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nexusstc/Socrates' Children: Modern: The 100 Greatest Philosophers/678f1bfa98ab66566f47b3de6c1cc3c6.pdf
Socrates' Children : Modern: The 100 Greatest Philosophers by Peter Kreeft St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press, The 100 greatest philosophers, South Bend, Indiana, 2019
This is the third of a four-volume history of philosophy . . . on ancient, medieval, modern, and contemporary philosophy. After the fourth volume is produced in paper, a one-volume clothbound edition, containing all four paperbound editions, will be published. Kreeft focuses on the “big ideas” that have influenced present people and present times, and includes relevant biographical data, proportionate to its importance for each thinker. Moreover, the aim of the work is to stimulate philosophizing, controversy, and argument. It uses ordinary language and logic, not jargon and symbolic logic, and it is commonsensical (like Aristotle) and existential in the sense that it sees philosophy as something to be lived and experienced in life. Philosophy, after all, is not about philosophy but reality . . . about wisdom, life and death, good and evil, and God. Kreeft seeks to be simple and direct and clear. But it is not dumbed down and patronizing. It will stretch the reader, but it is meant for beginnings, not just scholars. It can be used for college classes or do-it-yourselfers. It emphasizes surprises; remember, “philosophy begins in wonder.” And it includes visual aids: charts, cartoons, line drawings, and drawings of each philosopher.
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English [en] · PDF · 13.9MB · 2019 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/zlib · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167504.3
nexusstc/Socrates' Children: Ancient: The 100 Greatest Philosophers/e521c5e5915e548a14a863654b56c8d3.pdf
Socrates' Children : Ancient: The 100 Greatest Philosophers Peter Kreeft Saint Augustine's Press, Incorporated, 1, PS, 2019
This is the first of a four-volume history of philosophy . . . on ancient, medieval, modern, and contemporary philosophy. After the fourth volume is produced in paper, a one-volume clothbound edition, containing all four paperbound editions, will be published. Kreeft focuses on the “big ideas” that have influenced present people and present times, and includes relevant biographical data, proportionate to its importance for each thinker. Moreover, the aim of the work is to stimulate philosophizing, controversy, and argument. It uses ordinary language and logic, not jargon and symbolic logic, and it is commonsensical (like Aristotle) and existential in the sense that it sees philosophy as something to be lived and experienced in life. Philosophy, after all, is not about philosophy but reality . . . about wisdom, life and death, good and evil, and God. Kreeft seeks to be simple and direct and clear. But it is not dumbed down and patronizing. It will stretch the reader, but it is meant for beginners, not just scholars. It can be used for college classes or do-it-yourselfers. It emphasizes surprises; remember, “philosophy begins in wonder.” And it includes visual aids: charts, cartoons, line drawings, and drawings of each philosopher.
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English [en] · PDF · 8.6MB · 2019 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/zlib · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167501.64
ia/libertycontempor0000unse.pdf
Liberty: Contemporary Responses to J S Mill (Key Issues (St. Augustine's Press)) series editor, Andrew Pyle St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press, Key issues ;, no. 1, Key issues (Bristol, England) ;, no. 1., South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2000
Mill's On Liberty has turned out to be, as he predicted, the most widely-read and long-lasting of his writings. It has proved, however, extremely difficult to pin Mill down to any definite political doctrines. His contemporaries clearly had the same problems as have beset modern commentators. Some portray Mill as a dangerous revolutionary, a latter-day Jacobin; others see him as peddling mere platitudes. This volume traces the reception of On Liberty in the periodical literature, from the rave review by Buckle in Fraser's Magazine, by way of the furious denunciations in such Tory journals as Blackwood's and the Quarterly, down to later liberals like John Morley and Leslie Stephen.
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English [en] · PDF · 27.0MB · 2000 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167500.31
ia/janetscottagepoe0000trac.pdf
Janet's cottage : poems D. H. Tracy St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press, South Bend, IN, Indiana, 2011
iv, 88 p. ; 23 cm
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English [en] · PDF · 3.0MB · 2011 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167500.1
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ia/truelove0000seif.pdf
True Love Josef Seifert; John F. Crosby St. Augustines Press; St. Augustine's Press, 1st [edition]., South Bend, Indiana, Indiana, 2014
100% Satisfaction is *! For New condition books in our store; You will be the first user. You will be the first to open the book cover. For Used condition books in our store; It shows signs of wear from consistent use, but it remains in good condition and works perfectly. All pages and cover are intact , but may have aesthetic issues such as price clipping, nicks, scratches, and scuffs. Pages may include some notes and highlighting. For all our books; Cargo will be delivered in the required time. There are no problems in page content and in the paper. There are no problems except minor faults.
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English [en] · PDF · 3.4MB · 2014 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167500.1
ia/narcissistnation0000marl.pdf
Narcissist nation : reflections of a blue-state conservative Marlin, George J., 1952- St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press, South Bend, IN, Indiana, 2011
Book by Marlin, George J.
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English [en] · PDF · 9.6MB · 2011 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167497.88
lgli/F3thinker ! - Husserl and the Search for Certitude - Leszek Kolakowski (2001, ST. AUGUSTINE'S PRESS).pdf
Husserl and the Search for Certitude - Leszek Kolakowski F3thinker ! Saint Augustine's Press, Incorporated, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2001
"[Husserl] better than anybody, compelled us to realize the painful dilemma of knowledge: either consistent empiricism, with its relativistic, skeptical results (a standpoint which many regard discouraging, inadmissible, and in fact ruinous for culture) or transcendental dogmatism, which cannot really justify itself and remains in the end an arbitrary decision. I have to admit that although ultimate certitude is a goal that cannot be attained within the rationalist framework, our culture would be poor and miserable without people who keep trying to reach this goal, and it hardly could survive when left entirely in the hands of the skeptics." - From the author's conclusion.<br> "Kolakowski's Husserl and the Search for Certitude consists of his three Cassirer Lectures, delivered at Yale in 1974. In broad, general terms, he places Husserl in the tradition of philosophers, from Descartes to the Logical positivists, who were engaged in the attempt to discover some knowledge which was certain and indubitable. His final view is that such a quest must fail. But he also argues that unless it is undertaken, the tension and disharmonies which exist between the claims of the skeptics and relativists on the one hand, and those who believe in the possibility of absolute certainty on the other, must come to an end. And since he believes that this tension is to a large extent the source of all culture and intellectual life, we should be disastrously impoverished if the search were finally given up. . . . [Kolakowski's] purpose is to show the ways in which Husserl pursued, and inevitably failed to reach, his goal, and to justify, at least in part, the claim he made for his philosophy, that iswas the defense of culture and civilization. The lectures are elegant, persuasively clear and delightful." - Mary Warnock, Times Literary Supplement<br>
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English [en] · PDF · 0.9MB · 2001 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/zlib · Save
base score: 11063.0, final score: 167497.75
lgli/Josef Pieper [Pieper, Josef] - Leisure, the Basis of Culture (1998, St. Augustine's Press).epub
Leisure, the Basis of Culture Josef Pieper [Pieper, Josef] St. Augustine's Press, 1998
English [en] · EPUB · 0.5MB · 1998 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/zlib · Save
base score: 11055.0, final score: 167497.6
lgli/Josef Pieper - The Christian Idea of Man (2011, St. Augustine's Press).pdf
The Christian Idea of Man Josef Pieper; preface by John Haldane; translated by Dan Farrelly Saint Augustine's Press, Incorporated, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2011
In The Christian Idea of Man Josef Pieper brings off an extraordinary feat. He acknowledges that whoever introduces the theme of virtue and the virtues can expect to be met with a smile of various shades of condescension. He then proceeds to single out prudence as the fundamental virtue on which the other cardinal virtues are based. In defining it, he does away with the shallow connotations which have debased it in modern times. Similarly, he manages to divest it of all traces of moralism, which, to a large extent has become identified with the Christian idea of virtue and has made it fall into general disrepute. For Pieper, prudence is fundamentally based on a clear perception of reality of things as they are and the prudent person is the one who acts in accordance with this perception. It has nothing to do with knowing how to avoid decisions which might be to ones disadvantage. Similarly, justice, which is based on prudence, involves acting toward other persons according to ones perception of the truth of the circumstances again, a perception of things as they are. This is not a reference to any status quo, but to the reality as constituted by the Creator. In referring to courage [fortitude], Pieper discusses the overcoming of fear. This does not imply having no fear but, precisely, overcoming it. With regard to the fundamental fear of death, Pieper rejects the approaches which contend that there is nothing to fear in death. On the contrary, there is everything to fear in death: it concerns the question of possible absolute annihilation! Here Pieper introduces the consideration of the theological virtues of faith, hope, and love [charity]. When confronted with the question of possible annihilation, the Christians faith is paramount. Belief in God lets him confront danger and overcome even the most radical fear through hope in God. His love of God does not wipe out fear but gives him courage. Moderation is seen as the last in the hierarchy of the cardinal virtues. Through its manifestation, in recent Christian thinking, with chastity and abstinence, it became in the Christian mind the most prominent characteristic of the Christian idea of man and one that dominated everything else. It has been reduced to the status of the most private of the virtues and is combined with a moralistic conception of the good. Piepers analysis of moderation shows how this virtue needs to be rethought, although, even then, it will remain the last in the hierarchy of virtues.
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English [en] · PDF · 2.4MB · 2011 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/zlib · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167495.95
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nexusstc/Leisure: The Basis of Culture/0f1c8d55ad96543644e4204bdf58374c.epub
Leisure: The Basis of Culture Josef Pieper; Gerald Malsbary St. Augustine’s Press, Paperback, 1998
One of the most important philosophy titles published in the twentieth century, Josef Pieper's Leisure: the Basis of Culture is more significant, even more crucial, today than it was when it first appeared fifty years ago. Pieper shows that the Greeks understood and valued leisure, as did the medieval Europeans. He points out that religion can be born only in leisure - a leisure that allows time for the contemplation of the nature of God. Leisure has been, and always will be, the first foundation of any culture. He maintains that our bourgeois world of total labor has vanquished leisure, and issues a startling warning: Unless we regain the art of silence and insight, the ability for nonactivity, unless we substitute true leisure for our hectic amusements, we will destroy our culture - and ourselves. These astonishing essays contradict all our pragmatic and puritanical conceptions about labor and leisure; Josef Pieper demolishes the twentieth-century cult of "work" as he predicts its destructive consequences.
