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Results for 'P. Bergson'

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  1.  18
    GettingBergson straight: the contributions of intuition to the sciences.P. A. Y. Gunter -2023 - Wilmington, Deleware: Vernon Press.
    This study concerns the ideas of one particular philosopher, HenriBergson, whose views of time, intuition, and creativity have had a significant impact on art, literature, and the humanities, both in his time and in our own. Although it is generally recognized thatBergson's ideas have significantly impacted the arts and the humanities, it has not been recognized how they have also had a creative influence on the sciences as well. Nor has it been realized that this was (...) one of his most basic contentions.Bergson's conception of intuition--his fundamental insight into reality--was not limited to fugitive insights into human existence. By realizing previously unsuspected possibilities for research and discovery, his endeavors were also meant to make possible new advances in the sciences. If it enabled his cousin by marriage, Marcel Proust, to explore human memory in depth, it also inspired psychologists like Daniel Schachter to useBergson's ideas to make real contributions to contemporary memory science. If his notion of creative evolution brought many thinkers to a belief in human creative freedom, it brought others (notably Alexis Carrel and Pierre Lecomte de Noüy) to a scientific study of biological time. Among his successful speculations was the theory of the Big Bang cosmology. 'GettingBergson Straight' shows many points at whichBergson's ideas anticipated future developments in the sciences. This was seen clearly by the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Luis de Broglie who viewedBergson's physics as presaging quantum physics. Thus, the text is well situated for arts, humanities, social science, and natural science classrooms studying creative thinking and/or intellectual history. (shrink)
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  2. Atlas (Greek mythology) 49 Augustine, St. 187 Bacon, F. 189 Bakunin, M. 183, 190 Ballerowicz, L. 176 n. 5.Father C. Bartnik,L. Von Beethoven,H.Bergson,P.Bergson,Rabbi Hillel,E. Bevin,Bishop Pieronek,Bishop T. Pieronek,O. Von Bismarck &M. Black -1999 - In Ian Charles Jarvie & Sandra Pralong,Popper's Open Society After Fifty Years: The Continuing Relevance of Karl Popper. New York: Routledge.
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  3. Bergson et le Vedânta.P. S. Basu -1930 - Montpellier,: Librairie nouvelle.
     
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  4. GOUHIER H., "Bergson et le Christ des Evangiles".P. G. P. G. -1962 -Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 54:124.
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  5. Bergson and Non-Linear Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics: An Application of Method.P. A. Y. Gunter -1991 -Revue Internationale de Philosophie 45 (177):108-121.
  6.  16
    Bergson's Theory of Matter and Modern Cosmology.P. A. Y. Gunter -1971 -Journal of the History of Ideas 32 (4):525.
  7.  53
    Bergson's Creation of the Possible.P. A. Y. Gunter -2007 -Substance 36 (3):33-41.
  8.  33
    Bergson and Free Will.Edward P. Cronan -1937 -New Scholasticism 11 (1):1-57.
  9. Le lettere diBergson a Xavier Léon e ad altri.S. P. S. P. -1994 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 14:168.
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  10.  24
    Chacón Fuertes, P.,Bergson o el tiempo del espíritu.H. Gil Caballero -1989 -Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 23:285.
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  11. Sur le point de départ de la Philosophie deBergson.P. Kucharski -1947 -Archives de Philosophie 17:56-80.
     
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  12. (1 other version)Bergson and the Evolution of Physics.P. A. Y. Gunter -1971 -British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 22 (1):75-76.
     
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  13. William James and HenriBergson.George P. Adams -1915 -Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 12 (22):615.
     
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  14.  67
    Whitehead,Bergson, Freud: Suggestions Toward a Theory of Laughter.P. A. Y. Gunter -1966 -Southern Journal of Philosophy 4 (2):55-60.
  15.  41
    Bergson and Modern Physics. [REVIEW]R. P. D. -1972 -Review of Metaphysics 26 (2):355-355.
