists, in a Heideggerian vein, on the fact that Technology (with a capital “T”) does not depend on human ends but has its own ends. (shrink)
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  4. Jean-Luc Nancy, par lui-même.Jean-Luc Nancy -2014 -Cités 58 (2).
     
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  5.  32
    The Possibility of a World: Conversations with Pierre-Philippe Jandin.Jean-Luc Nancy,Pierre-Philippe Jandin,Travis Holloway &Flor Méchain -2017 - New York: Fordham University Press. Edited by Pierre-Philippe Jandin.
    Jean-Luc Nancy discusses his life's work with Pierre-Philippe Jandin. As Nancy looks back on his philosophical texts, he thinks anew about democracy, community, jouissance, love, Christianity, and the arts.
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  6. De l'âme.Jean-Luc Nancy -2008 - InCorpus. New York: Fordham University Press.
     
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  7.  124
    The erotic phenomenon.Jean-Luc Marion -2007 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    While humanists have pondered the subject of love to the point of obsessiveness, philosophers have steadfastly ignored it. One might wonder whether the discipline of philosophy even recognizes love. The word philosophy means “love of wisdom,” but the absence of love from philosophical discourse is curiously glaring. So where did the love go? In The Erotic Phenomenon,Jean-Luc Marion asks this fundamental question of philosophy, while reviving inquiry into the concept of love itself. Marion begins his profound and personal (...) book with a critique of Descartes’ equation of the ego’s ability to doubt with the certainty that one exists—“I think, therefore I am”—arguing that this is worse than vain. We encounter being, he says, when we first experience love: I am loved, therefore I am; and this love is the reason I care whether I exist or not. This philosophical base allows Marion to probe several manifestations of love and its variations, including carnal excitement, self-hate, lying and perversion, fidelity, the generation of children, and the love of God. Throughout, Marion stresses that all erotic phenomena, including sentimentality, pornography, and even boasts about one’s sexual conquests, stem not from the ego as popularly understood but instead from love. A thoroughly enlightening and captivating philosophical investigation of a strangely neglected subject, The Erotic Phenomenon is certain to initiate feverish new dialogue about the philosophical meanings of that most desirable and mysterious of all concepts—love. (shrink)
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  8.  388
    The being-with of being-there.Jean-Luc Nancy -2008 -Continental Philosophy Review 41 (1):1-15.
    In Being and Time, Heidegger affirms that being-with or Mitsein is an essential constitution of Dasein but he does not submit this existential to the same rigorous analyses as other existentials. In this essay,Jean-Luc Nancy points to the different places where Heidegger erased the possibility of thinking an essential with that he himself opened. This erasure is due, according to Nancy, to the subordination of Mitsein to a thinking of the proper and the improper. The polarization of Being-with (...) between an improper face, the Anyone, and a proper one, the people, which is also, as Nancy shows, a polarization between everydayness and historicity, between a being-together in exteriority (indifference and anonymity) and a being-together in interiority (union through destiny), between a solitary dying and the sacrificial death in combat, leaves the essential with unthought. This essay shows not only the tensions that arise out of Heidegger’s own analyses of Mitsein and affect the whole of Being and Time but also underlines in the end a “shortfall in thinking” inherent not only to Heidegger’s work but, as Nancy claims, to our Western tradition, a shortfall which Nancy has attempted to remedy in his Being Singular Plural. (shrink)
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  9. Étant donné : Essai d’une phénoménologie de la donation.Jean-luc Marion -1997 -Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 60 (3):615-617.
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  10.  18
    Ego sum:Jean-Luc Nancy.Jean-Luc Nancy -1979 - Aubier-Flammarion.
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  11.  352
    The Question of Intensive Magnitudes According to Some Jesuits in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.Jean-Luc Solère -2001 -The Monist 84 (4):582-616.
    The problem of the intensification and remission of qualities was a crux for philosophical, theological, and scientific thought in the Middle Ages. It was raised in Antiquity with this remark of Aristotle: some qualities, as accidental beings, admit the more and the less. Admitting more and less is not a trivial property, since it belongs neither to every category of being, nor to every quality. Rather it applies only to states and dispositions such as virtue, to affections of bodies such (...) as heat and sweetness, and to affections of soul such as anger. However, the property of admitting more and less was a matter of importance for the qualitative physics that had reigned up to about the time of Descartes, a physics which was concerned with concepts such as heat, coldness, lightness, heaviness, and so on. (shrink)
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  12.  46
    Revelation Comes from Elsewhere.Jean-Luc Marion -2024 - Stanford: Cultural Memory in the Present. Translated by Stephen E. Lewis & Stephanie Rumpza.