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English [en] · EPUB · 0.4MB · 1998 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/zlib · Save
base score: 11055.0, final score: 167495.56
ia/orwellyourorwell0000stee.pdf
Orwell your Orwell : a worldview on the slab David Ramsay Steele South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Indiana, 2017
To Those Who Think They Know What George Orwell Is All About, This Book Unpacks Surprise After Surprise. Orwell Your Orwell Reveals An Orwell Very Different From The One Most People Think Of. It Gives An Unexpected Yet Convincing Picture Of Orwell's Beliefs, Every Key Point Precisely Documented. Orwell Adopted A Habitual Rhetoric In Which He Portrayed Himself As A Lone, Embattled Dissident. But Objectively Examined, His Opinions Broadly Corresponded With Those Of Conventional Leftwing Thinking. Far From Being Skeptical Of Prevailing Orthodoxies, Orwell Emerges As A True Believer In The Orthodoxies Of The 1930s Left, Though A Believer Who Sharply Drew Attention To Some Of The Serious Problems With These Ideologies. In His Short Life, Orwell Underwent Several Dramatic Conversions - Such As His Overnight Switch In August 1939 From Being Fiercely Anti-war To Enthusiastically Pro-war - While Cleaving To Some Fixed Positions - Such As His Opposition To The British Empire, Totalitarianism, And Birth Control. Dr. Steele Identifies Both The Conversions And The Continuities, As Well As Some Aspects Of His Thought Which Gradually Evolved. As Well As Recovering Orwell's Actual Beliefs From The Many Accumulated Misrepresentations, Dr. Steele Also Criticizes Some Of These Beliefs, Exposing The Fallacies In Orwell's Thinking On Such Issues As The Economics Of Imperialism, The Dangers Of Hedonism, The Significance Of The Spanish Civil War, And The Efficacy Of Mind Control.-- 1. The Purveyor Of Orthodoxies -- Orwell And The Left -- Orwell's Orthodoxies -- Confirmation By Contrary Instance -- The Style Of Propaganda -- Orwell's Artful Honesty -- Do The Lower Classes Smell? -- Why Orwell Matters, Really -- 2. The Follower Of Intellectual Fashion -- The Left And The Empire -- Leftwing Anti-facism In The 1930s -- Orwell And Communism -- Russell And Orwell -- The Reception Of Wigan Pier -- Dirty Spanish Linen -- The Delayed Acceptance Of Animal Farm -- A Typical Leftwing Intellectual? -- 3. The Socialist -- What Socialism Meant In 1936 -- The Doctrinaire Socialist -- Socialism Means Central Planning -- Arguments Against Socialism -- The Non-marxist -- The Anti-trotskyist -- The Ilp Member -- Socialism And Workers' Living Conditions -- The Labour Party Supporter -- 4. The Post-socialist -- From Post-socialist Anti-socialist To Post-socialist Socialist -- Orwell On Technology -- Why Orwell Was Wrong About Technology --^ Orwell On Technology After Wigan Pier -- The World Wells Made -- Orwell's Attacks On Wells -- Some Writers Orwell Read -- Leavis's Post-socialism -- The Intellectual Crisis Of Socialism -- The Fin-de-siècle Background Of Post-socialism -- The Myth Of Mind Control -- 5. The Reactionary -- Two Anti-degeneratist Theories -- The Falling Birthrate -- The Manly Man -- The Anti-homosexual -- Why The Anti-degeneratists Were Wrong About Homosexuality -- The Degenerate Middle Class -- The Anti-hedonist -- Confusion About Hedonism -- The Vacuity Of Orwell's Anti-hedonism -- The Anti-rationalist -- Orwell's And Huxley's Anti-hedonism -- The Nostalgic Atheist -- Reservations About Jews -- 6. The Anti-imperialist -- Worse Than National Socialism? -- The Movement For Indian Independence -- Orwell's Equivocations On Independence -- A Money Racket -- Did British Workers Gain From The Empire? -- An Assumption In Search Of An Explanation --^ Were British Workers Living Off The Backs Of Starving Coolies? -- Did The Empire Hold Back The Development Of The Colonies? -- The De-industrialization That Probably Never Happened -- Hobson And Lenin -- Two Remaining Theories -- 7. The Spanish Soldier -- Civil War In Spain -- A War Between Two Coalitions -- Orwell In Spain -- Orwell's Conversion To The Revolutionary Left -- Tweedledum And Tweedledee -- The Instinctively Revolutionary Working Class -- The Revolution Runs Out Of Enthusiasm -- Orwell's Defense Of Leftist Atrocities -- The Conflict Between Socialism And Syndicalism -- Spain In The Rearview Mirror -- 8. The Class Warrior -- Pacifism And The British Left -- The Class-war Anti-war Position -- A Dream Ends A Nightmare -- Class War To Cold War -- 9. The Anti-communist -- Orwell And The Communists -- Communists In The British Left -- Communist Zigs And Zags -- Exaggerating Communist Influence -- The Beliefs Of 1930s Intellectuals -- Orwell's International Policy After 1944 --^ I've Got A Little List -- 10. The Inadvertent Anti-socialist -- The Anti-antisocialist Interpretation Of Nineteen Eighty-four -- The Rightwing Response -- The Anti-orwell Leftists -- Immediate Contemporary Reactions -- Orwell's Reply -- The Ingsoc Regime -- The Challenge To Socialists -- Two Definitions Of Socialism -- Capitalism Is Doomed -- Bad, Bad Capitalism -- Is Nineteen Eighty-four About Capitalism? -- What If There's No Such Thing As Democratic Socialism? -- 11. Must Freedom Die? -- Socialism As Ultimate Democracy -- Collectivism Without Democracy -- What To Make Of The Ussr? -- What To Make Of Fascism? -- The Myth Of Irrational Fascism -- The Myth Of Unintellectual Fascism -- Orwell On Totalitarianism -- Totalitarian Influences In Culture -- The Death Of Literature -- The End Of Truth -- The Birth Of Brainwashing -- The Stability Of The Ingsoc Regime -- The Strange Death Of Democratic Collectivism -- It Didn't Happen. David Ramsay Steele. Includes Bibliographical References And Index.
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English [en] · PDF · 22.9MB · 2017 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167493.94
ia/massmisunderstan0000whit.pdf
Mass misunderstandings: the mixed legacy of the Vatican II liturgical reforms / Kenneth D. Whitehead by Kenneth D. Whitehead St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2008
<p>The first document enacted by the Second Vatican Council was its Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, and the liturgical reform mandated by that document has probably had a greater impact on the average Catholic than any other action of the Council. That this liturgical reform has not in every respect been the unalloyed success hoped for by the Council Fathers, however, has only been grudgingly recognized. The liturgists and other Church officials responsible for implementing the reforms have had a vested interest in claiming success, even where there was evidence to the contrary. Nevertheless, the many and sometimes abrupt liturgical changes made were bound to affect long-established modes of worship and devotion - not to speak of the drastic move from Latin to the vernacular, which came shortly after the Council, and which necessarily entailed radical change in the Church's worship.</p> <p>In July 2007, Pope Benedict XVI signaled that the liturgical question needed to be revisited when he issued a motu proprio that allowed, some fortyplus years after the end of the Council, a wider celebration of the unreformed pre-Vatican-II Mass in Latin as an "extraordinary" form of the Roman rite. While the pope's motu proprio was not a repudiation or cancellation of the Vatican II liturgical reforms - as some liturgists feared (and some tradition-alists hoped) - it did indicate a sane and sensible papal recognition that liturgy must be developed organically, not "manufactured" by a "committee." Above all, the pope recognized that the question of the liturgy must be approached realistically in the light of how the reforms have actually worked out, not of how some haveimagined that they might or should have worked out. This book by Kenneth D. Whitehead, who has written extensively both on Vatican II and on the liturgy, explains Pope Benedict's action in its proper context and describes the reactions to it, while making special reference to some of the pontiff's own extensive previous writings on the liturgy. The author then doubles back to evaluate the Vatican II liturgical reforms generally - how and why they were enacted, what has actually come about as a result of them, and how and why a "reform of the reform" is now called for.</p>
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English [en] · PDF · 15.2MB · 2008 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167493.78
Christian Metaphysics and Neoplatonism Albert Camus; translated with an Introduction and new preface by Ronald D. Srigley; [foreword by Ellis Sandoz; epilogue by Rémi Brague] St. Augustine's Press : In cooperation with the Eric Voegelin Society, South Bend, Indiana, Indiana, 2015
Contemporary scholarship tends to view Albert Camus as a modern, but he himself was conscious of the past and called the transition from Hellenism to Christianity the true and only turning point in history. For Camus, modernity was not fully comprehensible without an examination of the aspirations that were first articulated in antiquity and that later received their clearest expression in Christianity. These aspirations amounted to a fundamental reorientation of human life in politics, religion, science, and philosophy. Understanding the nature and achievement of that reorientation became the central task of Christian Metaphysics and Neoplatonism. Primarily known through its inclusion in a French omnibus edition, it has remained one of Camus' least-read works, yet it marks his first attempt to understand the relationship between Greek philosophy and Christianity as he charted the movement from the Gospels through Gnosticism and Plotinus to what he calls Augustine's second revelation of the Christian faith.
