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Mark Glouberman

Kwantlen Polytechnic University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    137
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    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.
  •  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.
  •  85
    Intermediate Possibility and Actuality
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 65 (1): 63-82. 1991.
    Philosophy of ReligionModality
  •  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.
  •  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
  •  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
  •  45
    Descartes' proto-critique
    History of European Ideas 6 (2): 153-171. 1985.
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  29
    Thinning Thick Reflectivity: A Feature of Philosophical Rhetoric
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 3 (3). 1989.
    Continental Philosophy
  •  97
    Cartesian Realism and G/P-Implosion
    Journal of Philosophical Research 23 307-329. 1998.
    Did Descartes make a revolutionary contribution to philosophy? Given the widespread application to him of the title ‘father of modem philosophy,’ the standard affirmative proves surprisingly difficult to justify. ln this paper I locate Descartes’s epoch-making philosophical shift. Descartes contributed a very strong idea of realism, an idea modelled in his cogito-argument. To grasp the contribution aright, it is however necessary to de-emphasise what is usually identified as his key contribution…Read more
    Did Descartes make a revolutionary contribution to philosophy? Given the widespread application to him of the title ‘father of modem philosophy,’ the standard affirmative proves surprisingly difficult to justify. ln this paper I locate Descartes’s epoch-making philosophical shift. Descartes contributed a very strong idea of realism, an idea modelled in his cogito-argument. To grasp the contribution aright, it is however necessary to de-emphasise what is usually identified as his key contribution---an epistemological one. AIso, the theoretical connection between Descartes’s core philosophical activity and the scientific revolution of his time has to be appreciated. ln the course of the discussion I explain, in a more philosophical vein, how the influence of Kant clouds the abiIity of post-Kantians to see what Descartes did. A route to an understanding of Descartes’s realism is an inconsistency in Kant’s modal views. The antirealism of Kant’s view---his transcendental idealism---yields up some of its mystery once the dialectical interplay with Cartesian realism is elicited.
    René Descartes
  •  18
    Matter and Rationality
    Apeiron 9 (1). 1975.
    Classical Greek PhilosophyAncient Greek and Roman Metaphysics
  •  55
    The Palinode Ot the Analyst Rationality and Self in the Euthyphro
    Philosophical Inquiry 16 (3-4): 38-55. 1994.
    Plato: Euthyphro
  • Conceptuality: An Essay in Retrieval
    Société Française de Philosophie, Bulletin 70 (4): 383. 1979.
  •  47
    Kant's Diversity Theory: A Dissenting View
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 7 (4). 1990.
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  55
    Transcendental Idealism: The Dialectical Dimension
    Dialectica 45 (1): 31-45. 1991.
    SummaryLeft wing interpreters of Kant's transcendental idealism argue that the doctrine must be excised in order to disclose the viable philosophical content of the first Critique. For right wing interpreters, this leaves a Hamlet without the prince. I chart and defend a middle path. Transcendental idealism, while essential to Kant's position, renders that position philosophically indefensible. Constant misinterpretation of the doctrine results from a failure to appreciate the inter‐theoretic re…Read more
    SummaryLeft wing interpreters of Kant's transcendental idealism argue that the doctrine must be excised in order to disclose the viable philosophical content of the first Critique. For right wing interpreters, this leaves a Hamlet without the prince. I chart and defend a middle path. Transcendental idealism, while essential to Kant's position, renders that position philosophically indefensible. Constant misinterpretation of the doctrine results from a failure to appreciate the inter‐theoretic relations between Kant's conceptualisation of sense‐involving experience and the output of ‘Cartesian theory of error'
    Kant: Metaphysics and Epistemology
  •  157
    A stratified bundle theory
    Synthese 42 (3). 1979.
    Bundle Theories
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