    Jean-Luc Marion has long endeavored to broaden our view of truth. In this illuminating new book--his deepest engagement with theology to date--Marion proposes a rigorous new understanding of human and divine revelation in a deeply phenomenological key. Although today considered the central theme of theology, the concept of Revelation was almost entirely unknown to the first millennium of Christian thought. In a penetrating historical deconstruction Marion traces the development of this term to the rise of metaphysics from Aquinas through (...) Descartes, Suárez, and Kant; formalized into an epistemological framework, this understanding of Revelation has restricted philosophical and theological thinking ever since. To break free from these limits, Marion takes hints from theologians including Balthasar and Barth while mobilizing the phenomenology of givenness to provide a rigorous new understanding of revelation as a mode of uncovering. His extensive study of the Jewish and Christian Scriptures unfolds a logic of Trinitarian phenomenality, worked out in conversation with Augustine, Basil, Hegel, Schelling, and others, that ultimately transforms our very notions of being and time. The result is precisely what we have come to expect from this acclaimed philosopher: masterful historical scholarship working in tandem with daring originality. (shrink)
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  13.  15
    Dies Irae.Jean-Luc Nancy -2019 - [London]: University of Westminster Press. Edited by Angela Condello, Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos & Carlo Grassi.
    This is the first English translation published ofJean-Luc Nancy's acclaimed consideration of the law's most pervasive principles in the context of actual systems and contemporary institutions, power, norms, laws.
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  14.  83
    (1 other version)God without being: hors-texte.Jean-Luc Marion -1991 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Thomas A. Carlson & David Tracy.
    Jean-Luc Marion advances a controversial argument for a God free of all categories of Being. Taking a characteristically postmodern stance, Marion challenges a fundamental premise of both metaphysics and neo-Thomist theology: that God, before all else, must be. Rather, he locates a "God without Being" in the realm of agape, of Christian charity or love. This volume, the first translation into English of the work of this leading Catholic philosopher, offers a contemporary perspective on the nature of God. "An (...) immensely thoughtful book. . . . It promises a rich harvest. Marion's highly original treatment of the idol and the icon, the Eucharist, boredom and vanity, conversion and prayer takes theological and philosophical discussions to a new level."--Norman Wirzba, Christian Century. (shrink)
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  15.  290
    Thomas d’Aquin, l’étiologie proclusienne, et la théorie du concours de Dieu à la causalité naturelle.Jean-Luc Solère -2022 - In Dragos Calma,Reading Proclus and the _Book of Causes_, Volume 3: On Causes and the Noetic Triad. BRILL. pp. 303-337.
    Bringing together two aspects of Thomas Aquinas's thought that have been studied separately: his theory of God's concurrence and his theory of instrumental causality, I show how he uses the latter (which I discuss first) to clarify the Proclusian principle that the first cause has a greater influence on an effect than the proximate causes. Thanks to this theory, Aquinas accounts for the fact that it is God who confers existence to every new being that is produced by natural processes, (...) without however negating the agency of secondary, created causes. (shrink)
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  16.  100
    Scotus versus Aquinas on Instrumental Causality.Jean-Luc Solére -2019 -Oxford Studies in Medieval Philosophy 7 (1).
    The medieval notion of instrumental cause is not limited to what we call today “instruments” or “tools.” It extends way beyond the realm of technology and includes natural entities, for instance, the accidents by which a substance acts on another substance, sensible species in the air acting on a visual faculty, sacraments, bodily organs, and sometimes creatures with respect to God’s action. In all these cases, instrumental causes, like secondary causes in general, are subordinated to a principal cause and contribute (...) to its action and effects. However, the manner in which they do so makes them different from regular secondary causes, and the specifics are not easy to pinpoint. At the occasion of discussions about creation ex nihilo and sacraments, John Duns Scotus challenges Thomas Aquinas’s theory of instrumental causality. Whereas Aquinas does not strongly distinguish between artifacts and natural agents, and postulates a complex superposition of layers of causation, Scotus offers a novel view that clearly separates artificial instrumentality and natural instrumentality, and in both cases explains causation with great economy. Scotus’s in-depth discussion has far-reaching implications. It completely transforms the understanding of instrumental causality in general. (shrink)
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  17.  84
    The visible and the revealed.Jean-Luc Marion -2008 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    The possible and revelation -- The saturated phenomenon -- Metaphysics and phenomenology: a relief for theology -- "Christian philosophy": hermeneutic or heuristic? -- Sketch of a phenomenological concept of the gift -- What cannot be said: Apophasis and the discourse of love -- The banality of saturation -- Faith and reason.