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English [en] · EPUB · 0.4MB · 2015 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/zlib · Save
base score: 11058.0, final score: 167493.47
Christian Metaphysics and Neoplatonism Albert Camus; translated with an Introduction and new preface by Ronald D. Srigley; [foreword by Ellis Sandoz; epilogue by Rémi Brague] St. Augustine's Press : In cooperation with the Eric Voegelin Society, 1985
Contemporary scholarship tends to view Albert Camus as a modern, but he himself was conscious of the past and called the transition from Hellenism to Christianity the true and only turning point in history. For Camus, modernity was not fully comprehensible without an examination of the aspirations that were first articulated in antiquity and that later received their clearest expression in Christianity. These aspirations amounted to a fundamental reorientation of human life in politics, religion, science, and philosophy. Understanding the nature and achievement of that reorientation became the central task of Christian Metaphysics and Neoplatonism. Primarily known through its inclusion in a French omnibus edition, it has remained one of Camus' least-read works, yet it marks his first attempt to understand the relationship between Greek philosophy and Christianity as he charted the movement from the Gospels through Gnosticism and Plotinus to what he calls Augustine's second revelation of the Christian faith.
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English [en] · EPUB · 0.4MB · 1985 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/zlib · Save
base score: 11058.0, final score: 167492.47
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ia/lossrecoveryoftr0000niem.pdf
The Loss and Recovery of Truth: Selected Writings of Gerhart Niemeyer Gerhart Niemeyer; edited by Michael Henry South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Indiana, Indiana, 2013
xxii, 696 pages ; 24 cm Includes bibliographical references and index
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English [en] · PDF · 38.1MB · 2013 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167492.08
ia/legitimacyofhuma00brag.pdf
The Legitimacy of the Human Rémi Brague; Paul Seaton South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press, 1st [edition, South Bend, Indiana, 2016
Armes de destruction massive, pollution, extinction dmographique : tout ce qui menace l'homme en tant qu'espce vivante ne fait plus de doute. Mais il existe des facteurs qui viennent de l'homme lui-mme, visant saper son humanit propre. Ces facteurs ont beau tre plus difficiles saisir, c'est eux que Rmi Brague tche de reprer travers une analyse fulgurante et radicale de l'ide d'humanisme. Car il ne s'agit plus de savoir comment nous pouvons promouvoir la valeur homme et ce qui est humain, en luttant contre toutes les figures de l'inhumain. Il s'agit dsormais de savoir s'il faut vraiment promouvoir un tel humanisme. C'est l'humanisme lui-mme qui est mis mal. Ce phnomne rcent, Rmi Brague en aperoit des signes avant-coureurs dans trois oeuvres majeures du XXe sicle, celle du pote russe Alexandre Blok, qui crivait l're de la rvolution d'Octobre, et, plus prs de nous, celles des philosophes Michel Foucault et Hans Blumenberg. Nous ne pouvons plus nous bercer d'illusions. Il est facile de prcher un humanisme rduit aux rgles du vivre-ensemble, mais comment le fonder ? La pense moderne est court d'arguments pour justifier l'existence mme des hommes. En cherchant btir sur son propre sol, l'exclusion de tout ce qui transcende l'humain, nature ou Dieu, elle se prive de son point d'Archimde. Est-ce une faon de dire que le projet athe des temps modernes a chou ? C'est au lecteur d'en juger.
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English [en] · PDF · 9.0MB · 2016 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167491.72
ia/nightvisionpoems0000foyj.pdf
Night Vision: Poems Poems. Selections Foy, John , 1960- (author.) University of Chicago Press, South Bend, IN, 2016
In John Foy's Night Vision, Wars Go On In The Middle East, Violence Is Never Far Away, And The Creatures Of The Field Are Much The Worse / For Having Been Beneath The Rotor Blades. Written In An Uncluttered Idiom, These Poems, Technically Adept, Play Across A Range Of Forms In A Voice That Stands Out For Its Bitter Clarity And Directness. They Are By Turns Contemplative And Savage, Invoking Meister Eckhart But Acknowledging That We Die Like Dogs In The Deep Snow. If They Offer Solace At All, It's In A Plainspoken, Dark Humor. The Result Is An Emotional Immediacy Unique In American Poetry-- John Foy. Winner Of The New Criterion Poetry Prize.
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English [en] · PDF · 3.7MB · 2016 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167491.66
lgli/Feser, Edward [Feser, Edward] - The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism (2012, St. Augustine's Press).epub
The Last Superstition : A Refutation of the New Atheism Feser, Edward [Feser, Edward] Saint Augustine's Press, Incorporated, 2014
The central contention of the “New Atheism” of Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens is that there has for several centuries been a war between science and religion, that religion has been steadily losing that war, and that at this point in human history a completely secular scientific account of the world has been worked out in such thorough and convincing detail that there is no longer any reason why a rational and educated person should find the claims of any religion the least bit worthy of attention. But as Edward Feser argues inThe Last Superstition, in fact there is not, and never has been, any war between science and religion at all. There has instead been a conflict between two entirely philosophical conceptions of the natural order: on the one hand, the classical “teleological” vision of Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas, on which purpose or goal-directedness is as inherent a feature of the physical world as mass or electric charge; and the modern “mechanical” vision of Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, and Hume, according to which the physical world is comprised of nothing more than purposeless, meaningless particles in motion. As it happens, on the classical teleological picture, the existence of God, the immortality of the soul, and the natural-law conception of morality are rationally unavoidable. Modern atheism and secularism have thus always crucially depended for their rational credentials on the insinuation that the modern, mechanical picture of the world has somehow been established by science. Yet this modern “mechanical” picture has never been established by science, and cannot be, for it is not a scientific theory in the first place but merely a philosophical interpretation of science. Moreover, as Feser shows, the philosophical arguments in its favor given by the early modern philosophers were notable only for being surprisingly weak. The true reasons for its popularity were then, and are now, primarily political: It was a tool by which the intellectual foundations of ecclesiastical authority could be undermined and the way opened toward a new secular and liberal social order oriented toward commerce and technology. So as to further these political ends, it was simply stipulated, by fiat as it were, that no theory inconsistent with the mechanical picture of the world would be allowed to count as “scientific.” As the centuries have worn on and historical memory has dimmed, this act of dogmatic stipulation has falsely come to be remembered as a “discovery.” However, not only is this modern philosophical picture rationally unfounded, it is demonstrably false. For the “mechanical” conception of the natural world, when worked out consistently, absurdly entails that rationality, and indeed the human mind itself, are illusory. The so-called “scientific worldview” championed by the New Atheists thus inevitably undermines its own rational foundations; and into the bargain (and contrary to the moralistic posturing of the New Atheists) it undermines the foundations of any possible morality as well. By contrast, and as The Last Superstition demonstrates, the classical teleological picture of nature can be seen to find powerful confirmation in developments from contemporary philosophy, biology, and physics; moreover, morality and reason itself cannot possibly be made sense of apart from it. The teleological vision of the ancients and medievals is thereby rationally vindicated – and with it the religious worldview they based upon it.
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English [en] · EPUB · 0.3MB · 2014 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/zlib · Save
base score: 11055.0, final score: 167491.48
ia/socraticlogiclog0000kree.pdf
Socratic Logic: A Logic Text using Socratic Method, Platonic Questions, and Aristotelian Principles, Edition 3.1 by Peter Kreeft; edited by Trent Dougherty South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, Ed. 3.1., South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2010
This new and revised edition of Peter Kreeft's Socratic Logic is updated, adding new exercises and more complete examples, all with Kreeft's characteristic clarity and wit. Since its introduction in the spring of 2004, Socratic Logic has proven to be a different type of logic text: (1) This is the only complete system of classical Aristotelian logic in print. The zold logicy is still the natural logic of the four language arts (reading, writing, speaking, and listening). Symbolic, or zmathematical, y logic is not for the humanities. (How often have you heard someone argue in symbolic logic?) (2) This book is simple and user-friendly. It is highly interactive, with a plethora of exercises and a light, engaging style. (3) It is practical. It is designed for do-it-yourselfers as well as classrooms. It emphasizes topics in proportion to probable student use: e.g., interpreting ordinary language, not only analyzing but also constructing effective arguments, smoking out hidden assumptions, making zargument maps, y and using Socratic method in various circumstances. (4) It is philosophical. Its exercises expose students to many classical quotations, and additional chapters introduce philosophical issues in a Socratic manner and from a commonsense, realistic point of view. It prepares students for reading Great Books rather than Dick and Jane, and models Socrates as the beginner's ideal teacher and philosopher
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English [en] · PDF · 23.7MB · 2010 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
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upload/newsarch_ebooks_2025_10/2023/09/26/Modernity and What Has Been Lost Considerations on the Lega.pdf
Modernity and what has been lost : considerations on the legacy of Leo Strauss Paweł Armada; Arkadiusz Górnisiewicz Jagiellonian University Press, First edition, Krakow, 2010
