•  6
    This is intended as an introductory statement to the explorations undertaken in the essays that follow. The authors of these essays attempt to introduce the reader to some of the insights of Michael Polanyi and their implications for the reader who wishes to come to a greater understanding of modern technological society, which — for better or worse — has come to define his very existence. Arguably, no twentieth-century thinker has probed more deeply than Polanyi into the dynamics of scientific …Read more
  • Christian Ambiguity and Social Disorder
    Interpretation 3 (2/3): 221-242. 1973.
  •  39
    Despite fundamental differences in the epistemologies presented by Oakeshott and Polanyi, there are some important areas of common concern which suggest further exploration. Focus here is on Oakeshott’s epistemological and disciplinary boundaries in his The Voice of Liberal Leaming.
  •  20
    An Introduction to Plato's Laws. By R. F. Stalley (review)
    Modern Schoolman 62 (3): 217-219. 1985.
  •  76
    Mikhail Bakhtin: The Dialogical Principle. By Tzvetan Todorov (review)
    Modern Schoolman 64 (1): 69-70. 1986.
  •  183
    William Poteat’s Anthropology
    Tradition and Discovery 21 (1): 33-44. 1994.
    Using the metaphor of a circle with its center, periphery, and radius, this essay explores William Poteat's understanding of the self, or "mindbody," in its dynamic and creative relation to the larger world, or cosmos, identifying the mindbody's prereflective radix with the "center," its boundary or point of interface with the larger world with the "periphery," and its dialectical evolution and articulation of a sense of coherence and meaning in terms of a pretensive and retrotensive "radius."
  •  8
    A Symposium Encounter
    Tradition and Discovery 38 (2): 6-13. 2011.
    Participants have known Poteat as teacher or colleague or author over various periods of time and assess him according to these various relationships. Polanyi is given less attention largely because he has been less difficult to understand. Poteat’s approach is the more radical because he attempts to take the implications of Polanyi’s thinking further. Central to comprehending the nature of their differences are an understanding (1) of their different perceptions of transcendence and (2) of the …Read more
  •  118
    Murray Jardine on Christianity and Modern Technological Society
    Tradition and Discovery 37 (3): 39-58. 2010.
    Murray Jardine’s The Making and Unmaking of Technological Society further develops several of the author’s political and economic concerns articulated in his earlier Speech and Political Practice. It probes the impact and implications of both Christianity and modern technology for our understanding of, and ability to cope with, problems that have become endemic to Western and, specifically, American culture. Jardine’s major continuing themes include: the importance to a well-formed self and soci…Read more
  •  30
    William Poteat’s Anthropology
    Tradition and Discovery 21 (1): 33-44. 1994.
    Using the metaphor of a circle with its center, periphery, and radius, this essay explores William Poteat's understanding of the self, or "mindbody," in its dynamic and creative relation to the larger world, or cosmos, identifying the mindbody's prereflective radix with the "center," its boundary or point of interface with the larger world with the "periphery," and its dialectical evolution and articulation of a sense of coherence and meaning in terms of a pretensive and retrotensive "radius."
  •  56
    A Symposium Encounter
    Tradition and Discovery 38 (2): 6-13. 2008.
    Participants have known Poteat as teacher or colleague or author over various periods of time and assess him according to these various relationships. Polanyi is given less attention largely because he has been less difficult to understand. Poteat’s approach is the more radical because he attempts to take the implications of Polanyi’s thinking further. Central to comprehending the nature of their differences are an understanding (1) of their different perceptions of transcendence and (2) of the …Read more