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In: Routledge library editions. 18th century philosophy volume 11
1. Berkeley's theory of morals / C.D. Broad -- 2. George Berkeley on moral demonstration / Graham P. Conroy -- 3. Berkeley and the problem of evil / Jackson P. Hershbell -- 4. Berkeley's querist and its place in the economic thought of the eighteenth century / T.W. Hutchinson -- 5. The development of Berkeley's ethical theory / G.A. Johnston -- 6. A synopsis of Berkeley's monetary philosophy / Joseph Johnston -- 7. Universalization in Berkeley's rule-utilitarianism / Joseph Kupfer -- 8. Berkeley's social theory: context and development / David E. Leary -- 9. Berkeley as a moral philosopher / Hugh W. Orange -- 10. George Berkeley's theory of economic policy and classical economic liberalism / Frank Petrella -- 11. George Berkeley / Douglas Vickers -- 12. George Berkeley: precursor of Keynes or moral economist on underdevelopment / Ian D.S. Ward.
In: St Andrews studies in philosophy and public affairs 13
chapter Introduction -- chapter 1 Aristotle's woman -- chapter 2 Slaves and citizens -- chapter 3 Is humanity a natural kind? -- chapter 4 Children and the mammalian order -- chapter 5 Anarchists against the revolution -- chapter 6 Bioregional environmentalism and the humanistic culture -- chapter 7 Good and bad ethology and the decent polis -- chapter 8 Apes and the idea of kindred -- chapter 9 Herds of free bipeds -- chapter 10 Enlarging the community -- chapter 11 Nations and empires.
In: Oxford Paperbacks
In: European Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Band 9, Heft 3, S. 49-63
I propose, in partial response to the rich essays by Millican & Thornhill-Miller and Salamon that religious traditions are too diverse to be represented either by a cosmological core or even (though this is more plausible) an ethical. Religious sensibility is more often inspirational than explanatory, does not always require a transcendent origin of all things (however reasonable that thesis may be in the abstract), and does not always support the sort of humanistic values preferred in the European Enlightenment. A widely shared global religion is more likely to be eclectic than carefully 'rational', and is likely to be opposed by a more overtly 'supernatural' project founded in revelation.
In: European Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Band 8, Heft 4, S. 3-22
The Hindu Brahmanas record that God's reply to the question 'Who are you?' was simply 'Who': 'Who is the God whom we should honour with the oblation': an indicative, as well as interrogative! Might this also be what Aeschylus intended by his reference to 'Zeus hostis pot'estin' (Zeus, whoever He is): not an expression of doubt, but of acknowledged mystery? The name by which He is to be called, perhaps ('if it pleases Him'), is not 'Zeus' but, exactly, 'Whoever'. And most famously the God that Moses encountered, asked who He is, answered only 'I am'. What does this apparently evasive response imply for worship and theology in the light of David Hume's enquiry, how an unknowable God differs from an equally unknowable non-God? Rather than asking what God is we can investigate instead what worship is, perceiving our response to the Unknown as itself a revelation. In Orthodox terms, what we can share with God is not His Essence, but His Energeiai: not what He Is, but what He does.
In: The European legacy: the official journal of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas (ISSEI), Band 17, Heft 6, S. 769-778
ISSN: 1470-1316
In: European Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 87-107
Good reasons to "give up reason" are (i) naturalistic reasons that downplay the likely effectiveness of human mentation - these lead to contradiction if naturalism itself is reckoned "really true"; (ii) there are pragmatic reasons to license and enjoy imaginative stories that conflict with principles elevated as "rational"; (iii) mystical reasons, which take account of the revolutionary aspects of certain "religious" disciplines, and throw doubt on what we "naturally" take for granted.
In: International social science journal, Band 62, Heft 205-206, S. 301-312
ISSN: 1468-2451
In: Metascience: an international review journal for the history, philosophy and social studies of science, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 563-567
ISSN: 1467-9981
In: Inquiry: an interdisciplinary journal of philosophy and the social sciences, Band 45, Heft 2, S. 249-267
ISSN: 1502-3923