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What We Mean by Experience

Stanford, California: Stanford University Press (2012)

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  1. Neuropragmatism, the cybernetic revolution, and feeling at home in the world.Tibor Solymosi - forthcoming - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences:1-20.
    In recent work, Mark Johnson has argued that a scientifically updated version of John Dewey’s pragmatism affords human beings the opportunity to feel at home in the world. This feeling at home, however, is not fully problematized, nor explored, nor resolved by Johnson. Rather, Johnson and his collaborators, Don Tucker (2021) and Jay Schulkin (2023), defend this updated pragmatism within the historical development of the sciences of life and mind from the twentieth century to the present day. A central theme (...)
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  • (1 other version)Religious experience in the current theological discussion and in the church pew.David Biernot & Christoffel Lombaard - 2017 - HTS Theological Studies 73 (3).
    Taking a new look at the language of ‘religious experience’, the authors in this contribution take into review this aspect in the current theological discussion, and in the church pew, asking the question: Does George Lindbeck’s criticism of the experiential-expressive model of religion still have something to say to us? Firstly, Lindbeck is reviewed and recouped. Then, religious experience and its commodification are discussed, at the hand also of the heritage from Schleiermacher onwards on experience. Taking a position within the (...)
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