The title of this volume appears to suggest that modernity is somehow devoid of something of utmost importance. Sixteen years after the death of Leo Strauss, certainly one of the most profound thinkers in the twentieth century, the model of liberal democracy has been declared victorious, not to say final and true. Due to unrestrained acceptance of such a perspective, a real tension between human beings disappears as there is only one way of being 'correct'. Having taken it into consideration, we point toward something that goes beyond the discussion about the pros and cons of liberal democracy. It would be presumptuous to believe that the current embrace of the liberal-democratic model of culture has definitely settled the question, 'How to live?' And if modernity threatens to silence this most important question, or to neglect its importance as seen by common sense, it seems all the more important to show that the contemporary answers fall short of being self-evident
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English [en] · PDF · 0.6MB · 2010 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/upload/zlib · Save
base score: 11055.0, final score: 167491.25
lgli/The Meaning of Conservatism [2617757].epub
˜Theœ Meaning of Conservatism Roger Scruton Chicago Distribution Center (CDC Presses), Chicago Distribution Center (CDC Presses), South Bend, Indiana, 2020
This is a major contribution to political thought from conservatism's greatest contemporary proponent. Originally published in Britain in 1980 and revised in 1984, this edition – the first ever in the United States – is a major rewriting of the work. Scruton's idea of conservatism – what in America we tend to call "paleo-conservatism" – might well shock the sensibilities of those American conservatives" who view it as little more than the workings of the free market. Conservatism, says Scruton, is neither automatic hostility toward the state nor the desire to limit the state's obligations toward the citizen. Rather, conservatism regards the individual not as the premise but the conclusion of politics, a politics that is fundamentally opposed to the ethic of social justice, to equality of station, income, and achievement, or to the attempt to bring major institutions of society (such as schools and universities) under government control. The conservative outlook, says Scruton, is neither outmoded nor irrational. On the contrary, it is the most reasonable of political alternatives. The evils of socialism, he maintains, lie precisely where its supporters find its strengths, and the conditions for the credibility of socialism have long since disappeared. Neither socialism nor liberalism can come to terms with the real complexity of human society, and both appear plausible only because they direct attention away from what is actual, toward what is merely ideal. From earlier editions of The Meaning of Conservatism : "The book provides exactly that swift kick on the intellectual bottom which every undergraduate student of political science needs, most of them more urgently than ever before." – T. E. Utley, (London) Daily Telegraph "If the text is full of surprises, the manner is no less striking than the matter. Scruton is a great stylist, and one is continually arrested by beautifully crafted phrases which beg for quotation. . . . [He] is a cultured and critical guide through the traditional landscape of conservatism; his book provokes thought and it is a pleasure to read." – Bram Gieben, Political Quarterly ". . . remarkable work. . . . The highest praise which one can bestow on The Meaning of Conservatism is to say that it reminds one at every page of Thomas Hobbes, the greatest master of the English language ever to write a work of political theory." – Jonathan Sumption, Sunday Telegraph ". . . clearly too ghastly to be taken seriously." – Andrew Belsey, Radical Philosophy
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English [en] · EPUB · 1.3MB · 2020 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167491.25
lgli/Edward Feser - The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism (2012, St. Augustine's Press).epub
The Last Superstition : A Refutation of the New Atheism Edward Feser Saint Augustine's Press, Incorporated, 2014
The central contention of the “New Atheism” of Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens is that there has for several centuries been a war between science and religion, that religion has been steadily losing that war, and that at this point in human history a completely secular scientific account of the world has been worked out in such thorough and convincing detail that there is no longer any reason why a rational and educated person should find the claims of any religion the least bit worthy of attention. But as Edward Feser argues inThe Last Superstition, in fact there is not, and never has been, any war between science and religion at all. There has instead been a conflict between two entirely philosophical conceptions of the natural order: on the one hand, the classical “teleological” vision of Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas, on which purpose or goal-directedness is as inherent a feature of the physical world as mass or electric charge; and the modern “mechanical” vision of Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, and Hume, according to which the physical world is comprised of nothing more than purposeless, meaningless particles in motion. As it happens, on the classical teleological picture, the existence of God, the immortality of the soul, and the natural-law conception of morality are rationally unavoidable. Modern atheism and secularism have thus always crucially depended for their rational credentials on the insinuation that the modern, mechanical picture of the world has somehow been established by science. Yet this modern “mechanical” picture has never been established by science, and cannot be, for it is not a scientific theory in the first place but merely a philosophical interpretation of science. Moreover, as Feser shows, the philosophical arguments in its favor given by the early modern philosophers were notable only for being surprisingly weak. The true reasons for its popularity were then, and are now, primarily political: It was a tool by which the intellectual foundations of ecclesiastical authority could be undermined and the way opened toward a new secular and liberal social order oriented toward commerce and technology. So as to further these political ends, it was simply stipulated, by fiat as it were, that no theory inconsistent with the mechanical picture of the world would be allowed to count as “scientific.” As the centuries have worn on and historical memory has dimmed, this act of dogmatic stipulation has falsely come to be remembered as a “discovery.” However, not only is this modern philosophical picture rationally unfounded, it is demonstrably false. For the “mechanical” conception of the natural world, when worked out consistently, absurdly entails that rationality, and indeed the human mind itself, are illusory. The so-called “scientific worldview” championed by the New Atheists thus inevitably undermines its own rational foundations; and into the bargain (and contrary to the moralistic posturing of the New Atheists) it undermines the foundations of any possible morality as well. By contrast, and as The Last Superstition demonstrates, the classical teleological picture of nature can be seen to find powerful confirmation in developments from contemporary philosophy, biology, and physics; moreover, morality and reason itself cannot possibly be made sense of apart from it. The teleological vision of the ancients and medievals is thereby rationally vindicated – and with it the religious worldview they based upon it.
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English [en] · EPUB · 0.3MB · 2014 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/zlib · Save
base score: 11055.0, final score: 167491.11
ia/churchmarriagefa0000fell.pdf
The church, marriage, and the family : proceedings from the 27th Annual Convention of the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars, September 24-26, 2004, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania : including a tribute : In memoriam : Rev. Msgr. George A. Kelly, 1916-2004, founder of the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars K. D Whitehead; Fellowship of Catholic Scholars Convention St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2007
Pro-family Prospects In The Congress / Christopher H. Smith -- Message From The Pontifical Council For The Family On The 10th Anniversary Of The Holy Father's Letter To Families / Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo -- Sacred Scripture And Sexual Identity / Stephen F. Miletic -- John Paul Ii And The Complementarity Of Man And Woman / John F. Crosby -- The Public Goods Of Marriage : Or Why Church And State Should Protect And Support Real Marriage And Family / Anthony Fisher -- The Good Of The Spouses And Marriage As A Vocation To Holiness / William E. May -- Catholic Marriage And Feminism / Mary Prudence Allen -- Can Feminism Acknowledge A Vocation For Women? / Laura L. Garcia -- Pornography And The Communion Of Persons / Whitney R. Jacobs -- Chastity As The Fruit Of Genuine Affirmation : Reflections On The Work Of Anna Teruwe, Conrad Baars, And Pope John Paul Ii / Philip M. Sutton --^ K-12 Catholic Schools And The Revival Of The Catholic Family In American Culture / Dennis Purificacion -- The Importance Of A Sound Vision Of The Person In A Sexually Permissive Culture / Theresa H. Farnan And William Thierfelder -- Empowering Catholic Children To Live In A Secular Culture Via The Theology Of The Body / Hanna Klaus -- Homosexuality : How Relevant Are Experience And Science To Theology And Pastoral Practice? / Paul Flaman -- The Human Family As A Type Of The Family Of The Trinity : An Analysis Of The Seven-fold Family Of God / Kelly Bowring -- On Allegory And Metaphysics In The Language Of Sexuality / Damian P. Fedoryka -- The Future Of Marriage And Family In The United States : Some History Lessons / Allan Carlson -- Towards A Catholic Ethos Of Family, Work, And Culture : A Response To Allan Carlson / Stuart W. Swetland -- Social Science And The Vindication Of Catholic Moral Teaching / W. Bradford Wilcox -- The Global War Against Baby Girls / Nicholas Eberstadt --^ John Paul Ii And The Nuptial Attribute Of The Body : The Family And The Future Of Humanity / David L. Schindler -- Family As Domestic Church : Developmental Trajectory, Legitimacy, And Problems Of Appropriation / Joseph C. Atkinson -- The International Jujitsu Of The Sexual Vanguard / Austin Ruse And Douglas A. Sylva -- The International Year Of The Family / William L. Saunders -- Remarks On Receiving The Cardinal Wright Award / Prudence Allen -- Banquet Remarks On The Fellowship Of Catholic Scholars / Anthony Fisher -- Homily For The 27th Annual Convention Of The Fellowship Of Catholic Scholars / Donald W. Wuerl -- In Memoriam : Rev. Msgr. George A. Kelly, 1916-2004. The Leader Of The Resistance / Patrick G.d. Riley -- Look All Around You! / Michael J. Wrenn -- Priest And Founding Father / William B. Smith -- Remembering Monsignor Kelly / Ralph Mcinerny -- A Man Of The Church / James Hitchcock -- A Good Fighter / William E. May --^ George Anthony Kelly, R.i.p. / Gerard V. Bradley -- A Friend To Those In Need / Kenneth D. Whitehead -- Appendix : Fellowship Of Catholic Scholars. Edited By Kenneth D. Whitehead. Includes Bibliographical References.
