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The Miracle Of Theism: Arguments for and against the existence of GodReview of Metaphysics 38 (3): 657-659. 1985.
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18A New Theory of AnalogyProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 44 70-85. 1970.
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2Religious KnowledgeProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 46 29-42. 1972.
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139analogy, the similarity along with difference, among meanings, among sorts of thinking, and among realities. Analogy theory originated with *Aristotle in its three main parts: analogy of meaning, analogous thinking, and analogy of being. There were some antecedents in *Plato, where the names of Forms and of participating things are the same but differ in meaning, and the notion of ‘being’ is said to differ with what we are talking about, for example Forms versus physical things (Sophist). Syst…Read more
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Inquiries into Medieval PhilosophyRevue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 164 (2): 219-220. 1974.
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3God, Creator of Kinds and PossibilitiesIn Robert Audi & William J. Wainwright (eds.), Rationality, religious belief, and moral commitment: new essays in the philosophy of religion, Cornell University Press. pp. 315--334. 1986.
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50William T. Fontaine 1909-1968Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 43. 1969.
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64This paper is as much about knowledge in general, as it is about the particular inquiry that occasions it.
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92This is more than a philosophical work. It is a systematic exposition of a whole Christian conception of the world within philosophical principles and concepts.
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66To avoid the deadends, I redeploy[52] the idea that integral human freedom (and understanding) has two modes. One is "natural" and the other "supernatural," though dividing the matter that way supposes the "natural" is the residue after the integrated whole is lost, because the supernatural[53] contains the natural "eminently" the way olympic winning routines envelop the qualifying skills.[54] In my account, humans were never "merely" objects in nature at all-- that is, objects, alongside stones…Read more
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88There are reasons of principle limiting what lexical fields can explain. As will emerge, they are not just the limitations that have encouraged "frame" semantics, or an emphasis on the "belief elements of meaning" peculiar to the lexicon of a given language, but reasons concerned with the combinatorial adaptation of words in all languages. An example of combinatorial adaptation, which I call "semantic contagion," is the italicized pair: "look down \on art; look down \at the floor".
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22This anthology contains essays by a distinguished group of British and American scholars prominent in the field of medieval philosophy. Setting high standards of clarity and exactness, the papers reflect current analytic, formalistic, and traditional methods of philosophy applied to topics such as logic, linguistics, and the philosophy of the mind.
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48Thought and World: The Hidden NecessitiesUniversity of Notre Dame Press. 2008.Introduction: Structural realism -- Necessities : earned truth and made truth -- Real impossibility -- What might have been -- Truth -- Perception and abstraction -- Emergent consciousness and irreducible understanding -- Real natures : software everywhere -- Going wrong with the master of falsity.
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116The Fate of the AnalysisProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 64 (n/a): 51-74. 1990.
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174Together with the Body I LoveProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 75 1-18. 2001.Philosophical difficulties with Augustine’s dualism, and with the scholastic “separated souls” account of the gap between personal death and supernatural resurrection, suggest that we consider two other options, each with its own attractions: (i) that the General Resurrection is immediate upon one’s death, despite initial awkwardness with common piety, and (ii) that there is a “natural metamorphosis” of bodily continuity after death and before resurrection
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113The God of the Philosophers by Anthony Kenny (review)Journal of Philosophy 79 (7): 410-417. 1982.
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97The Excavations at Dibon (Dhīb'n) in MoabThe Excavations at Dibon (Dhiban) in MoabJournal of the American Oriental Society 89 (1): 169. 1969.
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52Religious KnowledgeProceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 46 (n/a): 29. 1972.
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111Philosophy and Christian TheologyProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 44 70-85. 1970.
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