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  18.  70
    Entretien avecJean-Luc Nancy.Jean-luc Nancy &Véronique Fabbri -2004 -Rue Descartes 44 (2):62-79.
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  19.  20
    L'expérience de la liberté.Jean-Luc Nancy -1988 - Galilée.
    « La liberté : ce singulier ne désigne pas ici une essence à laquelle rapporter toutes nos “libertés”. Il suspend au contraire toute détermination de ces “libertés”, qu’on sait bien “formelles”, sans pourtant vouloir le savoir… Il le fait au nom de l’expérience singulière de ce qui est sans essence : l’existence même. Cette expérience est un fait, lui aussi singulier, car il n’obéit pas à une logique du “fait” opposé à la “loi”. Ni fait, ni loi, mais l’être même (...) en tant que partage de l’existence. La pensée en provient, elle ne s’en empare pas. Quant elle s’ouvre à cette expérience, elle pense son possible hors d’elle-même, comme chose, force ou regard. La liberté est l’in-fini de la pensée. ». (shrink)
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  20.  85
    The experience of freedom.Jean-Luc Nancy -1993 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    This is the most systematic, the most radical, and the most lucid treatise on freedom that has been written in contemporary Continental philosophy. Finding its guiding motives in Kant's second Critique and working its way up to and beyond Heidegger and Adorno, this book marks the most advanced position in the thinking of freedom that has been proposed after Sartre and Levinas. If we do not think being itself as a freedom, we are condemned to think of freedom as a (...) pure 'idea' or 'right', and being-in-the-world, in turn, as a blind and obtuse necessity. Since Kant, philosophy and our world have relentlessly confronted this schism. To combat this renunciation of freedom, one must think the experience of freedom in thought itself: what it is that, simply in order for there to be thinking, must partake of freedom. (shrink)
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  21.  33
    Eros, Once Again: Danielle Cohen-Levinas in Conversation withJean-Luc Nancy.Danielle Cohen-Levinas &Jean-Luc Nancy -2020 - In Michael Fagenblat & Arthur Cools,Levinas and Literature: New Directions. De Gruyter. pp. 37-46.
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  22.  41
    Orthodox Christianity, Soviet Atheism and 'Animist' Practices in the Russianized World.Jean-Luc Lambert -2005 -Diogenes 52 (1):21-31.
    In Russia a monotheism - Orthodox Christianity - and atheism in its Marxist version have succeeded each other as state systems of rites and representations. Rather than contrasting one with the other, term with term, this paper proposes to bring in a third term: the local religious systems of Russia’s animist minorities. We examine how Christianity and atheism tried one after the other to get established there and also consider the reactions they encountered. The analysis as planned is undertaken on (...) two levels: on an overall level we look at the strategies and aims of the state and its representatives, and on the local level - illustrated by the particular example of the Nenets - concrete and always specific mechanisms are presented, which application of general policy has implemented on the ground. (shrink)
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  23.  22
    Commentary to Helena De Preester: The deep bodily origins of the subjective perspective: Models and their problems?☆.Jean-Luc Petit -2007 -Consciousness and Cognition 16 (3):619-622.
  24.  14
    Intorno aJean-Luc Nancy.Ugo Perone &Jean-Luc Nancy (eds.) -2012 - Torino: Rosenberg & Sellier.
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  25. Bayle et les apories de la science divine.Jean-Luc Solere -2002 - In Olivier Boulnois, Jacob Schmutz & Jean-Luc Solère,Le Contemplateur et les Idées. Modèles de la science divine, du néoplatonisme au XVIIIe siècle. Paris, France: Vrin. pp. 271-326.
     
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  26.  593
    Bayle et les apories de la raison humaine.Jean-Luc Solere -2003 - In Isabelle Delpla & Philippe de Robert,La Raison corrosive. Études sur la pensée critique de Pierre Bayle. Honoré Champion. pp. 87-137.
    I examine Bayle's infamous statement that Christian mysteries are not only "above" human reason, but are "against" it. I put it back in the context of 16th-17th century Reformed thought. I then discuss the relation between reason and faith according to Bayle.
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  27.  21
    En el nombre o cómo callarlo.Jean-Luc Marion &Jorge Roggero -2023 -Revista de Filosofia: Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción 22 (2):217-249.
