Skip to main content

You are now only searching within the eBColl Philosophy & Religion R0 package

previous disabled Page of 4
and
  1. No Access

    Chapter

    Derrida on Rousseau: Deconstruction as Philosophy of Logic

    In the lengthy reading of Rousseau which makes up the central portion of Jacques Derrida’s Of Grammatolog. there is much that should interest philosophers of logic (Derrida 1976). Just recently some writers — Gra...

    Christopher Norris in Language, Logic and Epistemology: A Modal-Realist Approach (2004)

  2. No Access

    Chapter

    Modularity, Nativism, and Reference-Fixing: On Chomsky’s Internalist Assumptions

    Noam Chomsky’s objections to the Kripke/Putnam externalist or causal theory of reference have been developed in various books and articles over the past two decades (see for instance Chomsky 1986, 1988, 1992, ...

    Christopher Norris in Language, Logic and Epistemology: A Modal-Realist Approach (2004)

  3. No Access

    Book

  4. No Access

    Chapter

    The Perceiver’s Share (2): Deconstructive Musicology and Cognitive Science

    It is now more than twenty years since Joseph Kerman published his much-cited essay ‘How we got into analysis, and how to get out’ (Kerman 1980). Significantly enough, it appeared in the US journal Critical Inqui...

    Christopher Norris in Language, Logic and Epistemology: A Modal-Realist Approach (2004)

  5. No Access

    Chapter

    Introduction

    This volume brings together a number of chapters which I should happily describe as ‘inter-disciplinary’ if that term had not acquired — to my mind at least — certain negative or worrisome connotations. These ...

    Christopher Norris in Language, Logic and Epistemology: A Modal-Realist Approach (2004)

  6. No Access

    Chapter

    The Limits of Whose Language?: Wittgenstein on Logic, Mathematics, and Science

    I think that most likely in a century’s time — if humanity survives that long and still goes in for philosophical debate — there will be a great deal of headscratching among philosophers as to why one of their...

    Christopher Norris in Language, Logic and Epistemology: A Modal-Realist Approach (2004)

  7. No Access

    Chapter

    The Perceiver’s Share (1): Realism, Scepticism, and Response-Dependence

    There is a large recent literature on the topic of response-dependence, ranging over issues in ontology, epistemology, philosophy of mind, political theory, ethics, aesthetics, and various other branches of th...

    Christopher Norris in Language, Logic and Epistemology: A Modal-Realist Approach (2004)

  8. No Access

    Chapter

    Change, Conservation, and Crisis-Management in the Discourse of Analytic Philosophy

    There has been much debate in recent years as to whether ‘analytic philosophy’ describes a distinctive tradition of thought or perhaps just a loosely related set of family-resemblance features. Here I put the ...

    Christopher Norris in Language, Logic and Epistemology: A Modal-Realist Approach (2004)

  9. No Access

    Chapter

    On Reader Responsibility: An Introduction

    Contemporary theories of reading have been heavily determined by new criticism, Russian formalism, and structuralism, and their influence continues, variously, in New historicism, post-structuralism, as also i...

    Clara A. B. Joseph, Gaye Williams Ortiz in Theology and Literature (2006)

  10. No Access

    Chapter

    Only Irresponsible People would go into the Desert for Forty Days: Jim Crace’s Quarantine Or the Diary of another Madman

    Jim Crace’s novel Quarantine (1997) revisits the story of the temptations of Jesus in the wilderness. It does not adhere closely to the gospel narratives, yet it has uncanny resonances with Scripture, with the st...

    David Jasper in Theology and Literature (2006)

  11. No Access

    Chapter

    Samuel Beckett’s Use of the Bible and the Responsibility of the Reader

    Samuel Beckett’s use of the Bible might seem quite inconsistent, ambiguous, and irresponsible, especially when seen from a Christian point of view, for the plethora of allusions and direct references to the Bi...

    Spyridoula Athanasopoulou-Kypriou in Theology and Literature (2006)

  12. No Access

    Chapter

    The “Indian” Character of Modern Hindi Drama: Neo-Sanskritic, Pro-Western Naturalistic, or Nativistic Dramas?

    This essay deals with the notion of “Indian” character of naturalistic Hindi drama, as revealed in the plays of Mohan Rakeś (1925–1972), Bhuvaneśvar (1912–1957), and Upendranath Aśk (1910–1996) who wrote in th...

    Diana Dimitrova in Theology and Literature (2006)

  13. No Access

    Chapter

    Bible and Ethics: Moral Formation and Analogical Imagination

    The use of the Bible in ethics is comparable with the way in which literature and film are used in ethics.1 Every great work of literature, film, or drama invites us into an alternative reality where new possibil...

    Johannes Nissen in Theology and Literature (2006)

  14. No Access

    Chapter

    Revolting Fantasies: Reviewing the Cinematic Image as Fruitful Ground for Creative, Theological Interpretations in the Company of Julia Kristeva

    Are the movies good for us? In her book, Intimate Revolt: The Powers and Limits of Psychoanalysis, Julia Kristeva (2002a) defends what she calls a revolutionary culture whose mode and purpose is a liberating proc...

    Alison Jasper in Theology and Literature (2006)

  15. No Access

    Chapter

    Dialogue in Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule or the Reader as Truth-Seeker

    This essay1 examines Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj, particularly its dialogic form, in order to highlight several theoretical implications for a study of the literary reader. The Gandhian reader is, above everything else,...

    Clara A B Joseph in Theology and Literature (2006)

  16. No Access

    Book

    Theology and Literature

    Rethinking Reader Responsibility

    Williams Ortiz Gaye, Clara A B Joseph (2006)

  17. No Access

    Chapter

    Some Dilemmas of an Ethics of Literature

    What can an ethical approach to literature mean, and how does it relate to the autonomy art and literature have achieved through the nineteenth and twentieth century? The current “ethical turn” goes from fairl...

    Liesbeth Korthals Altes in Theology and Literature (2006)

  18. No Access

    Chapter

    The Ethics of Biblical Interpretation: Rhetoricizing the Foundations

    Historically, biblical ethics dealt with the question of what the Bible has to say about right living and moral decision making. Given that the same texts yield a variety of ethical stances, the basis upon whi...

    Robert J Hurley in Theology and Literature (2006)

  19. No Access

    Chapter

    Responsibly Performing Vulnerability: Salman Rushdie’s Fury and Edgar Laurence Doctorow’s City of God

    Salman Rushdie’s novel Fury (2002) presents modernity as intrinsically religious. Fury creatively twists and reverses the Koranic story of Abraham (Ibrahim) sacrificing his son by presenting its main character Ma...

    Erik Borgman in Theology and Literature (2006)

  20. No Access

    Chapter

    On Trial: Mikhail Bakhtin and Abram Tertz’s Address to “God”

    The literary work of Mikhail Bakhtin and Andrey Sinyavsky (also known as Abram Tertz) can be fully understood in the light of their critical responses to the Soviet doctrine of socialist realism, which was off...

    Lewis Owens in Theology and Literature (2006)

previous disabled Page of 4