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Point Counterpoint

Humana Mente 4 (15):394-399 (1929)

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  1. Human Rights versus Corporate Rights: Understanding Life Value, the Civil Commons, and Social Justice.John McMurtry - 2011 - Studies in Social Justice 5 (1):2011.
    This analysis maps the deepening global crisis and the principles of its resolution by life-value analysis and method. Received theories of economics and justice and modern rights doctrines are shown to have no ground in life value and to be incapable of recognizing universal life goods and the rising threats to them. In response to this system failure at theoretical and operational levels, the unifying nature and measure of life value are defined to provide the long-missing basis for understanding the (...)
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  • Reference time and time in narration.John Nerbonne - 1986 - Linguistics and Philosophy 9 (1):83 - 95.
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  • The Metaphorical Construction of Complex Domains: The Case of Speech Activity in English.Elena Semino - 2005 - Metaphor and Symbol 20 (1):35-70.
    In this article I provide an account of the way in which the domain of spoken communication is metaphorically constructed in English, on the basis of the analysis of over 450 metaphorical references to speech activity in a corpus of contemporary written British English. I show how spoken communication is mainly structured via a set of source domains that conventionally apply to a wide variety of target domains, such as the source domains of MOTION, PHYSICAL TRANSFER, PHYSICAL CONSTRUCTION, and PHYSICAL (...)
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  • The New Type of Hero in Ayn Rand's Novels and Its Historical Roots.Anastasiya Vasilievna Grigorovskaya - 2017 - Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 17 (2):275-284.
    This article examines the new type of hero created by Ayn Rand and finds its roots in Chernyshevsky's “new human.” Rand's characters share such features as extremism, asceticism, escapism, and the desire to transform the world. Moreover, Rand's heroes exhibit the self-building and “wholeness” traits of the “superhuman” as found in myths and in Renaissance and Masonic ideas.
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  • Human Rights versus Corporate Rights: Life Value, the Civil Commons and Social Justice.John McMurtry - 2011 - Studies in Social Justice 5 (1):11-61.
    This analysis maps the deepening global crisis and the principles of its resolution by life-value analysis and method. Received theories of economics and justice and modern rights doctrines are shown to have no ground in life value and to be incapable of recognizing universal life goods and the rising threats to them. In response to this system failure at theoretical and operational levels, the unifying nature and measure of life value are defined to provide the long-missing basis for understanding the (...)
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  • The vocation of reason: Wallace Stevens and Edmund Husserl. [REVIEW]Jonathan B. Imber - 1986 - Human Studies 9 (1):3 - 19.
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