    En este textoJean-Luc Marion ofrece una lectura crítica de la interpretación derridiana de Dionisio, aclarando su propia posición respecto de la teología mística. A partir de un análisis de cada una de las cuatro objeciones presentadas por Derrida, Marion presenta la tercera vía, la vía de la de-nominación; analiza el estatus de la alabanza y de la plegaria; distingue la mística de la metafísica de la presencia y de la ontoteología; y delinea los rasgos del fenómeno de la (...) revelación. (shrink)
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  28.  141
    Descartes on God and Duration, Revisited.Jean-Luc Solère &Nicholas Westberg -2024 -Philosophica: International Journal for the History of Philosophy 32 (2):91-130.
    This article aims to establish that Descartes accepted the scholastic view that God’s duration in itself (“eternity”) is not successive but “all at once,” as opposed to temporal things’ durations. Though most scholars have assumed this to be Descartes’ view, Geoffrey Gorham recently called it into question with a number of strong arguments. We contest his interpretation on multiple grounds. First, we show that when Descartes asserts that a duration which is “all at once” is “inconceivable,” he is not making (...) a metaphysical claim but, rather, is making an epistemological one, based on the limitations of the human intellect in understanding the attributes of God. Second, we object to a number of Gorham’s systematic reconstructions of Descartes’ views. He argues among other things that divine simplicity is consistent with temporal parts and that the laws of Cartesian physics require God to have temporal parts. We refute these claims based on Descartes’ fundamental metaphysical commitments. We thus conclude that Descartes does not think that, per se, God’s existence unfolds successively, moment after moment. (shrink)
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  29.  22
    The Deconstruction of Sex.Jean-Luc Nancy &Irving Goh -2021 - Duke University Press.
    In _The Deconstruction of Sex_,Jean-Luc Nancy and Irving Goh discuss how a deconstructive approach to sex helps us negotiate discourses about sex and foster a better understanding of how sex complicates our everyday existence in the age of #MeToo. Throughout their conversation, Nancy and Goh engage with topics ranging from relation, penetration, and subjection to touch, erotics, and jouissance. They show how despite its entrenchment in social norms and centrality to our being-in-the-world, sex lacks a clearly defined essence. (...) At the same time, they point to the potentiality of literature to inscribe the senses of sex. In so doing, Nancy and Goh prompt us to reconsider our relations with ourselves and others through sex in more sensitive, respectful, and humble ways without bracketing the troubling aspects of sex. (shrink)
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  30.  29
    The Truth of Democracy.Jean-Luc Nancy -2010 - Fordham.
    Written in a direct and accessible, almost manifesto-like style, The Truth of Democracy presents a forceful plea that we rethink democracy not as one political regime or form among others but as that which opens up the very experience of ...
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  31.  11
    (1 other version)Une Etude sur des Structures Ayant une Certaine Propriete de Seuil Pour les Automorphismes Elementaires.Jean-Luc Paillet -1978 -Mathematical Logic Quarterly 24 (1‐6):7-24.
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  32.  11
    L'impératif catégorique.Jean-Luc Nancy -1983 - Flammarion.
    Il ne s'agit pas de morale. Il s'agit de ce qui nous oblige, de ce qui fait de nous des êtres-obligés : une loi au-delà de la loi, qui nous est donnée et à laquelle nous sommes abandonnés.
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  33.  15
    L'Idole et la distance: cinq études.Jean-Luc Marion -1977
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  34.  381
    Durand of Saint-Pourçain’s Refutation of Concurrentism.Jean-Luc Solere -2024 -Religions 15 (5):1-22.
    The Dominican theologian Durand of Saint-Pourçain (ca. 1275–1334), breaking from the wide consensus, made a two-pronged attack on concurrentism (i.e., the theory according to which God does more than conserving creatures in existence and co-causes all their actions). On the one hand, he shows that the concurrentist position leads to the unacceptable consequence that God is the direct cause of man’s evil actions. On the other hand, he attacks the metaphysical foundations of concurrentism, first in the version offered by Thomas (...) Aquinas and Giles of Rome, and then in a more general way. Against Thomas and Giles, he challenges Neoplatonic assumptions about causality and being. More generally, he establishes that God’s action and a creature’s action can be neither identical nor different, and thus cannot both be direct causes of the same effect. Without claiming that Durand’s series of objections are definitely unanswerable, we may at least observe that they have generally been underestimated (which earned him the lowly role of the mere foil of the concurrentist view in the history of philosophy) and are able to do considerable damage to concurrentism. (shrink)
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  35.  373
    Création continuelle, concours divin et théodicée dans le débat Bayle-Jaquelot-Leibniz.Jean-Luc Solere -2015 - InChr. Leduc, P. Rateau and J.-L. Solère, eds., Leibniz et Bayle: Confrontation et Dialogue. Hanover, Germany: pp. 395-424.