    As seen by Professor Capek,Bergson’s views about the nature of matter were either misunderstood or ignored in the decades following their publication at the turn of the century. The explanation for this attitude of bothBergson’s opponents and his disciples lies in the fact that, at that time, although there were rumblings under the foundations of classical physics, "hardly anybody could then guess even remotely the extent of the coming scientific revolution." One of the main stumbling blocks (...) forBergson’s readers was the non-pictorial character of his ‘model’ of matter, which was conceived as consisting of imageless events. InBergson and Modern Physics, Capek attempts to remove this stumbling block and to evaluate the relation betweenBergson’s thought and modern physics as it stands today. The book consists of three parts:Bergson’s biological theory of knowledge, his theory of duration, and his theory of the physical world and its relations to contemporary physics. Three appendices deal with Russell’s complex relation toBergson, with the much discussed relation of microphysical indeterminancy to freedom, and withBergson’s views on entropy and modern cosmogony, respectively. The book is indexed and carries extensive references to the scientific and philosophical literature. With this book Capek provides a competent exposition and historical perspective ofBergson’s philosophy and its relation to modern physics.—D. R. P. (shrink)
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  16.  6
    La philosophie deBergson.Albert P. Lafontaine -1923 - Paris,: J. Vrin.
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  17. (1 other version)Studies in the Philosophy of Creation. With Especial Reference toBergson and Whitehead.Newton P. Stallknecht -1935 -Philosophy 10 (40):495-496.
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  18. BERGSON, H. - Les deux sources de la Morale et de la Religion. [REVIEW]P. Leon -1932 -Mind 41:485.
     
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  19. CHEVALIER J., "Entretiens avecBergson".P. G. P. G. -1961 -Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 53:211.
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  20. JANKÉLÉVITCH V., "HenriBergson".P. G. P. G. -1961 -Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 53:334.
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  21.  7
    Identité et primauté d'autrui: la philosophie merleau-pontyenne de l'hospitalité.Lendja Ngnemzué &AngeBergson -2016 - Paris: L'Harmattan.
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty a placé la primauté d'autrui au centre de la structure du sujet, inaugurant une philosophie de l'hospitalité à contre-courant des phénoménologies du conflit (Hegel, Husserl, Sartre, etc.), et en dépassement radical du cogito cartésien et husserlien : la Phénoménologie de la perception institue le pluralisme ontologique tiré de la transcendantalité de l'intersubjectivité. L'étude précise (chapitre 1) que la montée des théories essentialistes a profité de l'analyse de la crise sociale des années 1960. Samuel P. Huntington en a été (...) l'un des leaders, qui animait un débat sur les identités rentré récemment dans l'arène académique. Au fond, on ne peut parler philosophiquement et sérieusement de l'identité et de l'essentialisme qu'en partant de la découverte cartésienne d'un cogito insulaire (chapitre 2), qui hante les Méditations cartésiennes : la réduction eidétique ne dépasse le cogito cartésien qu'en en gardant la caractéristique essentielle, qui est la transcendance (chapitre 3). Radicale et hérétique, la démarche de Merleau-Ponty s'en tient à l'analyse de l'expérience ingénue tirée du dernier Husserl (chapitre 4), pour faire du sujet lui-même un être (en) dehors (de soi). La transcendance de l'intersubjectivité est primordiale (chapitre 5) et éclaire singulièrement le passage de l'analytique du sujet à la politique et à l'histoire (chapitre 6). Repenser le politique à partir d'une telle approche, c'est faire du pluralisme ontologique le concept de déconstruction des constellations historiques (communauté, nationalité, ethnicité, etc.) rigidifiées par les essentialistes (chapitre 7). L'appendice du livre réfléchit sur les relations que cette thèse neuve sur la Lebenswelt peut entretenir au plenum de la sociologie radicale. (shrink)
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  22. Bergson's vitalism in the light of modern biology.Maria de Issekutz Wolsky,Alexander A. Wolsky,F. Burwick &P. Douglass -1992 - In Frederick Burwick & Paul Douglass,The Crisis in modernism: Bergson and the vitalist controversy. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  23.  36
    Introduccion aBergson[REVIEW]P. R. &Jose Ferrater Mora -1947 -Journal of Philosophy 44 (15):419.
  24. HenriBergson Kritik der Quantität als allgemeine Entfremdungstheorie der Gegenwart.Konstantin P. Romanos -1991 -Revue Internationale de Philosophie 45 (177):151-184.
     
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  25. M.Bergson as Liberator.L. P. Jacks -1934 -Hibbert Journal 33:55.
