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Tabla De Materias Dec 1980

Tabla De Materias

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Erasmi Corpus Mariologicum, Joaquín María Alonso Dec 1980

Erasmi Corpus Mariologicum, Joaquín María Alonso

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Appendix Dec 1980

Appendix

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Índices Dec 1980

Índices

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Back Cover Dec 1980

Back Cover

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Addenda Et Corrigenda Dec 1980

Addenda Et Corrigenda

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Front Cover Dec 1980

Front Cover

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents Dec 1980

Table Of Contents

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


Juicio General Crítico: Conclusion, Joaquín María Alonso Dec 1980

Juicio General Crítico: Conclusion, Joaquín María Alonso

Marian Library Studies

No abstract provided.


A Report On Studies Of Religious Imagination, William P. Frost Oct 1980

A Report On Studies Of Religious Imagination, William P. Frost

University of Dayton Review

History provides many records of the human fascination with images and imagination. For example, when the Hebrew people in their Exodus experienced numerous frustrations after Moses, their leader, had disappeared in a cloud on a mountain top, they melted the earrings of their wives and daughters and fashioned themselves a golden calf. The Bible reads, "Then they cried, 'This is your God, O Israel, who brought you out of the land of Egypt'" (Exodus 32:4).


The Anonymity Of God, Thomas J. J. Altizer Oct 1980

The Anonymity Of God, Thomas J. J. Altizer

University of Dayton Review

Simply to speak of theology today is to raise a question, and that question is the question of the possibility of theology itself. Is theological speech possible in our world? Is it actually possible for us to speak of God? Can we speak of God and truly say anything at all? These questions and others are driving us to the realization that we can only speak of God by realizing a new identity of theology. One route to such an identity is the realization that what we once knew as theology has become a soliloquy, a narcissistic soliloquy in which …


Transcending And Centering, Robert Gussner Oct 1980

Transcending And Centering, Robert Gussner

University of Dayton Review

This article focuses on the human urge to transcend, and especially upon the dynamics of its success or failure to attain spiritual fulfillment. I approach this from the background of a comparative religionist working in Asian material, but I hope that what I say will also be of interest to theologians and to "philosophical anthropologists" of several sorts.


The Catholic Imagination And Its Relationship To Catholic Social Theory, Bruno V. Manno Oct 1980

The Catholic Imagination And Its Relationship To Catholic Social Theory, Bruno V. Manno

University of Dayton Review

One of the abundantly fruitful acquisitions of post-conciliar Catholic Christianity is the highly complex and pluralistic articulation of religious possibilities emerging out of a renewed and rigorous study of its heritage. Rather than a lifeless body of propositions, this past is more and more approached and seen to be a rich, living reality in need of critical reapportionment. While this activity is discomforting and disconcerting for some individuals and even vigorously opposed by others, there is little doubt that this mining of the multiplicity of riches will continue.

From a general theological point of view, one area proving to be …


Religious Imagination And Liturgical Time, Renee Rust Oct 1980

Religious Imagination And Liturgical Time, Renee Rust

University of Dayton Review

Religious language provides both a vehicle for contact with the Holy and protection from its full force which, in the Biblical understanding, no one could completely see and yet live.

Symbols are this kind of necessary language. They allow a sensual-spiritual extension of one's insights, images, and other experiences of the Holy into concrete human forms. These forms function in various ways: they make the experience available again upon recall; they allow one to gain some readiness for and objective distance from particularly painful calls to change; they quicken one's notion of future possibilities when one gives oneself over to …


Introduction, William P. Frost Oct 1980

Introduction, William P. Frost

University of Dayton Review

Just in the final stages of preparing this publication, the Spring 1980 issue of Daedalus appeared. Its topic is "Intellect and Imagination." Excellent contributions come from professors of various disciplines, e.g., anthropology, biology, music, neurophysiology, aesthetics, and history. Such an interdisciplinary interest in imagination is the focus of our present UDR. The state of the arts is described in the introduction, "A Report on Studies of Religious Imagination." It mentions Kenneth Boulding and his book The Image as very influential in bringing together representatives of various disciplines in the general systems research. Of special interest to the introduction is the …