  36.  354
    Sine qua non causality and the context of Durand’s early theory of cognition.Jean-Luc Solere -2014 - In G. Guldentops, A. Speer, F. Retucci & Th Jeschke, Durand of Saint-Pourçain and his Sentences commentary. Historical, Philosophical and Theological Issues. Peeters Pub & Booksellers. pp. 185-227.
    This paper explores the origins of the term "causa sine qua non" used by Durand de Saint-Pourçain to describe the role of material things in knowledge. I show that its technical meaning comes from the Stoics and was transmitted to the Middle Ages by Boethius' commentary on Cicero's Topics. The expression "sine qua non" here does not have the ordinary and restricted meaning of "indispensable", "necessary condition", which can also apply to direct, per se causes of an effect. In the (...) present context, sine qua non causes do not act on the effect in question, either as concomitant, secondary, or instrumental causes, or as remote causes. They act only on that which hinders the actualization of a potentiality, in order to remove that obstacle. For example, the removal of a support that prevented something from falling does not act on that thing, nor does it add anything to its tendency to fall; it simply enables that thing to exercise its own actualization. Similarly, in cognitive processes, external things do not impose anything on the soul, but simply give it the opportunity to actualize its faculties of its own accord. I situate Durand's use of this form of causality in the context of late 13th/early 14th century theories of cognition, among several other attempts to find an alternative theory to the standard Aristotelian model and to maintain the pure activity of the soul with respect to the body. (shrink)
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  37.  233
    Scotus geometres: The longevity of Duns Scotus’s geometric arguments against indivisibilism.Jean-Luc Solere -2013 - In M. Dreyer, E. Mehl & M. Vollet,La posterité de Duns Scot / Die Rezeption des Duns Scotus / Scotism through the Centuries. pp. 139-154.
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  38.  95
    The idol and distance: five studies.Jean-Luc Marion -2001 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Marked sharply by its time and place (Paris in the 1970s), this early theological text byJean-Luc Marion nevertheless maintains a strikingly deep resonance with his most recent, groundbreaking, and ever more widely discussed phenomenology. And while Marion will want to insist on a clear distinction between the theological and phenomenological projects, to read each in light of the other can prove illuminating for both the theological and the philosophical reader - and perhaps above all for the reader who (...) wants to read in both directions at once, the reader concerned with those points of interplay and undecidability where theology and philosophy inform, provoke, and challenge one another in endlessly complex ways." "In both his theological and his phenomenological projects Marion's central effort to free the absolute or unconditional (be it theology's God or phenomenology's phenomenon) from the various limits and preconditions of human thought and language will imply a thoroughgoing critique of all metaphysics, and above all of the modern metaphysics centered on the active, spontaneous subject who occupies modern philosophy from Descartes through Hegel and Nietzsche. (shrink)
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  39.  24
    The Essential Writings.Jean-Luc Marion -2013 - New York, New York: Fordham University Press. Edited by Kevin Hart.
    Jean-Luc Marion: The Essential Writings is the first anthology of this major contemporary philosopher's writings. It spans his entire career as a historian of philosophy, as a theologian, and as a theoretician of "saturated phenomena." The editor's long general Introduction situates Marion in the history of modern philosophy, especially phenomenology, and shorter introductions preface each section of the anthology. The entire volume will enable professors to teach Marion by assigning a single book, and the editor's introductions will make it (...) possible for students to learn enough about phenomenology to read Marion without having to take preliminary courses in Husserl and Heidegger. (shrink)
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  40.  9
    Was heißt uns Denken? Ein Gespräch.Jean-Luc Nancy &Daniel Tyradellis -2013 - Diaphanes.
    Ein Gespräch zwischen zweien, die sich nicht sicher sind, ob sie schon denken -/- Der Begriff des Denkens zieht sich als emphatischer Begriff durch das Werk vonJean-Luc Nancy. Zugleich lehnt er es ab, sich selbst als »Denker« bezeichnen zu lassen. Denken ist für ihn stets mit einem »noch nicht« zu versehen. Anknüpfend an Heideggers berühmte Vorlesung »Was heißt Denken?« spricht Nancy in diesem Band mit dem Philosophen und Kurator Daniel Tyradellis über das, was Denken macht: über prägende Lektüren (...) und einflussreiche Lehrer, über Misosophie und das Unerträgliche, über ästhetische Erfahrungen und ihre Medien. In Nähe und Abgrenzung zu Heidegger entsteht ein Bild des Denkens, das darum ringt, dem »uns« und dem »wir« Raum zu geben und das Mit-Sein als ontologische Kategorie zu fassen. (shrink)
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  41.  9
    Vous désirez?Jean-Luc Nancy -2013 - Montrouge: Bayard.