     
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  26.  28
    Jean Milet, "Bergson et le calcul infinitésimal: ou, la raison et le temps". [REVIEW]P. A. Y. Gunter -1976 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 14 (2):244.
  27.  12
    Comentário a “G. Canguilhem lector de politzer”: fazer justiça aBergson”.Herivelto P. Souza -2023 -Trans/Form/Ação 46 (3):75-78.
  28.  28
    The Philosophy of HenriBergson[REVIEW]A. Y. G. P. -1982 -Review of Metaphysics 35 (3):609-610.
    This is a brief, clear, and vigorous reinterpretation ofBergson's philosophy. The author attempts to prove that, far from being an irrationalist,Bergson is a systematic metaphysician firmly committed to the concept of final cause.
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  29. GIUSSO L., "Bergson". [REVIEW]P. Filiasi Carcano -1951 -Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 5:145.
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  30. Plato: An Introduction. [REVIEW]P. R. -1958 -Review of Metaphysics 12 (2):324-324.
    This first English translation of a well-known work presents the 1954 German edition. It includes material discussingBergson, Schopenhauer, Jaspers, and Heidegger in relation to various Platonic problems. An essay by Huntington Cairns on Plato as jurist is reprinted here as well.--R. P.
     
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  31.  56
    Possibility or necessity? On Robert Watt’s “Bergson on number”.John V. Garner &Christopher P. Noble -2023 -British Journal for the History of Philosophy 32 (1):207-217.
    This paper seeks to highlight the importance of spatial cognition inBergson’s Données immédiates by engaging with Robert Watt’s reconstruction ofBergson’s argument that every idea of number involves the idea of space. We focus on the second stage of Watt’s reconstruction, whereBergson argues that only space can provide the distinction required for our counting of otherwise identical items. Watt bases his reconstruction on a premise regarding the possibility that identical objects, in the absence of spatial (...) distinction, might remain identical across different “temporal locations”. Our paper raises the prospect thatBergson is committed to a stronger thesis, namely one implying that identical objects would necessarily remain indistinguishable without the intervention of space. The paper thus concludes by emphasizing the indispensability of space for knowledge according toBergson. (shrink)
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  32.  26
    Natura dell'Intelletto e risveglio dell'anima. Note autografe inedite diBergson su Plotino, Enneade VI 9, capp. 2-3.Daniela P. Taormina -2016 -Rivista di Storia Della Filosofia 71 (2):313-328.
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  33.  35
    Being in Becoming: A Theory of Human Freedom.Newton P. Stallknecht -1955 -Review of Metaphysics 8 (4):633 - 641.
    To avoid this blunt and embarrassing alternative seems to be the goal of much recent philosophy--and especially of continental European thought. It becomes apparent at once that these problems cannot be separated from our experience and interpretation of process and duration, of time and change, and of our place within them. It is this consideration, recognized as the very heart of the matter, to which Professor Chaix-Ruy has turned his attention. He finds his central problem to be an ancient and (...) recurring one, and he pays as much attention to Augustine and Pascal as toBergson and Einstein. There results a panorama of Western thought apprehended from an unusual point of view. The detailed studies included are often fresh and penetrating and the whole argument is of absorbing interest. We may introduce this argument by indicating that at one point, although at one point only, Chaix-Ruy agrees completely with Sartre: the relation of essence to existence in human life is a unique one, quite different from that to be found elsewhere among non-human or sub-human beings. This contrast involves a description of man's relation to time and to change. Human nature is subject to change, or better, man subjects himself to change. "Chez nous l'essence est in fieri". We are reminded of Sartre's "Faire et en faisant se faire," although, as we shall soon see, we need not think of the initiative as lying wholly with our existence, as opposed to our essence. After all, an existence capable of transforming essence must have a structure of its own and a modus operandi. Even the freest choice is "structured." This would seem to be true even if our creative self-realization in some way embraces or contains nonbeing. (shrink)
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  34.  7
    The Physicist and the Philosopher: Einstein,Bergson, and the Debate that Changed Our Understanding of Time. [REVIEW]Jude P. Dougherty -2017 -Review of Metaphysics 71 (1).
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  35.  15
    Ambiguities in Pope Francis's Message of Mercy.O. P. Louis Roy -2022 -New Blackfriars 103 (1105):396-407.
