This article looks at Husserlian ideas as an analytical tool to explain the cognitive aspects of experiences that range between knowledge acts in inferences and Mulligan’s contemporary perspective of meaning formation, through reflections of relations.
The end-result of the intellect’s normative (i.e. meaning-seeking) operations is knowledge—i.e. a metaphysical, sharable, and truth-indipendent end-result of intellectual processes of ontological abstraction that transcend experience’s facticity and finiteness.Footnote 62 The two considerations ...
with the intro, “Thought you might appreciate this.” So, someone *has* has been reading myscreeds against religious nonsense and bigotrythoughtful critiques of the dangers of entangling mythology and supernatural beliefs with cultural institutions and government....
as a gradual accretion of the Wisdom of Ages Immemorial, bears traces of many successive schools of thought. But all its messages are fraught with hope for the regeneration of humanity. The author intimated his desire in this
I forget the title of whatever one I had on my computer screen; something to do with a male dance revue.[3]The one I’m currently…watching (I don’t know if that is the correct word, as I never seem to finish them) is titled,Christmas in Notting Hill. In arip-offnod to the ...
His articles have appeared or are forthcoming in the Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance, La Revue des Amis de Ronsard, L'Esprit Créateur, French Forum, and elsewhere. Educated at the University of London (UK) and Harvard University (Cambridge, MA), he regularly lectures in the United ...
of scientists of what they see as the retreat from “Enlightenment” values, including the belief that universal truths and falsehoods can be established by science, and the belief that religion cannot be allowed to contend that any “objective” truth is impossible, in the manner of contemporary...
He was trained in realities even more than in ideas; and hence he is original, forcible, clear, an enemy of all philosophic indefiniteness and obscurity; so that it may well be said of him, in the words of a writer in the _Revue Contemporaine, ce n’est pas un philosophe comme les ...
“Bastards,” was how he described most of his celluloid appearances, “conceived in contempt of life and spewn out onto screens across the world with noxious ballyhoo; saying nothing, contemptuous of the truth, sullen and lecherous.” Born Sterling Relyea Walter and poor, Hayden was adopted...
“I want to reclaim, resanctify, and repurify the power and truth of words, because words do matter.” Amen. As a writer, I’m taking up her challenge and working to heed her call. Words matter — never more than now. Leave a comment ...