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  1. From brahma to a blade of grass.Alfred Collins - 1991 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 19 (2):143-189.
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  • The Incorporation of Devotional Theism into Purāṇic Gifting Rites.David Brick - 2017 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 45 (1):191-205.
    The Purāṇas make a major contribution to Brahmanical writing on gifting, primarily because they contain descriptions of numerous specific gifting rites that texts of other genres generally fail to discuss. Although largely unstudied, these Purāṇic gifting rites provide unique evidence of a historically significant, yet hitherto ignored, development in gifting in medieval India, namely, the incorporation of the increasingly popular ethos of bhakti into the much older practice of dāna, wherein gods traditionally played no prominent role. This article will argue (...)
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  • In karna's realm: An ontology of action. [REVIEW]William S. Sax - 2000 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 28 (3):295-324.
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  • Kingship and 'contrapriests'.Declan Quigley - 1997 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 1 (3):565-580.
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  • Goddesses dancing in the city: Hinduism in an urban incarnation—a review article. [REVIEW]Steven M. Parish - 1997 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 1 (3):441-484.
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  • Ritual Agency, Substance Transfer and the Making of Supernatural Immediacy in Pilgrim Journeys.Andreas Nordin - 2009 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 9 (3-4):195-223.
    Pilgrim journeys are popular religious phenomena that are based on ritual interaction with culturally postulated counterintuitive supernatural agents. This article uses results taken from an anthropological Ph. D. thesis on cognitive aspects of Hindu pilgrimage in Nepal and Tibet. Cognitive theories have been neglected in pilgrimage studies but they offer new perspectives on belief structures and ritual action and call into question some of the current assumptions in this research field. Pilgrim journeys often involve flows of substance of anthropomorphic character. (...)
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  • For whom the bell tolls”? A ‘vulnerability-responsibility’ model based on democratic and ‘dignified’ transactions.Subrata Mitra - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (5):538-553.
    The welfare state, once seen as the best institutional response to people in need, has steadily come under pressure, as much from shrinking state capacities as from neo-liberal advocates of individual responsibility. Still, despite decline of the post-war consensus on the efficacy of the welfare state, social ‘vulnerability’ still remains the key focus of public policy. However, though much in use in contemporary political discourse, the logical and practical implications of social vulnerability remain unclear. Its essential subjectivity – it is (...)
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