    New Blackfriars, Volume 103, Issue 1105, Page 396-407, May 2022.
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  36.  80
    The sound of the life-world.P. Kerszberg -1999 -Continental Philosophy Review 32 (2):169-194.
    Husserl's investigations of internal time-consciousness take sound as the primary temporal object. However, in these investigations, the structure of the flux of temporal subjectivity is established to the detriment of the rich tonal content of sound. Just as Husserl has enlarged the significance of the spatial object of mathematical physics to include the historically-sedimented layers of its appearance, so the temporal object will receive additional intelligibility if the rich texture of musical sound is taken into consideration. Particularly useful for this (...) task isBergson's philosophy of the listening experience. (shrink)
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  37.  43
    Duration and Simultaneity. [REVIEW]J. M. P. -1966 -Review of Metaphysics 19 (4):804-805.
    Hitherto unavailable except in the original French,Bergson's Durée et Simultanéité is an engaging contribution to the philosophy of relativity theory, space, and time. The book appeared during a period of great debate on the philosophical status of Einstein's Special Theory, and it treats, therefore, of it to the exclusion of the more conceptually difficult General Theory.Bergson is mainly concerned with trying to explicate the problems of the twin and clock 'paradoxes' which are presently again under some (...) critical discussion.Bergson tries to show that there is a symmetry in the aging of the two twins, not the usual asymmetry. AlthoughBergson is not usually considered a philosopher of science, those interested in the conceptual foundations of a modern physical theory might do well to consider his refreshing conclusions. The publishers are to be congratulated for making available this stimulating book.—P. J. M. (shrink)
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  38. Faith and Reason: A Comparative Study of Pascal,Bergson and James. [REVIEW]D. P. R. -1963 -Review of Metaphysics 17 (1):150-150.
    A summary of these three philosophers on the subjects of the limitation of rational-conceptual knowledge and of the necessity for what the author calls "supra-rational" knowledge. Pascal is used as a standard for the other two, due to his full commitment to suprarational knowledge in the Christian revelation.--R. D. P.
     
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  39.  26
    Problems and Theories of Philosophy. [REVIEW]S. P. -1974 -Review of Metaphysics 27 (4):785-786.
    Polish philosopher Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz’s survey of epistemological and metaphysical problems, taken from a positivist orientation, is notable for its brief, clear characterizations of philosophical problems and its well placed, simplified expositions of the theories of Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Berkeley, Hume, Kant, Hegel,Bergson and Husserl. He focusses on the logical limitations of the solutions for clearly defined problems. Any lack of depth in this book is compensated for by the accurate outlines which encourage the reader to question the foundations (...) of classical positions. In the first part of the book, the theory of truth is given logical priority to epistemology. We "... should define truth as agreement of thought with final and irrevocable criteria," to avoid the contradiction of extreme skepticism which could not be formulated without, at least, tacit reference to "reality." Because of this positive but stipulative orientation, a priorism in epistemology is given a thorough exposition. Realism, "... we can know reality only on the basis of experience," is proposed to balance the abstractness of a priorism. (shrink)
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  40.  21
    The World of Dreams. [REVIEW]P. R. -1959 -Review of Metaphysics 12 (4):662-662.
    In this popular essay,Bergson presents the view that the indistinct sensations of the disinterested dreamer serve to choose those memories which will come from the unconscious. The translation is easy and accurate.--R. P.
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  41.  20
    Founders of Constructive Postmodern Philosophy: Peirce, James,Bergson, Whitehead, and Hartshorne.David Ray Griffin,John B. Cobb Jr,Marcus P. Ford,Pete A. Y. Gunter &Peter Ochs -1992 - State University of New York Press.
    Paper edition (unseen), $14.95. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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  42.  59
    Psychopathologies of time: Defining mental illness in early 20th-century psychiatry.Allegra R. P. Fryxell -2019 -History of the Human Sciences 32 (2):3-31.