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English [en] · PDF · 24.6MB · 2007 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167491.11
Xenophon's Socratic discourse : an interpretation of the Oeconomicus Strauss, Leo, Xenophon. Oeconomicus. English, Lord, Carnes South Bend, Ind. : St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 1998
Xenophon's only true Socratic discourse, the Oeconomicus, is a dialogue between Socrates and a gentleman-farmer on the art of household management and the art of farming as practiced on a gentleman's estate. It is generally acknowledged to be the oldest surviving work devoted to \"economics,\" and it constitutes the classic statement of \"economic\" thought in ancient Greece. The dialogue examines the roles of husband and wife in the household and the division of labor between them, and considers the duties of the farm steward and the housekeeper. It discusses the goals of efficient management and the means for attaining these goals., Issue: до 2011-01, Edition: 1, Includes bibliographical references and index
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English [en] · PDF · 10.8MB · 1998 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · zlib · Save
base score: 11060.0, final score: 167490.84
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ia/sciencemethod0000poin_d6q7.pdf
Science and Method (Key Texts (South Bend, Ind.).) Henri Poincaré, Francis Maitland, Amit Hagar South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, Key texts : classic studies in the history of ideas, South Bend, Ind, 2001
<p>Classic account of basic methodology and psychology of scientific discovery explains how scientists analyze and choose their working facts and explores the nature of experimentation, theory, and the mind. 1914 edition.</p>
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English [en] · PDF · 12.6MB · 2001 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
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ia/encounterswiths000rahn.pdf
Encounters With Silence Karl Rahner; translated by James M. Demske South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 1999
One of the classics of modern spirituality, Encounters with Silence is one of Karl Rahners most lucid and powerful books. A book of meditations about mans relation with God, it is not a work of dry theology, but rather a book of prayerful reflections on love, knowledge, and faith, obedience, everyday routines, life with our friends and neighbors, our work and vocation, and human goodness. The immense success of this moving work is a tribute to its practicality and the ability of the great theologian to speak simply and yet profoundly to ordinary men and women seeking an inspiring guide to the inner life, one that never forsakes the world of reality. The book is cast in the form of a dialogue with God that moves from humble but concerned inquiry to joyful contemplation. You will come again because the fact that you have already come must continue to be revealed ever more clearly. It must become progressively manifest to the world that the heart of all things is already transformed, because you have taken them all to your heart. . . . The false appearance of our world, the shabby pretense that it has not been liberated . . . must be more and more thoroughly rooted out and destroyed. . . . And your coming is neither past nor future, but the present, which has only to reach its fulfillment. Now it is still the one single hour of your advent. (from the book)
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English [en] · PDF · 3.9MB · 1999 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167490.84
ia/philosophyartsse0000andr.pdf
Philosophy and the Arts: Seeing and Believing (Bristol Introductions Series , No 4) Andrew Harrison St. Augustine's Press, Bristol introductions, Bristol, 1997
How Can Pictorial And Narrative Arts Be Compared? What In Principle Can Or Cannot Be Communicated In Such Different Media? Why Does It Seem That, At Its Best, Artistic Communication Goes Beyond The Limitations Of Its Own Medium - Seeming To Think And To Communicate The Uncommunicatable? In Philosophy And The Arts Andrew Harrison Explores These Questions. He Finds That An Understanding Of Art Leads To A Richer Understanding Of What It Is To Be Human. Much Of What Misleads Or Baffles Us In The Arts Is What Puzzles Us About Ourselves - The Issues Raised By Art Are Thus Central To Philosophy. Preface / Ray Monk -- Easy Pictures -- The Portability Of Looks -- Recognizability -- Resemblance And Illusion -- Looks Again -- Pictures In Art And Science -- Perceptual Replication And Causal Pictures -- Photographic Reality -- Causal Pictures And Style -- The Problem Of Privacy -- Simply Seeing And Seeing Simply -- Perceptual Error -- The Public Project Of Perspective -- Arbitrary And Non-arbitrary Signs -- The Marks Of Making -- Expressivity -- Intention And Its Objects -- The Process Of Knowledge And Decorum: Two Kinds Of Privacy -- The Fit Of Drawings To What They Depict -- Units Of Significance -- Arbitrary And Non-arbitrary Structures -- World Features And Picture Features: The Authority Of Drawing -- Maps And Models, The 'syntax' Of The Pictorial -- The Limits Of The Pictorial -- Pictures Versus Narrative -- Depiction Versus Exemplification -- The Function Of Models -- Style And Aesthetic Properties -- Fear Of Aesthetic Presence -- Beyond The Literal? -- Word-making. Andrew Harrison ; Preface By Ray Monk. Includes Bibliographical References (p. 197-204) And Index.
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English [en] · PDF · 10.7MB · 1997 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167490.67
ia/deathimmortality0000piep.pdf
Death And Immortality Josef Pieper; translation by Richard and Clara Winston South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2000
Pieper [attempts to] show how death must be seen as an experience of the whole man and is properly to be understood as ‘punishment.' When he views man's pilgrim status on earth, Pieper is led to assert that death is an act of human freedom, consistent with Creation and redemption. . . . With his rare gift of high-level popularization, Pieper brings a critical mind and an in-depth acquaintance with the scholastic tradition to bear on contemporary thought and experience. . . . [This] volume deserves a place on any bookshelf devoted to Christian philosophy. – Library Journal<br> Dr. Pieper very subtly and usefully stresses the character of dying as act and choice, leading us up very gently to the shocking old notion that it might also constitute a well-deserved punishment. – Times Literary Supplement<br>
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English [en] · PDF · 6.7MB · 2000 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167490.48
nexusstc/True Love/0373da16b573ab0e778158399584edfc.pdf
True Love Josef Siefert St. Augustines Press; St. Augustine's Press, 1st [edition, South Bend, Indiana, 2015
100% Satisfaction is *! For New condition books in our store; You will be the first user. You will be the first to open the book cover. For Used condition books in our store; It shows signs of wear from consistent use, but it remains in good condition and works perfectly. All pages and cover are intact , but may have aesthetic issues such as price clipping, nicks, scratches, and scuffs. Pages may include some notes and highlighting. For all our books; Cargo will be delivered in the required time. There are no problems in page content and in the paper. There are no problems except minor faults.
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English [en] · PDF · 34.1MB · 2015 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/zlib · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167490.48
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nexusstc/Socrates' Children: Contemporary: The 100 Greatest Philosophers/670193c16a183f126fb9f020a7661b4c.pdf
Socrates' Children : Contemporary: The 100 Greatest Philosophers by Peter Kreeft Saint Augustine's Press, Incorporated, The 100 greatest philosophers, South Bend, Indiana, 2019
This is the fourth and final part of Kreeft’s four-volume history of philosophy . . . on ancient, medieval, modern, and contemporary philosophy. Kreeft focuses on the “big ideas” that have influenced present people and present times, and includes relevant biographical data, proportionate to its importance for each thinker. Moreover, the aim of the work is to stimulate philosophizing, controversy, and argument. It uses ordinary language and logic, not jargon and symbolic logic, and it is commonsensical (like Aristotle) and existential in the sense that it sees philosophy as something to be lived and experienced in life. Philosophy, after all, is not about philosophy but reality . . . about wisdom, life and death, good and evil, and God. Kreeft seeks to be simple and direct and clear. But it is not dumbed down and patronizing. It will stretch the reader, but it is meant for beginnings, not just scholars. It can be used for college classes or do-it-yourselfers. It emphasizes surprises; remember, “philosophy begins in wonder.” And it includes visual aids: charts, cartoons, line drawings, and drawings of philosophers. Peter Kreeft teaches philosophy at Boston College and is a very prolific author of philosophy and theology texts, including, from St. Augustine’s Press, Socratic Logic , An Ocean Full of Angels , The Philosophy of Jesus , Jesus-Shock , The Sea Within , I Surf Therefore I Am , If Einstein Had Been a Surfer , the first nine titles in his Socrates Meets series, including Philosophy 101 by Socrates and the titles on Machiavelli, Descartes, Hume, Kant, Marx, and Sartre, and the first three volumes of this series, Socrates’ Children: Ancient , Socrates’ Children: Medieval , and Socrates’ Children: Modern .
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English [en] · PDF · 16.5MB · 2019 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/zlib · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167490.34
ia/americasspiritua0000capa.pdf
America's spiritual capital Capaldi Ph.D., Professor Nicholas N., Malloch, Theodore Roosevelt South Bend, Ind. : St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2012
xii, 151 p. ; 23 cm, Includes bibliographical references and index, Spiritual capital -- Judeochristian spiritual capital -- America and the spiritual quest of modernity -- Spiritual capital and economic freedom -- Spiritual capital and political freedom -- Challenges of secularization
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English [en] · PDF · 8.7MB · 2012 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia/zlib · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167490.14
ia/objectiveidealis0000hosl.pdf
Objective idealism, ethics, and politics Hösle, Vittorio University of Notre Dame Press, University of Notre Dame Press, South Bend, Ind, 1998
<p>Vittorio H`sle, touted as the German philosopher of the coming generation, exhibitshis wide range of scholarship in this, his first book published in America. AAlthough treating quite different subjects, these essays are linked together by a common philosophical project B the revitalization of the tradition of objective idealism. The conviction that we can have synthetic a priori knowledge, and that this knowledge discovers something that is independent of our mind, is of particular importance for practical philosophy. . . . The position here defended in systematic terms is also seen in the context of a philosophical history of philosophy, namely as a possible synthesis of realism and subjective idealism, of enlightenment and counter- enlightenment, and as the supposition of renewing the humanities tradition. B from the Preface. Not content with merely telling us how to find a way back to objective idealism, H`sle exhibits his philosophy in a wide-ranging series of essays on topics ranging from the greatness and limits of Kant's practical philosophy to the moral ends and means of world population policy, from moral reflection and the decay of institutions in the enlightenment and counter- enlightenment to a reflection on philosophical foundations of a future humanism in our world of overinformation.</p>
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English [en] · PDF · 14.1MB · 1998 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167489.95
ia/sixsecularphilos0000lewi.pdf
Six secular philosophers : religious themes in the thought of Spinoza, Hume, Kant, Nietzsche, William James and Santayana Lewis White Beck St. Augustine's Press; Thoemmes Pr, Key Texts : Classic Studies in the History of ideas, Bristol, 1997
"In this critique of religious philosophy, Beck discusses six philosophers whose works on religion he considers to be the most germane to contemporary issues. First addressing the question 'what is secular philosophy?', Beck then explains differences between the 'families' of secular philosophers, before examining their lives and works. This new edition is 'important to all those who are troubled over the position and function of religion in our culture and in a divided world'."--BOOK JACKET
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English [en] · PDF · 6.0MB · 1997 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167489.77
ia/lightofreasonlig0000agba.pdf
Light of reason, light of faith : Joseph Ratzinger and the German enlightenment Maurice Ashley Agbaw-Ebai, Emery de Gaál, George Weigel University of Chicago Press; St. Augustines Press, South Bend, lndiana, 2021
"Fr. Maurice Ashley Agbaw-Ebai, a native of Cameroon, has written a fresh, exciting new study of the lifelong engagement of Josef Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI, with the German Enlightenment and its contemporary manifestations and heirs. Contemporary European disdain for organized religion and the rise in secularism on that continent has deep roots in the German Enlightenment. To understand contemporary Europe, one must return to this crucial epoch in its history, to those who shaped the European mind of this era, and to a study of the ideas they espoused and propagated. These ideas, for good or for ill, have taken hold in other parts of the modern world, being incarnated in many minds and institutions in contemporary society and threatening to enthrone a disfigured rationality without faith or a sense of Transcendence. Ratzinger's extraordinary and sympathetic understanding of the sources of contemporary secularism equipped him to appreciate the gains of the Enlightenment, while still being a fierce critic of the losses humanity has suffered when reason falsely excludes faith. Fr. Agbaw-Ebai's account reveals Ratzinger, in relation to his various interlocutors, to be the truly "enlightened" one because he demonstrates a truly balanced understanding of the human mind. To be truly rational one must be able to hold to faith and reason both, reason informed by faith in Jesus Christ. A particular merit of this book is Agbaw-Ebai's presentation of Ratzinger's treatment of the German Enlightenment's greatest contributors: Kant, Nietzche, Hegel and Habermas, among others. In the postscript George Weigel characterizes what this study accomplishes in the larger framework of scholarship. "[Ratzinger's] position remains too often misunderstood, and sometimes deliberately misinterpreted, throughout the whole Church. And to misunderstand, or misinterpret, Ratzinger is to misunderstand or misinterpret both the modern history of theology and the Second Vatican Council." Agbaw-Ebai masterfully positions Ratzinger correctly in the history of ideas, and exhibits why Ratzinger will be remembered as one of its main players. Pure rationalists and true believers are equally indebted to him"
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English [en] · PDF · 23.5MB · 2021 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167489.77
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ia/onhunting00roge.pdf
On Hunting Scruton, Roger South Bend, IN: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, ©1998
"Modern people are as given to loving, fearing, fleeing and pursuing other species as were their hunter-gatherer forebears. And in fox-hunting they join together with their most ancient friends among the animals, to pursue an ancient enemy. The feelings stirred by hunting are explored by writer and philosopher Roger Scruton, in a book which is both illuminating and deeply personal. Drawing on his own experiences of hunting and offering a delightful portrait of the people and animals who take part in it, Roger Scruton introduces the reader to some of the mysteries of country life. His book is a plea for tolerance toward a sport in which the love of animals prevails over the pursuit of them, and in which Nature herself is the center of the drama."--BOOK JACKET
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English [en] · PDF · 8.0MB · 1998 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167489.28
ia/fallotherpoems0000bott.pdf
The Fall and Other Poems Bottum, Joseph St. Augustine's ; Saint Austin, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2001
A Collection Of Christian Poems. Baptism -- Restoration -- Timor Mortis -- The Libertine Against Abortion -- The Spring Advances -- The Fall -- The Boston School Of Beauty -- The Attic -- Dirge -- Lines Written On My Daughter Faith's Second Birthday -- What Water Washes Wears Away -- Diaspora -- Black Scrawl -- Song -- Tetrameter -- Fiat Rex -- The Profligate Poet Calls For Bishop Golias -- The Winter Orchard -- The November Funeral Of A Twelve-year-old Girl -- Henry Carter In His Bath -- Larvatus Prodeo -- Twelve Quatrains -- Modern Catholic Verse -- On Publishing His Memoirs -- The Kiln -- The Feet Like Water -- On An Ancient Roman Frieze -- Washington, The First Of May -- Hades' Lament At Persephone's Annual Departure -- Hymeneal -- St. Columbkille's -- Love In Boston -- In Refusal Of Politics -- About The Author. J. Bottum.
