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Books > Philosophy > Western philosophy > General
The Long Quarrel: Past and Present in the Eighteenth Century
examines how the intellectual clashes emerging from the Quarrel of
the Ancients and the Moderns continued to reverberate until the end
of the eighteenth century. This extended Quarrel was not just about
the value of ancient and modern, but about historical thought in a
broader sense. The tension between ancient and modern expanded into
a more general tension between past and present, which were no
longer seen as essentially similar, but as different in nature.
Thus, a new kind of historical consciousness came into being in the
Long Quarrel of the eighteenth century, which also gave rise to new
ideas about knowledge, art, literature and politics. Contributors
are: Jacques Bos, Anna Cullhed, Hakon Evju, Vera Fasshauer, Andrew
Jainchill, Anton M. Matytsin, Iain McDaniel, Larry F. Norman, David
D. Reitsam, Jan Rotmans, Friederike Vosskamp, and Christine Zabel.
The Bible is the crucible within which were forged many of the
issues most vital to philosophy during the early modern age.
Different conceptions of God, the world, and the human being have
been constructed (or deconstructed) in relation to the various
approaches and readings of the Holy Scriptures. This book explores
several of the ways in which philosophers interpreted and made use
of the Bible. It aims to provide a new perspective on the subject
beyond the traditional opposition "faith versus science" and to
reflect the philosophical ways in which the Sacred Scriptures were
approached. Early modern philosophers can thus be seen to have
transformed the traditional interpretation of the Bible and
emphasized its universal moral message. In doing so, they forged
new conceptions about nature, politics, and religion, claiming the
freedom of thought and scientific inquiry that were to become the
main features of modernity. Contributors include Simonetta Bassi,
Stefano Brogi, Claudio Buccolini, Simone D'Agostino, Antonella Del
Prete, Diego Donna, Matteo Favaretti Camposampiero, Guido Giglioni,
Franco Giudice, Sarah Hutton, Giovanni Licata, Edouard Mehl, Anna
Lisa Schino, Luisa Simonutti, Pina Totaro, and Francesco Toto.
On the Binding Biases of Time and Other Essays on General Semantics
and Media Ecology consists of a series of explorations into our use
of symbols, language, and media to relate to our environment, and
how our different modes of perception and communication influence
human consciousness, culture, and social organization. These essays
draw upon and integrate the perspectives of general semantics,
systems theory, and media ecology, bringing them to bear upon a
diversity of topics that include the future of consciousness,
identity and meaning, the Ten Commandments, media literacy, The
Lord of the Rings, and our relationship to time. Throughout this
volume, Strate grapples with the question of what it means to be
human, and what the prospects may be for humanity's continued
survival. As he concludes in the title essay of this book: "As a
species, we are binders of time, bound up by our biases of time; we
are moved by our consciousness of time, as we tell time, and as we
tell ourselves that only time will tell; as we play for time, and
as we pray, as we pray for time."
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