    This article examines the role of time as a methodological tool and pathological focus of clinical psychiatry and psychology in the first half of the 20th century. Contextualizing ‘psychopathologies of time’ developed by practitioners in Europe and North America with reference to the temporal theories implicit in Freudian psychoanalysis and HenriBergson’s philosophy of durée, it illuminates how depression, schizophrenia, and other mental disorders such as obsessive-compulsive behaviours and aphasia were understood to be symptomatic of an altered or disturbed (...) ‘time-sense’. Drawing upon a model of temporal synthesis whereby in healthy individuals, a subjective temporal sense ( Ichzeit, durée, or personal lifetime) was perceived and understood in relation to objective time frameworks ( Weltzeit, clock-time, or quantitative time models like historical chronology), clinicians argued that mentally ill patients were unable to synthesize Ichzeit and Weltzeit, using variations in this disturbance to define specific pathological conditions. (shrink)
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  43.  25
    An Essay on the Foundations of our Knowledge. [REVIEW]R. P. -1957 -Review of Metaphysics 10 (4):717-717.
    A well-written translation of Cournot's Essai sur les fondements de nos connaissances et sur les caractères de la critique philosophique. The author, little known in this country except for his work in mathematics and economics, first published this work in 1851. The Essay is part rationalism, part empiricism. The first half of the Essay argues for Cournot's theory of knowledge; the second relates his theory to problems of mathematics, logic, law, history, psychology, ethics, esthetics, and to his philosophical predecessors. It (...) is a work which will reward careful study and which will be of special interest to students of Peirce andBergson. The translator has provided a lengthy introduction which will be of value to those unfamiliar with Cournot and Cournot literature, and an excellent index. --R. P. (shrink)
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  44.  36
    Percevoir Dieu? HenriBergson et William P. Alston.Anthony Feneuil -2012 -ThéoRèmes 2 (1).
    William Alston et HenriBergson semblent défendre une même thèse : celle de la valeur de l’expérience mystique pour la connaissance. L’étude comparée de la manière dont chacun d’entre eux la formule et la défend constitue un bon angle pour envisager la différence entre tradition « analytique » et tradition « continentale » en philosophie de la religion. Cet article vise à montrer les divergences et les convergences entre les deux auteurs, mais surtout à situer le point d’origine des (...) divergences. Il apparaît que celui-ci n’est pas à chercher dans deux conceptions irréductibles de la philosophie ou de la rationalité, mais dans une différence de compréhension de la mystique. (shrink)
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  45.  25
    Percepts, Concepts and Theoretic Knowledge. [REVIEW]M. P. -1973 -Review of Metaphysics 27 (1):140-141.
    Professor Lee presents us with a thoroughly worked out and clear epistemology from a pragmatic-naturalist standpoint; his acknowledged intellectual mentors have been C. I. Lewis, G. H. Mead, and H.Bergson. A neo-Kantian without Kant’s fixed structures, Lee holds that the categories by which we interpret the "intuitive flux" need not be rigid because the flux itself is not of this character. "The concepts are derived from experience; thus there is no mystery or miracle involved in their application to (...) experience." Where does the necessary or apodictic element in knowledge come from? There is none; Lee holds it to be the distinctive advance of twentieth-century science to have recognized the hypothetical-deductive nature of all knowledge. It is to critically underscore this open-ended dimension to knowledge that Lee introduces his concept of the "continuum." Lee attempts to find an epistemic locus in an experience of continuity or "passage," "the vaguely felt wholeness that contains no gaps or separateness," but argues his case chiefly by exploiting the discoveries in mathematics of the discrepancy between our "intuition" of continuity on the one hand, and our ability to express this intuition in a formal system or work our way back to it from discrete parts. The fallacy of "misplaced discreteness" consists in taking a selection from the continuous flux as an adequate representation or definitive characterization of the entire flux. But "a continuum is not to be obtained from discrete parts, no matter how tightly they are jammed up against each other." Lee attacks the view that "one and only one analysis of the situation is correct. Such a demonstration is impossible if events are cut from a continuum; the assumption of a single analysis is unjustified.". (shrink)
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  46. Bergsonian Philosophy and Thomism. [REVIEW]O. P. Ephrem McCarthy -1956 -Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 6:219-219.
    La Philosophie Bergsonienne was Maritain’s earliest work. It has now been translated into English for the first time. Already, when the book was written, Maritain was a follower of St. Thomas; in his foreword to the present edition he modestly describes it as “probably a fair to middling account of basic Thomistic Philosophy”. As the title of the book suggests,Bergson’s thought, at least in its basic doctrines, is given not for its own sake but rather to enable us (...) to see how Thomistic thought can face up to the problemsBergson sought to answer. (shrink)
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  47.  14
    P. A. Y. Gunter's "HenriBergson: A Bibliography". [REVIEW]Daniel S. Robinson -1975 -Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 36 (2):277.
