Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Philosophy Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Philosophy

Concerned Philosophers For Peace, Vol. 1, No. 12, Concerned Philosophers For Peace Dec 1985

Concerned Philosophers For Peace, Vol. 1, No. 12, Concerned Philosophers For Peace

Concerned Philosophers for Peace

No abstract provided.


Concerned Philosophers For Peace, Vol. 1, No. 11, Concerned Philosophers For Peace Apr 1985

Concerned Philosophers For Peace, Vol. 1, No. 11, Concerned Philosophers For Peace

Concerned Philosophers for Peace

No abstract provided.


Newsletter: The Center For Professional Ethics, March 1985, Case Western Reserve University Mar 1985

Newsletter: The Center For Professional Ethics, March 1985, Case Western Reserve University

Center for Professional Ethics

Table of Contents:

  • An Afternoon With Billy Budd
  • Internal Education of the Steering Committee
  • The Center's Spring Conference
  • Center Activities
  • Good News for the Center
  • Reflections from New CPE Steering Committee Members by Carol J. Rottman and Linda Barr


Update - Winter 1985, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics Jan 1985

Update - Winter 1985, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics

Update

In this issue:

-- Hastings Center and Ethics Center to present "Biomedical Ethics Today: Old models and New" at Loma Linda April 21 and 22
-- Maloney and Winslow address allocation
-- "Worship Aids" unite ethics and liturgy
-- Ethics Center: Priest, Prophet, or Participant? (Editorial)


[ Reflections Regarding William Bartling ]
-- Siding With Life
-- The Patient is the Final Arbiter
-- Competing Claims Make Hard Choices

-- Excerpts from the California appeals court decision
-- $200,000 given to Ethics Center


Genius And Monologue, Ken Frieden Jan 1985

Genius And Monologue, Ken Frieden

Books

"Genius is the intellectual obsession of our time," Ken Frieden writes, "and monologue is one symptom of the disorder." From ancient, spiritual conceptions of genius to modern notions of the extraordinary mind, Frieden traces associated philosophic and literary expressions of inspiration and individuality.

Frieden juxtaposes the evolving forms of genius with traditions of monologue in pre-Shakespearean and Shakespearean drama, Romantic poetry, and nineteenthand twentieth-century fiction. He delineates the linguistic mechanisms that have shaped the dominant ideology of genius, showing that while literary monologues typically break the conventions of dialogue, aethetics ultimately identifies originality with deviance and madness. The successive guises …