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Mark Glouberman

Kwantlen Polytechnic University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    137
    • Most Recent
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    • Topics
  •  News and Updates
    119

 More details
  • Kwantlen Polytechnic University
    Department of Philosophy
    Instructor
University of Oxford
Faculty of Philosophy
DPhil, 1973
CV
Areas of Interest
Metaphilosophy
Philosophy of Religion
20th Century Philosophy
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Value Theory
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophical Traditions
Other Academic Areas
3 more
  • All publications (137)
  •  30
    Conclusion: On the Carmel
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 298-306. 2012.
  •  31
    12. Misbehaviourism
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 269-297. 2012.
  •  27
    10. Love Stories
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 216-242. 2012.
  •  24
    9. Becoming Political
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 193-215. 2012.
  •  23
    8. The Birth of Death
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 174-192. 2012.
  •  31
    7. Nobodies
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 151-173. 2012.
  •  20
    5. The Reformation
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 106-121. 2012.
  •  22
    3. An Ethical Compass
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 64-77. 2012.
  •  24
    1. In Defence of Perplexity
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 17-38. 2012.
  •  31
    2. Man’s Estate
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 39-63. 2012.
  •  41
    6. Contemplating the Bust of Homer
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 122-150. 2012.
  •  27
    Index
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 347-356. 2012.
  •  18
    11. Life and Times
    In The Raven, the Dove, and the Owl of Minerva: The Creation of Humankind in Athens and Jerusalem, University of Toronto Press. pp. 243-268. 2012.
  •  85
    O God, O Montreal!
    Philo 17 (1): 23-43. 2014.
    In the book A Secular Age, Charles Taylor argues that: (1) modern secularism carries in it more than a trace residue of the explicitly religious way of thinking that it supersedes, and (2) the secular ensemble would not survive if the residue were filtered out. Modern secularism is not, in short, exclusively humanistic. Many who profess exclusive humanism, even perhaps the majority, are therefore—according to Taylor—exclusive humanists in name alone. My position is that Judeo-Christianity, in it…Read more
    In the book A Secular Age, Charles Taylor argues that: (1) modern secularism carries in it more than a trace residue of the explicitly religious way of thinking that it supersedes, and (2) the secular ensemble would not survive if the residue were filtered out. Modern secularism is not, in short, exclusively humanistic. Many who profess exclusive humanism, even perhaps the majority, are therefore—according to Taylor—exclusive humanists in name alone. My position is that Judeo-Christianity, in its teachings about men and women, is humanism. Humanism is what Western religion is all about at its core. This I defend by close examination of Taylor’s argument and by exposing some of the philosophical core of the Bible.
  •  86
    ‘I am the Lord your god’: Religion, morality, and the ten commandments
    Heythrop Journal 52 (4): 541-558. 2011.
    Philosophy of ReligionScience and Religion
  •  77
    Cartesian unceratainty: Descartes and Rorty
    Philosophia 17 (3): 271-295. 1987.
    Richard RortyRené Descartes
  •  25
    Meaning and Analysis
    . 1973.
    Meaning
  •  69
    The Sense/Intellect Continuum in Early Modern Philosophy
    Modern Schoolman 67 (1): 49-70. 1989.
    17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  69
    Cartesian Certainty: Toward the Categorial Core
    Idealistic Studies 15 (3): 219-248. 1985.
    Whence the Cartesian’s advantage over competing world investigators? Descartes’s answer is that those of his persuasion do not proceed by “resting [their] reasons on any other principle than the infinite perfections of God”. The claim’s considerable opacity does not prevent it from letting this much light filter through: only Cartesian scientists operate on the right metaphysical basis.
    European Philosophy
  •  85
    Intermediate Possibility and Actuality
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 65 (1): 63-82. 1991.
    Philosophy of ReligionModality
  •  44
    The methodological development of critical philosophy
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 17 (2): 217-242. 1979.
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  56
    Book review (review)
    Philosophia 17 (1): 509-515. 1987.
  •  50
    Gods, Giants, Fractals, and the Geometry of Early Modernity: Descartes, Gassendi, and the Rise of Science
    Perspectives on Science 3 (4): 480-519. 1995.
    The recent scholarly promotion of Pierre Gassendi to a key position in the formative modern period raises doubts about the portrayal of Descartes as “the father” of the post-Scholastic philosophical conceptualization. I defend the Cartesio-centric account against Thomas M. Lennon’s elliptical alternative. The defense necessitates a reassessment of the root nature of Descartes’s contribution—specifically of the interplay between philosophy and science, the latter being the crucial extraphilosophi…Read more
    The recent scholarly promotion of Pierre Gassendi to a key position in the formative modern period raises doubts about the portrayal of Descartes as “the father” of the post-Scholastic philosophical conceptualization. I defend the Cartesio-centric account against Thomas M. Lennon’s elliptical alternative. The defense necessitates a reassessment of the root nature of Descartes’s contribution—specifically of the interplay between philosophy and science, the latter being the crucial extraphilosophical component of the new practico-cognitive ensemble. This raises questions about the “philosophically” of Descartes’s activity, and with that questions about the quality of modernity. By way of explaining Gassendis nonoriginative position, his attitude toward the post-Scholastic Humanist thought that Descartes simply repudiated is examined.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  84
    The Conceptual Structure of Reality
    Philosophical Quarterly 65 (261): 848-850. 2015.
  •  35
    Book reviews (review)
    with Kenneth S. Friedman, Donald Gotterbarn, Bryan G. Norton, David S. Schwarz, and Walter P. Van Stigt
    Philosophia 9 (1): 75-127. 1979.
  •  45
    Descartes' proto-critique
    History of European Ideas 6 (2): 153-171. 1985.
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  33
    Reason and Substance. The Kantian Metaphysics of Conceptual Positivism
    Kant Studien 73 (1-4): 1-16. 1982.
    Kant: Metaphysics, Misc
  •  30
    Language and world
    Metaphilosophy 11 (3-4): 229-243. 1980.
    European PhilosophyMartin HeideggerBritish Philosophy
  •  18
    Matter and Rationality
    Apeiron 9 (1). 1975.
    Classical Greek PhilosophyAncient Greek and Roman Metaphysics
  •  29
    Thinning Thick Reflectivity: A Feature of Philosophical Rhetoric
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 3 (3). 1989.
    Continental Philosophy
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