    Désirer, qu’est-ce que c’est? Quelle différence entre désirer, vouloir ou avoir besoin?Jean-Luc Nancy, auteur fidèle de la collection, s’attache à percevoir comment le désir travaille en nous, et comment nous vivons avec cette force toujours à l’oeuvre, quels que soient nos âges et nos situations.
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  42.  131
    Being singular plural.Jean-Luc Nancy -2000 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    One of the strongest strands in Nancy's philosophy is an attempt to rethink community and the very idea of the social in a way that does not ground these ideas in some individual subject or subjectivity. The fundamental argument of this book is that being is always 'being with', that 'I' is not prior to 'we', that existence is essentially co-existence. He thinks this being together, not as a comfortable enclosure in a pre-existing group, but as a mutual abandonment and (...) exposure to each other, one that would preserve the 'I' and its freedom in a mode of imagining community as neither a 'society of spectacle' nor via some form of 'authenticity'. (shrink)
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  43.  24
    The insufficiency of ‘values’ and the necessity of ‘sense’.Jean-Luc Nancy -1997 -Cultural Values 1 (1):127-131.
  44.  199
    Dominican Debates on the Intensification of Qualities at the Beginning of the 14th Century.Jean-Luc Solere -2020 - In Andreas Speer & Andrea Colli,Censures, Condemnations, Corrections in Late Medieval Schools. pp. 293-346.
  45. Cartesian metaphysics and the role of the simple natures.Jean-Luc Marion -1992 - In John Cottingham,The Cambridge companion to Descartes. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 115--139.
     
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  46.  17
    «Summetria» des Nombres de la «République».Jean-Luc Périllié -2004 -Revue Philosophique De Louvain 102 (1):35-58.
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  47.  56
    Adoration.Jean-Luc Nancy -2010 - Fordham University Press. Edited by John McKeane.
    Adoration is the second volume of the Deconstruction of Christianity, following Dis-Enclosure. The first volume attempted to demonstrate why it is necessary to open reason up not to a religious dimension but to one transcending reason as we have been accustomed to understanding it; the term "adoration" attempts to name the gesture of this dis-enclosed reason. -/- Adoration causes us to receive ignorance as truth: not a feigned ignorance, perhaps not even a "nonknowledge," nothing that would attempt to justify the (...) negative again, but the simple, naked truth that there is nothing in the place of God, because there is no place for God. The outside of the world opens us in the midst of the world, and there is no first or final place. Each one of us is at once the first and the last. Each one, each name. And our ignorance is made worse by the fact that we do not know whether we ought to name this common and singular property of all names. We must remain in this suspense, hesitating between and stammering in various possible languages, ultimately learning to speak anew. -/- In this book,Jean-Luc Nancy goes beyond his earlier historical and philosophical thought and tries to think-or at least crack open a little to thinking-a stance or bearing that might be suitable to the retreat of God that results from the self-deconstruction of Christianity. Adoration may be a manner, a style of spirit for our time, a time when the "spiritual" seems to have become so absent, so dry, so adulterated. -/- The book is a major contribution to the important strand of attempts to think a "post-secular" situation of religion. (shrink)
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  48.  13
    Le visible et le révélé.Jean-Luc Marion -2005 - Paris: Cerf.
    Analyse ce qui, dans la Révélation, suggère ou dépasse une phénoménologie du révélé.
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  49.  26
    Une pensée finie.Jean-Luc Nancy -1990 - Galilée.
    « L’existence a-t-elle un sens quelconque? – cette question aura besoin de quelques siècles pour seulement être entendue de façon complète et dans toute sa profondeur. » Nietzsche « Parce que la philosophie s’adresse à l’homme dans sa totalité et dans ce qu’il a de plus élevé, il faut que la finitude s’indique dans la philosophie d’une manière tout à fait radicale. » Heidegger.
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  50.  22
    Extending the capability paradigm to address the complexity of disability.Jean-Luc Dubois &Jean-François Trani -2009 -Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 3 (3):192-218.
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