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English [en] · PDF · 2.9MB · 2001 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167489.19
lgli/Neo-Scholastic Essays.pdf
Neo-Scholastic Essays by Edward Feser St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press, South Bend, Indiana, Indiana, 2015
"In a series of publications over the course of a decade, Edward Feser has argued for the defensibility and abiding relevance to issues in contemporary philosophy of Scholastic ideas and arguments, and especially of Aristotelian-Thomistic ideas and arguments. This work has been in the vein of what has come to be known as "analytical Thomism," though the spirit of the project goes back at least to the Neo-Scholasticism of the period from the late nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth. Neo-Scholastic Essays collects some of Feser's academic papers from the last ten years on themes in metaphysics and philosophy of nature, natural theology, philosophy of mind, and ethics. Among the diverse topics covered are: the relationship between Aristotelian and Newtonian conceptions of motion; the varieties of teleological description and explanation; the proper interpretation of Aquinas's Five Ways; the impossibility of a materialist account of the human intellect; the philosophies of mind of Kripke, Searle, Popper, and Hayek; the metaphysics of value; the natural law understanding of the ethics of private property and taxation; a critique of political libertarianism; and the defensibility and indispensability to a proper understanding of sexual morality of the traditional "perverted faculty argument.""-- Provided by publisher
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English [en] · PDF · 11.1MB · 2015 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/zlib · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167489.11
ia/findingcommonthr0000unse.pdf
Finding a common thread : reading great texts from Homer to O'Connor edited by Robert C. Roberts, Scott H. Moore, and Donald D. Schmeltekopf; introduction by Robert C. Roberts South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2012
In this book, a group of prominent scholar-teachers meditate on how to read, in the context of a specifically Christian university or college education, some of the greatest texts of the Western tradition. Each author devotes himself or herself to a single text. In many cases, the authors have been reading, rereading, marking, ruminating, inwardly digesting, teaching, and discussing their text for several decades, so that they offer here a distillation of years of familiarity and reflection. The texts span nearly 3,000 years. They are pre-Christian, Christian, and post-Christian. Each kind of text indeed, each individual text offers its own special opportunities and challenges for Christian interpretation. From these diverse readings emerges a sense that these texts all belong to a single great tradition, one to which Christianity made and continues to make enormous contributions. Medieval Christian writers exploit and transform pagan texts, and post-Christian writers like Nietzsche and Joyce are often preoccupied with Christian themes. In one way or another all the texts are about what it is to be a human being and what a good human life might look like. Thus common threads bind one text to the next, creating countless resonances among them. The authors of the essays in this book all address the question, How shall we read these texts from the vantage point of faith in God and Jesus Christ? Moreover, how shall we read them as members of a community with a common vision of the human good, aiming to nurture our students in that vision by reading with them some of the profoundest and most delightful things the human hand has penned? As the Introduction suggests, the volume hopes to contribute to a renewal of the original intention of university education: to cultivate minds and hearts formed and informed by wisdom, the highest of intellectual goods.
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English [en] · PDF · 22.9MB · 2012 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167489.11
ia/intunewithworldt0000piep_e3q5.pdf
In tune with the world : a theory of festivity Josef Pieper South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, Chicago Distribution Center (CDC Presses), South Bend, Ind, 1999
In this stimulating and still-timely study, Josef Pieper takes up a theme of paramount importance to his thinking – that festivals belong by rights among the great topics of philosophical discussion. As he develops his theory of festivity, the modern age comes under close and painful scrutiny. It is obvious that we no longer know what festivity is, namely, the celebration of existence under various symbols Pieper exposes the pseudo-festivals, in their harmless and their sinister forms: traditional feasts contaminated by commercialism; artificial holidays created in the interest of merchandisers; holidays by coercion, decreed by dictators the world over; festivals as military demonstrations; holidays empty of significance. And lastly we are given the apocalyptic vision of a nihilistic world which would seek its release not in festivities but in destruction. Formulated with Pieper's customary clarity and elegance, enhanced by brilliantly chosen quotations, this is an illuminating contribution to the understanding of traditional and contemporary experience.
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English [en] · PDF · 5.0MB · 1999 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167489.1
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ia/mentalacts0000geac_z0g3.pdf
Mental Acts (Key Texts (South Bend, Ind.).) Geach, P. T. (Peter Thomas), 1916-2013 South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, Key texts, Key texts (South Bend, Ind.), South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2002
Geach insists, in opposition to the behaviorism of the day, that there are episodic mental acts such as acts of judgment. How to characterize such mental acts remains as problematic as it was fifty years ago, and his book still has much to teach us. He begins with an attack on the abstractionist theory of concept-formation, then goes on to criticize the relational theory of judgment propounded by Bertrand Russell. Moving from criticism to construction, Geach first offers an improved version of Russells analysis, then moves on to offer an alternative of his own.
