From Nature to Experience: The American Search for Cultural AuthorityRowman & Littlefield, 2005 - 263 psl. "Roger Lundin explores this shift from nature to experience as the source of moral and cultural authority in America. Drawing on the resources of Protestant theology, he examines one of America's central intellectual traditions and shows the crucial possibilities it puts forth as well as the vexing problems it confronts. In the end, where the pragmatic tradition concludes that experience must generate the very light that will lead us out of its own darkness, From Nature to Experience returns to religion for illumination and truth." "A story of nineteenth-century sources and twenty-first-century consequences, this work brings together literature, history, philosophy, and theology to form a truly original critique of American culture."--BOOK JACKET. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 37
20 psl.
... appears to grow out of a belief that " preferences " must come from nowhere , must originate in a self free of the influence of social pressures and public norms . On the contrary , Fish writes , " predilection " is but another name for ...
... appears to grow out of a belief that " preferences " must come from nowhere , must originate in a self free of the influence of social pressures and public norms . On the contrary , Fish writes , " predilection " is but another name for ...
28 psl.
... appears to impart particularity only to that which is a function of his will , and therefore to deprive of true particularity ; and the hu- man will which appears to achieve independence only in the kind of arbitrary self assertion ...
... appears to impart particularity only to that which is a function of his will , and therefore to deprive of true particularity ; and the hu- man will which appears to achieve independence only in the kind of arbitrary self assertion ...
36 psl.
... appears to be " an epistemological absurdity " who is " at odds with every conceivable form of existential ... appear absent , or silent , or dead ( Evangelical , 1.224–25 ) . From Jean Paul's " Speech of the Dead Christ " to the ...
... appears to be " an epistemological absurdity " who is " at odds with every conceivable form of existential ... appear absent , or silent , or dead ( Evangelical , 1.224–25 ) . From Jean Paul's " Speech of the Dead Christ " to the ...
Turinys
The Preferences of Eden | 17 |
Emerson and the Path to Pragmatism | 41 |
William James and | 71 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 7
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
From Nature to Experience– The American Search for Cultural Authority Roger Lundin Ribota peržiūra - 2005 |
From Nature to Experience– The American Search for Cultural Authority Roger Lundin Ribota peržiūra - 2007 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Absalom Adams Alasdair MacIntyre American argues argument authority believe Bonhoeffer Calvin Cambridge Catholic Charles Taylor Christ Christian faith church claims Compson consciousness contemporary contingent conversation criticism cultural Darwin decades Dietrich Bonhoeffer divine doctrine Emily Dickinson Essays Faulkner Foucault Gadamer Gadamer's Hans-Georg Gadamer Harvard University Press Hauerwas Helmut Thielicke hereafter cited hermeneutical Hirsch human experience idea ideal intellectual interpretation Jesus John Dewey Karl Barth language Letters literary literature lives M. H. Abrams meaning mind modern moral Nature to Experience Nietzsche nineteenth century novel object Philosophical play poem poet poetry pragmatism pragmatists Protestant Protestantism Quentin question Ralph Waldo Emerson reality religion religious revelation Richard Rorty Ricoeur romantic Scripture secular sense Shreve soul spirit Stanley Fish story Sutpen theologian theology theory things Thoreau thought tion tradition trans truth understanding W. H. Auden William James words writes wrote York