Literature And Rite, Thomas J. J. Altizer Oct 1980

Literature And Rite, Thomas J. J. Altizer

University of Dayton Review

It has become a virtually established doctrine among both literary and religious scholars that myth and ritual are one and the same thing, the apparent difference between them deriving from the disjunctive power of an analytic mind beholding an originally organic and unitary phenomenon. Efforts to effect a real distinction between myth and rite are therefore declared to be fallacious. whether these arise from an attempt to assign a chronological priority to one or the other. or to apprehend either in an isolated and truly distinctive form. In Christian theological terms. this doctrine would appear to have a Catholic form. …


Passages And Epiphanies, Joseph W. Goetz Oct 1980

Passages And Epiphanies, Joseph W. Goetz

University of Dayton Review

When asked a few months ago to say a few words of introduction for the Presentations of the Covenant Players, I was more than a little diffident about doing so, The bete noire for many performing artists as for painters and poets is over- explanation. If a piece needs a great deal of interpretation before and after, it tends to lose its primary impact which should be direct and immediate. As an occasional and very amateur painter I now something of the frustration attendant upon the question: "What are you trying to say?" I have been tempted to round on …


Imagination And Purgation The Ascent Of Science Towards Truth, Michael Barnes Oct 1980

Imagination And Purgation The Ascent Of Science Towards Truth, Michael Barnes

University of Dayton Review

Science is a religious enterprise. By that I mean just the opposite of what science was once accused of. There was a time when science was perverted into a scientism. This was a highly dogmatic belief that science could eventually subdue mystery, answer even the ultimate questions of life, and somehow provide final salvation. The human project we call science is just the opposite of such dogmatism, however. It is nonetheless, even more clearly now, a project that is actually religious. Science is rooted in a fundamental faith in ultimate truth and value. By various steps it moves towards the …


Cover And Table Of Contents, University Of Dayton Oct 1980

Cover And Table Of Contents, University Of Dayton

University of Dayton Review

Cover and Table of Contents, Volume 14, Issue 3


Technology And The Human Imagination, Martin C. Kastelic Oct 1980

Technology And The Human Imagination, Martin C. Kastelic

University of Dayton Review

'What is the relationship between scientific technology, religion, and the human imagination? In asking this question, I do not propose to look for a general answer, one which would simply define each of the terms and then ex- tract the myriad of possible intersections. Nor do I have in mind an exhaustive comparative analysis of the interrelationship of these terms in various societies, past and present. Rather, what I hope to do is to look at one historical convergence of these terms which, as I see it, has given rise to Western civilization as we presently experience it. But I …


Conversational Data Analysis As An Altered State Of Consciousness, Andrew M. Greeley Oct 1980

Conversational Data Analysis As An Altered State Of Consciousness, Andrew M. Greeley

University of Dayton Review

Norman Nie was nothing if not candid as to the reasons why I was chosen to speak to you this evening. He said, "We want somebody who doesn't know a bit from a bite, but who has had a lot of experience with SCSS." I qualify on both counts. Biting is something you do to a bullet, and bit is what's left over in the paycheck after the government takes its taxes away. As for the use of SCSS I've done most of a book relying solely on my portable T1 terminal and, with some risk of having a giant …


Front Matter, Volume 5, Number 2 (1980) May 1980

Front Matter, Volume 5, Number 2 (1980)

University of Dayton Law Review

Table of contents for Volume 5, Number 2


The Road To Respectability: A Woman Of Pleasure And Competing Conceptions Of The First Amendment, Harriet L. Turney May 1980

The Road To Respectability: A Woman Of Pleasure And Competing Conceptions Of The First Amendment, Harriet L. Turney

University of Dayton Law Review

Whenever the United States Supreme Court announces a constitutional decision that rejects a previously established interpretation, the critics and scholars draw lines, choose sides, and attempt to reconcile or show how the decision cannot be reconciled with the previous interpretation. Where the line is drawn or which side is chosen hinges upon the constitutional theory embraced and advocated by the critic. Those critics who adhere to a strict interpretational theory often attack the more recent decision as being unfaithful to the framers' intent or the strict letter of the written constitution. Other critics, who do not agree that framers' intent …


The Hyde Amendment: An Analysis Of Its State Progeny, Joan Meyerhoefer Roddy May 1980

The Hyde Amendment: An Analysis Of Its State Progeny, Joan Meyerhoefer Roddy

University of Dayton Law Review

In the landmark case of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court held that the constitutional right to privacy included a woman’s decision on whether to terminate her pregnancy. The right to terminate the pregnancy, however, was not absolute, and had to be weighed, at various stages of the pregnancy, against the state’s “important and legitimate interest in preserving and protecting the health of the pregnant woman … [and] in protecting the potentiality of human life.” Justice Blackmun, at the outset of his majority opinion, acknowledged the Court’s “awareness of the sensitive and emotional nature of the abortion controversy, and of …


Application Of The Exlusionary Rule To Criminal Tax Fraud Investigations, Crofford J. Macklin Jr. May 1980

Application Of The Exlusionary Rule To Criminal Tax Fraud Investigations, Crofford J. Macklin Jr.