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English [en] · PDF · 7.8MB · 2002 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.88
nexusstc/Ethics Without God?: The Divine in Contemporary Moral and Political Thought/54c33b8c525b61eae0fa2979c3976a4b.pdf
Ethics without God? : the divine in contemporary moral and political thought Fulvio Di Blasi (editor), Joshua P. Hochschild (editor), Jeffrey Langan (editor) St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press; In association with Thomas International, South Bend, Ind, ©2008
Ethics Without God? brings the theological perspective of the Aristotelian and Thomistic traditions to bear on a variety of current political and theoretical questions. The main essays explore a place for the role of God in recent academic philosophy and political theory. The volume also explores the implications of two recent books, each a major scholarly venture in theologically realist ethical reflection: a defense of Platonism in John Rist’s Real Ethics and a natural law jurisprudence in Russell Hittinger’s The First Grace. With lengthy essays prompted by these books – four essays each, by prominent theologians, moral philosophers, and political scientists – and with extended responses from Rist and Hittinger, the result is a volume that engages ultimate questions across academic disciplines and intellectual traditions. Fulvio Di Blasi is author of God and the Natural Law, from St. Augustine’s Press. Ethics Without God? is an unusual collection of four short original articles, followed by two separate "book discussions" of John Rist's Real Ethics (2002) and Russell Hittinger's The First Grace (2003), wherein each author responds to his reviewers. The collection is aptly introduced by the editors when they state that the original essays and reviews, "bring a theological perspective to bear on a range of current political and theoretical questions" (x). In "God, Nietzsche and Contemporary Political Philosophy," Jeffrey Langan uses the Declaration of Independence as an exemplar of how the existence of God can be affirmed publicly within a polity. Langan proceeds to outline the theistic presuppositions of the Declaration, comparing it with contemporary readings of Locke's deistic natural rights theory and William Connolly's revived "immanent naturalism." Set against Nietzsche's premature pronouncement that God is dead, the article begins to explore what is living and what is dead in the Declaration of Independence's underlying philosophy without drawing any hard-and-fast conclusions beyond the document's continuing general relevance. "Preserving Kantianism from Consequentialism," by James Krueger critiques Christine Korsgaard's reformulation of Kantianism in her book, Creating the Kingdom of Ends. Krueger contends that Korsgaard, by sidelining Kant's practical postulates of God's existence and the immortality of the soul, ends up propounding a form of consequentialism with an otherwise Kantian hue. Using so-called tragic cases such as those of the Maltese conjoined twins, Krueger tries to demonstrate that Korsgaard invidiously countenances doing evil to achieve good. Though Krueger laudably concludes by stressing the import of the highest good and ultimate ends in moral reasoning, his focus on so-called hard cases limits the effectiveness of the overall critique. Laura L. Garcia's forthright essay, "Ethics on One Wing," takes clear aim at three contemporary theorists: Kai Nielsen, Michael Moore, and Steven Pinker. Using a typical example of each author's work, Garcia takes them to task for inconsistent eclecticism, reductionist materialism, and amateur philosophizing, respectively. There is a whiff of polemic in some of her asides against each author, but many of her fundamental points are well made. With a coda containing a plea for a return to metaphysics in morals and natural-law ethics, Garcia reveals the influence on her thought of Ralph McInerny and other proponents of Aristotelian-Thomism. David Thunder's essay, "Public Discourse without God?" finds the Rawlsian principle of restraint and Habermas's communication ethic too restrictive of public discourse within the political domain--especially in relation to religious justifications of legislation. Calling these approaches "rule centered," he contrasts this approach with his own favored "virtue centered" ethic of communication within a political community. Developing Mark Kingwell's work on political virtues, Thunder helpfully sketches how such virtues can prevent an open and agonistic discourse in the political domain from becoming antagonistic or uncivil. The discussion of John Rist's Real Ethics, a work arguing for a revival of an unabashed Platonic-Augustinian moral realism, mainly focuses on how the volume could have been strengthened by a better use of Aristotle's natural philosophy and moral theory, and an even stronger theistic grounding for Rist's (confessedly unfashionable) ethical perspective. Daniel McInerny's and Barry David's treatments stand out from the four collected, while John Rist's response to the discussants directly and concisely deals with all of the critical points. The book concludes with a discussion of Russell Hittinger's The First Grace. Three of the four discussants focus principally on Hittinger's understanding of Aquinas's natural-law theory, while Matthew Levering looks at religious liberty and the legacy of the Second Vatican Council. Michael Zuckert's contribution is the highlight here, with his dissection of Hittinger's view of the promulgation of the natural law. Hittinger's response gives little ground to the criticisms leveled by the reviewers and helpfully clarifies certain aspects of his influential understanding of Aquinas's moral and legal philosophy. Ethics Without God? is a mix of original short essays and reviews that does not entirely hang together. Even the longer contributions average fewer than twenty pages. As a consequence, the essays framing the first half of the book have a sketchy feel and do not have the space to develop some interesting themes. All the contributors propound a strong form of moral realism and are universally critical of certain modern Western cultural developments and many forms of modern philosophy. The influence of Aquinas, Augustine, and Aristotle pervades the collection. The book will be of greatest interest to graduate students of ethics or political theory who are researching the interface between philosophy and theology or the compatibility between natural-law theory or moral realism and forms of political liberalism. The collection gives a wide range of perspectives on these themes at the cost of coherence and comprehensiveness. The lack of an index does not seriously hinder the reader given the nature of the collection.
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English [en] · PDF · 6.1MB · 2008 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/zlib · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167488.88
ia/backtodrawingboa0000unse.pdf
Back to the drawing board : the future of the pro-life movement edited by Teresa R. Wagner South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, IN, United States, 2003
Introduction / Dr. Mildred Fay Jefferson -- The Legal Arena -- The Legal Profession And The Law Schools: Should We Blame The Lawyers? / By Charles E. Rice -- The Judiciary: Only Liars Need Apply / By Terence P. Jeffrey -- Litigation Strategies And Democratic Deliberation: Let The People Decide / By Clarke Forsythe -- An Appreciation Of Justice Byron White (1917-2002): Seeing The Dragon Cloud / By John Manning Regan, Sr. -- Medicine And Science -- The Medical Profession: Reflections Of The Abortion King / By Dr. Bernard Nathanson -- A View From Clinical Psychiatry: Abortion Wounds / By Dr. Philip Ney -- Long-term Physical Complications Of Induced Abortion: Breaking The Silence / By Dr. Elizabeth Shadigian -- Pregnancy Help Centers, Abstinence, Stds, And Healing: Putting It All Together / By Margaret Hartshorn, Ph. D. -- Politics And The Movement A History Of Pro-life Leadership: For Better Or Worse / By Dr. Jack Willke --^ Political Engagement: An Honest Evaluation / By Paul Weyrich -- A Defense Of The Republican Party: The Gop Must Do More / By The Honorable Chris Smith -- A Critique Of The Republican Party: The Republican Lesser Evil / By Joe Sobran -- The Party Or The Movement?: Principle Or Pragmatism? Abortion Politics In The Twenty-first Century / By Phyllis Schlafly And Colleen Parro -- The Democrat Party: Casey's Heirs And The Fall Of Pro-life Democrats / By Mark Stricherz And Raymond L. Flynn -- Another Party? Time For Constitutional Fidelity: The Constitution Party / By Howard Phillips -- The Base: Letter To The Troops: The Grassroots Of The Pro-life Movement / By James Dobson -- The Liberal Voice Beyond The Base: There's More To Abortion Than Abortion / By Nat Hentoff -- Religion -- Religious Leadership: Where Are The Shepherds? / By Jean Garton -- The Pro-life Movement And The Jewish Community: Lechayitn -- To Life! Judaism Is For Life, How About Jews? / By Rabbi Daniel Lapin --^ A Muslim Perspective: An Islamic View Of Life Issues And The West / By Dr. A. Majid Katme -- The Culture -- Hollywood: The Problem With Selling Half The Story / By Barbara Nicolosi -- The Kinsey Culture: Sex-on-demand, Abortion-on-demand / By Judith Reisman -- Motherhood And The Movement: Crisis Of Life? Crisis Of Love! / By Mary Hasson And Miki Hill, Mothers -- The Future -- Bioethics And The Status Of The Human Embryo: Two Traditions In Tension / By John M. Haas -- A New Federation For Life: Learning From Our Adversaries / By Chuck Donovan -- The International Scene: Dangerous Mischief At The United Nations: Abortion As The Law Of The World / By Austin Ruse. Edited By Teresa R. Wagner. Includes Bibliographical References.
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English [en] · PDF · 20.5MB · 2003 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.83
ia/polityeconomywit0000crop.pdf
Polity and economy : with further thoughts on the principles of Adam Smith Cropsey, Joseph South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2001
"The intention of Polity and Economy is to present Adam Smith as author of liberal capitalism, as propounder within an order that converts the natural self-preference of every living thing into an instrument of goodness, prosperity, and freedom - as long as our deployment of natural means does not, in the organization and conduct of society, violate the truths of nature itself.". "This edition of Polity and Economy revises the original with cross-references from the standard Glasgow editions and adds two further essays not in the original: "Adam Smith and Political Philosophy" and "The Invisible Hand: Moral and Political Considerations.""--BOOK JACKET.
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English [en] · PDF · 9.9MB · 2001 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.8
ia/heartanalysisofh0000vonh.pdf
The heart : an analysis of human and divine affectivity Dietrich von Hildebrand; John Haldane; John F. Crosby; John Henry Crosby South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, in association with the Dietrich von Hildebrand Legacy Project, New Ed edition, April 20, 2007
The An Analysis of Human and Divine Affectivity This new edition of The Heart (out of print for nearly 30 years) is the flagship volume in a series of Dietrich von Hildebrands works to be published by St. Augustines Press in collaboration with the Dietrich von Hildebrand Legacy Project. Founded in 2004, the Legacy Project exists in the first place to translate the many German writings of von Hildebrand into English. While many revere von Hildebrand as a religious author, few realize that he was a philosopher of great stature and importance. Those who knew von Hildebrand as philosopher held him in the highest esteem. Louis Bouyer, for example, once said that von Hildebrand was the most important Catholic philosopher in Europe between the two world wars. Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger expressed even greater esteem when he I am personally convinced that, when, at some time in the future, the intellectual history of the Catholic Church in the twentieth century is written, the name of Dietrich von Hildebrand will be most prominent among the figures of our time. The Heart is an accessible yet important philosophical contribution to the understanding of the human person. In this work von Hildebrand is concerned with rehabilitating the affective life of the human person. He thinks that for too long philosophers have held it in suspicion and thought of it as embedded in the body and hence as being much inferior to intellect and will. In reality, he argues, the heart, the center of affectivity, has many different levels, including an eminently personal level; at this level affectivity is just as important a form of personal life as intellect and will. Von Hildebrand develops the idea that properly personal affectivity, far than tending away from an objective relation to being, is in fact one major way in which we transcend ourselves and give being its due. Von Hildebrand also developed the import
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English [en] · PDF · 8.7MB · 2007 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.8
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ia/americancatholic0000marl.pdf
The American Catholic voter : 200 years of political impact Marlin, George J., 1952- South Bend, Ind. : St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2004
xx, 400 p. : 24 cm, Includes bibliographical references (p. [371]-389) and index, \"The free exercise thereof-- \" -- First stirrings : the Catholic voter and the election of 1800 -- The Catholic voter in the age of Jefferson and Jackson -- The Catholic voter versus the nativist voter -- The Catholic voter in the age of Lincoln -- The Catholic voter in the Gilded Age : the golden years -- The Catholic voter in the Gilded Age : the silver years -- The rise of the urban Catholic voter -- The Catholic voter in peace and war -- The campaign of 1928 -- The Catholic voter in the age of Roosevelt -- The Catholic voter in the age of anxiety -- The campaign of 1960 -- The Catholic voter in the age of the silent majority -- The Catholic voter in the age of Reagan -- The Catholic voter in the twenty-first century
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English [en] · PDF · 18.3MB · 2004 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia/zlib · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.8
ia/symposiumofplato00plat_0.pdf
The symposium of Plato : the Shelley translation Platon.; David Kevin O'Connor; Percy Bysshe Shelley South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Indiana, 2002
One of the most famous works of literature in the Western world, Plato's Symposium is also one of the most entertaining. The scene is a dinner party in Athens in 416 B.C. at which the guests - including the comic poet Aristophanes and Plato's mentor, Socrates - playfully discuss the nature of eros, or love. By turns earthly and sublime, the dialogue culminates with Socrates's famous account of the "ladder of love," an extended analysis of the many forms of eros. The evening ends with a speech by the drunken Alcibiades, the most popular and powerful Athenian of the day, who insists on praising Socrates rather than love, offering up a brilliant character sketch of the enigmatic philosopher. This Modern Library edition is the authoritative translation by Benjamin Jowett, substantially revised by Dr. Hayden Pelliccia, associate professor of classics at Cornell University. This revised translation takes into account advances in scholarship since Jowett's day and modernizes the Victorian English where it is coy or archaic. The result is a translation neither too colloquial nor too literal, one that is faithful to both Jowett's superb prose and Plato's matchless original.