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  48. In Reality :Bergson Beyond Duration, translated in English by Yaron WOLF (Milano: Mimesis International:2022), Series “Philosophy”, No. 52, 146 p.Michel Dalissier -2022 - Philosophy.
    Bergson is rightly considered the philosopher of duration. Has this theory, however, been sufficiently elucidated? Is there a domain, aside from life itself, to which the characteristics of duration can be meaningfully ascribed? Why, in his thesis from 1907, doesBergson write of a "real" duration? His subsequent work Duration and Simultaneity: With Reference to Einstein's Theory (1922) is the only volume written byBergson in the period separating Creative Evolution (1907) and The Two Sources of Morality (...) and Religion (1932). Duration and Simultaneity represents a polemical, unique, mature and relatively neglected work, one that allows us however to respond to these questions - provided that we read it as a work of philosophy and metaphysics. This book was awarded the 2020 Polydore de Paepe Prize of the Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium. (shrink)
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  49.  59
    European and American Philosophers.John Marenbon,Douglas Kellner,Richard D. Parry,Gregory Schufreider,Ralph McInerny,Andrea Nye,R. M. Dancy,Vernon J. Bourke,A. A. Long,James F. Harris,Thomas Oberdan,Paul S. MacDonald,Véronique M. Fóti,F. Rosen,James Dye,Pete A. Y. Gunter,Lisa J. Downing,W. J. Mander,Peter Simons,Maurice Friedman,Robert C. Solomon,Nigel Love,Mary Pickering,Andrew Reck,Simon J. Evnine,Iakovos Vasiliou,John C. Coker,Georges Dicker,James Gouinlock,Paul J. Welty,Gianluigi Oliveri,Jack Zupko,Tom Rockmore,Wayne M. Martin,Ladelle McWhorter,Hans-Johann Glock,Georgia Warnke,John Haldane,Joseph S. Ullian,Steven Rieber,David Ingram,Nick Fotion,George Rainbolt,Thomas Sheehan,Gerald J. Massey,Barbara D. Massey,David E. Cooper,David Gauthier,James M. Humber,J. N. Mohanty,Michael H. Dearmey,Oswald O. Schrag,Ralf Meerbote,George J. Stack,John P. Burgess,Paul Hoyningen-Huene,Nicholas Jolley,Adriaan T. Peperzak,E. J. Lowe,William D. Richardson,Stephen Mulhall & C. -1991 - In Robert L. Arrington,A Companion to the Philosophers. Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 109–557.
    Peter Abelard (1079–1142 ce) was the most wide‐ranging philosopher of the twelfth century. He quickly established himself as a leading teacher of logic in and near Paris shortly after 1100. After his affair with Heloise, and his subsequent castration, Abelard became a monk, but he returned to teaching in the Paris schools until 1140, when his work was condemned by a Church Council at Sens. His logical writings were based around discussion of the “Old Logic”: Porphyry's Isagoge, aristotle'S Categories and (...) On Interpretation and boethius'S textbook on topical inference. They comprise a freestanding Dialectica (“Logic”; probably c.1116), a set of commentaries (known as the Logica [Ingredientibus], c. 1119) and a later (c. 1125) commentary on the Isagoge (Logica Nostrorum Petititoni Sociorum or Glossulae). In a work Abelard called his Theologia, issued in three main versions (between 1120 and c.1134), he attempted a logical analysis of trinitarian relations and explored the philosophical problems surrounding God's claims to omnipotence and omniscience. The Collationes (“Debates,” also known as “Dialogue between a Christian, a Philosopher and a Jew”; probably c.1130) present a rational investigation into the nature of the highest good, in which the Christian and the Philosopher (who seems to be modeled on a philosopher of pagan antiquity) are remarkably in agreement. The unfinished Scito teipsum (“Know thyself,” also known as the “Ethics”; c.1138) analyses moral action. (shrink)
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  50. Schrecker, P., H. Bergsons Philosophie der Persönlichkeit. [REVIEW]O. Braun -1913 -Société Française de Philosophie, Bulletin 18:277.
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