University of Dayton Law Review

In investigating criminal tax fraud matters, the Internal Revenue Service (I.R.S.) has operated under certain informal customs and practices to obtain taxpayers' records from financial institutions and other third-party recordkeepers. These informal customs and practices often violate information-gathering procedures required by the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (I.R.C.) and the Treasury Regulations. Therefore, taxpayers whose records have been obtained in violation of the I.R.C. and regulations may seek to suppress such evidence under the exclusionary rule3 by claiming violations of due process4 and the fundamental right of privacy. The focus of this article will be on the following three areas: …


Home Monitoring And Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: The Legal Implications, Donald Eugene Theis May 1980

Home Monitoring And Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: The Legal Implications, Donald Eugene Theis

University of Dayton Law Review

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is a leading cause of death in infants. … SIDS has drawn political attention, as evidenced by Congress’ enactment of the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Act of 1974. Although intensive medical research has been going on for some time, the prevention of or cure for SIDS remains a mystery. One obstacle hampering a medical breakthrough in the area is the absence of a determination of the cause of SIDS. The consensus definition given to SIDS is illustrative of the difficulty medical science is facing in trying to solve this disease entity. The current definition for …


Analyses Of Selected 1979 Ohio Legislation, University Of Dayton May 1980

Analyses Of Selected 1979 Ohio Legislation, University Of Dayton

University of Dayton Law Review

This section of notes on selected Ohio legislation continues the practice, begun in Volume 4 of the University of Dayton Law Review, of providing brief analyses of certain recent enactments by the Ohio General Assembly. The number of bills analysed in this issue has been significantly increased from the preceding year, and the range of affected areas of law addressed by the analyses has been significantly broadened.

Each note summarizes the state of the law prior to the effective date of the legislation considered, and focuses on the intended or anticipated impact of the new statute. Many of the notes …


H.B. 835: Ohio's Response To The Domestic Violence Dilemma, Mark R. Chilson May 1980

H.B. 835: Ohio's Response To The Domestic Violence Dilemma, Mark R. Chilson

University of Dayton Law Review

Domestic violence is most often manifested by repeated, deliberate and severe beatings of family or household members. Victims frequently suffer broken bones, concussions, miscarriages or other physical injuries. The abused family or household members are also subjected to serious psychological and emotional injuries. Even though domestic violence impacts most clearly upon the victims, the assailants, too, are not without injury, often suffering from some type of mental illness, alcohol or drug abuse problem. The traditional view is that domestic violence does not exist, or if it exists, it must be dealt with privately. Today this view inappropriately deals with the …


H.B. 156: Achieving Uniform Utility Rate Schedules For Municipalities, Douglas A. Smoot May 1980

H.B. 156: Achieving Uniform Utility Rate Schedules For Municipalities, Douglas A. Smoot

University of Dayton Law Review

Public utility rates have increased in Ohio significantly in the past five years. Utility rate increase applications escalated 1,540 percent in 1975 alone when seventy-seven rate increase requests were filed with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO). On January 20, 1979, Consumer Counsel William A. Spratley, from the office of the Consumers’ Counsel of Ohio, expressed concern over the massive utility rate increases. Spratley notified Alfred E. Kahn, Chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability, and complained that PUCO was not holding Ohio utilities to the 9.5 percent annual maximum price increase recommended by the Council to …


H.B. 600: Ohio's Bill Of Rights For Nursing Home Patients, Nancy Mosmeier Phillips May 1980

H.B. 600: Ohio's Bill Of Rights For Nursing Home Patients, Nancy Mosmeier Phillips

University of Dayton Law Review

Nursing home residents are among the most helpless individuals in our society; their dependence on institutions for food, shelter, and personal care has cost them control over their own lives. “Because of the vulnerability of the aged population of the nursing home and the fact that most of them will reside in these homes for the rest of their lives, society bears a special obligation to ensure that the quality of their care is satisfactory and their treatment humane.” Ohio has responded to this obligation by enacting H.B. 600, which is directed at improving the care of Ohio nursing home …