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English [en] · PDF · 8.2MB · 2002 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.66
nexusstc/Ethics without God - Divine in Contemporary Moral and Political Thought/6fd2f84f0e3892b879573e7f63a22292.pdf
Ethics without God? : the divine in contemporary moral and political thought Fulvio Di Blasi (editor) & Joshua P. Hochschild (editor) & Jeffrey Langan (editor) St. Augustine's Press; St. Augustines Press; In association with Thomas International, South Bend, Ind, ©2008
“Ethics Without God? brings the theological perspective of the Aristotelian and Thomistic traditions to bear on a variety of current political and theoretical questions. The main essays explore a place for the role of God in recent academic philosophy and political theory. The volume also explores the implications of two recent books, each a major scholarly venture in theologically realist ethical reflection: a defense of Platonism in John Rist’s Real Ethics and a natural law jurisprudence in Russell Hittinger’s The First Grace. With lengthy essays prompted by these books – four essays each, by prominent theologians, moral philosophers, and political scientists – and with extended responses from Rist and Hittinger, the result is a volume that engages ultimate questions across academic disciplines and intellectual traditions. Fulvio Di Blasi is author of God and the Natural Law, from St. Augustine’s Press. Ethics Without God? is an unusual collection of four short original articles, followed by two separate "book discussions" of John Rist's Real Ethics (2002) and Russell Hittinger's The First Grace (2003), wherein each author responds to his reviewers. The collection is aptly introduced by the editors when they state that the original essays and reviews, "bring a theological perspective to bear on a range of current political and theoretical questions" (x). In "God, Nietzsche and Contemporary Political Philosophy," Jeffrey Langan uses the Declaration of Independence as an exemplar of how the existence of God can be affirmed publicly within a polity. Langan proceeds to outline the theistic presuppositions of the Declaration, comparing it with contemporary readings of Locke's deistic natural rights theory and William Connolly's revived "immanent naturalism." Set against Nietzsche's premature pronouncement that God is dead, the article begins to explore what is living and what is dead in the Declaration of Independence's underlying philosophy without drawing any hard-and-fast conclusions beyond the document's continuing general relevance. "Preserving Kantianism from Consequentialism," by James Krueger critiques Christine Korsgaard's reformulation of Kantianism in her book, Creating the Kingdom of Ends. Krueger contends that Korsgaard, by sidelining Kant's practical postulates of God's existence and the immortality of the soul, ends up propounding a form of consequentialism with an otherwise Kantian hue. Using so-called tragic cases such as those of the Maltese conjoined twins, Krueger tries to demonstrate that Korsgaard invidiously countenances doing evil to achieve good. Though Krueger laudably concludes by stressing the import of the highest good and ultimate ends in moral reasoning, his focus on so-called hard cases limits the effectiveness of the overall critique. Laura L. Garcia's forthright essay, "Ethics on One Wing," takes clear aim at three contemporary theorists: Kai Nielsen, Michael Moore, and Steven Pinker. Using a typical example of each author's work, Garcia takes them to task for inconsistent eclecticism, reductionist materialism, and amateur philosophizing, respectively. There is a whiff of polemic in some of her asides against each author, but many of her fundamental points are well made. With a coda containing a plea for a return to metaphysics in morals and natural-law ethics, Garcia reveals the influence on her thought of Ralph McInerny and other proponents of Aristotelian-Thomism. David Thunder's essay, "Public Discourse without God?" finds the Rawlsian principle of restraint and Habermas's communication ethic too restrictive of public discourse within the political domain--especially in relation to religious justifications of legislation. Calling these approaches "rule centered," he contrasts this approach with his own favored "virtue centered" ethic of communication within a political community. Developing Mark Kingwell's work on political virtues, Thunder helpfully sketches how such virtues can prevent an open and agonistic discourse in the political domain from becoming antagonistic or uncivil. The discussion of John Rist's Real Ethics, a work arguing for a revival of an unabashed Platonic-Augustinian moral realism, mainly focuses on how the volume could have been strengthened by a better use of Aristotle's natural philosophy and moral theory, and an even stronger theistic grounding for Rist's (confessedly unfashionable) ethical perspective. Daniel McInerny's and Barry David's treatments stand out from the four collected, while John Rist's response to the discussants directly and concisely deals with all of the critical points. The book concludes with a discussion of Russell Hittinger's The First Grace. Three of the four discussants focus principally on Hittinger's understanding of Aquinas's natural-law theory, while Matthew Levering looks at religious liberty and the legacy of the Second Vatican Council. Michael Zuckert's contribution is the highlight here, with his”
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English [en] · PDF · 2.7MB · 2008 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/lgli/lgrs/nexusstc/zlib · Save
base score: 11065.0, final score: 167488.56
ia/averroesmiddleco0000aver.pdf
Averroes' Middle Commentary on Aristotle's Poetics Averroes (Ibn Rushd); translation, introduction, and notes by Charles E. Butterworth South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2000
<p>This volume contains a translation into English of Averroes's Middle Commentary onAristotle's Poetics, an introduction to the translation in which the arguments of both Averroes and Aristotle are sketch out and their differences from Plato and other important thinkers explored, an outline analysis of the order of Averroes's commentary, annotations to the text, a bibliography, and a glossary of important terms with their English translations. Aristotle's Poetics has held the attention of scholars and authors through the ages, and Averroes has long been known as Athe commentator on Aristotle. His Middle Commentary on Aristotle's Poetics is important because of its striking content. Here, an author steeped in Aristotle's thought and highly familiar with an entirely different poetical tradition shows in careful detail what is commendable about Greek poetics and commendable as well as blameworthy about Arabic poetics. Heretofore, non-Arabic readers have had to depend upon Hermannus Alemannus's Latin translation of Averroes's Middle Commentary or on its English version. Both are inadequate. They incorrectly render Averroes's various arguments and make his beautiful poetic citations read like doggerel. Moreover, they provide inaccurate and incomplete information about the sources of those citations and consequently portray Averroes's text as a curious compilation of relics from some exotic but not very learned horde. The present translation is based on a sound, critical Arabic edition prepared by the translator. Not only is it the first English translation from the Arabic original, but also the first translation of the Arabic text into any language other than medieval Hebrew or Latin. The translation is literal and eloquent, albeit more literal when eloquent when sense demands such a sacrifice. Throughout the commentary, the same English word is used for the same Arabic word unless an exception is noted. The renditions of the poetic citations are somewhat freer without reaching to unwarranted innovations. Questions leading to a more accurate grasp of Averroes's argument are explored in the introduction, and the basic themes of his interpretation of Aristotle are laid bare. Thus, Butterworth takes issue with many of the prevalent beliefs about medieval Arabic poetics and explores the philosophical contention that poetry belongs to the art of logic. In doing so, he also points to the way that position allows both Averroes and Aristotle to revise Plato's attack on poetry and the significance of their revision.</p>
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English [en] · PDF · 9.5MB · 2000 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.56
ia/sacredmonsteroft0000pedd.pdf
The sacred monster of thomism : an introduction to the life and legacy of Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P Peddicord, Richard , 1958- South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2004
xii, 250 pages ; 24 cm "The Sacred Monster of Thomism (the epithet comes from Francois Mauriac) is the first full-length study of the life and thought of the most influential Dominican theologian in the first half of the twentieth century, and the scourge of liberal theologians everywhere." "Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange taught at the Angelicum for fifty years, held the first chair of spiritual theology in the Church's history, and authored twenty-eight books and over six hundred articles. He was also the doctoral dissertation director for Pope John Paul II." "The Sacred Monster of Thomism sketches the life and general context of Garrigou's life, discusses at length the most important factor in his life - his affiliation with the Order of Preachers (Dominicans) - and examines his philosophical disputes with Henri Bergson and Maurice Blondel, his theological (and political) disputes with Jacques Maritain and M.-Dominique Chenu, and ends with chapters examining Garrigou's Thomism and his approaches to theology and spirituality."--BOOK JACKET Includes bibliographical references (p. [233]-246) and index
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English [en] · PDF · 13.8MB · 2004 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.48
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ia/shakespeareanvar0000mcin.pdf
Shakespearean Variations Ralph McInerny; William Shakespeare South Bend, Ind.: St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, Ind, Indiana, 2001
While it will seem the height of arrogance to write variations on Shakespeare's sonnets, the attempt induces humility and an even deeper regard for the bard of Avon. In Shakespearean Variations, Ralph McInerny takes the first lines of the sonnets and their end rhymes, and composes sonnets of his own. The formal structure of the sonnet has always provided a salutary discipline for the poet -- iambic pentameter, the delicate symmetry of octet and sextet, the closing couplet which epitomizes the poem. The stamp that Shakespeare put upon the form, the themes of love and death, age and youth, loyalty and betrayal, have come to seem to adhere to the very form. The pleasure to be had from reading Shakespearean Variations will vary with one's acquaintance with the originals but should always turn one to the bard himself.
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English [en] · PDF · 2.8MB · 2001 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
base score: 11068.0, final score: 167488.48
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