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  1. “The most sacred society (thiasos) of the Pythagoreans:” philosophers forming associations.Philip A. Harland - 2019 - Journal of Ancient History 7 (1):207-232.
    Scholarly use of the label “school” to describe groups of philosophers has sometimes led to a neglect of the ways in which such gatherings of philosophers could function as unofficial associations of recognizable types. Concerns to distance supposedly “secular” philosophers from any “religious” connection have fed into this image of the philosophical “school,” diverting attention away from other important dimensions of associative life among philosophers and other literate professionals, including involvement in honours for the gods and in commensal activities. Epigraphic (...)
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  • Pantagruelism: A Rabelaisian inspiration for Understanding Poisoning, Euthanasia and Abortion in The Hippocratic Oath and in Contemporary Clinical Practice.Y. Michael Barilan & Moshe Weintraub - 2001 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 22 (3):269-286.
    Contrary to the common view, this paper suggests that the Hippocratic oath does not directly refer to the controversial subjects of euthanasia and abortion. We interpret the oath in the context of establishing trust in medicine through departure from Pantagruelism. Pantagruelism is coined after Rabelais' classic novel Gargantua and Pantagruel. His satire about a wonder herb, Pantagruelion, is actually a sophisticated model of anti-medicine in which absence of independent moral values and of properly conducted research fashion a flagrant over-medicalization of (...)
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  • St. Monica as Participant in St. Augustine’s Philosophical Companionship: A Woman’s Voice in the Time of Crisis.Dragana Dimitrijević - 2021 - In Irina Deretić (ed.), Women in Times of Crisis. Belgrade: Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade. pp. 49-61.
    The Cassiciacum dialogues mark an important point in St. Augustine’s spiritual journey from teacher of rhetoric to bishop of Hippo, and present Augustine as a Christian who had very recently found God, but was still unwilling to break off with the Greco-Roman philosophical tradition. Thus, Augustine designed his early philosophical writings in the old, classical manner. Although there is a vast body of scholarship on the Cassiciacum dialogues, only limited attention has been paid to the question of how significant a (...)
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  • Women in Times of Crisis.Irina Deretić (ed.) - 2021 - Belgrade: Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade.
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  • ‘From there everything changed’: conversion narrative in the biomimicry movement.Fransina Stradling & Valerie Hobbs - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    1. ‘Born into a world of stories’ (Bochner et al., 1997), humans share a propensity to experience and understand the world through narratives. We use narratives to situate ourselves physiologically...
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  • Arrepentimiento y conversión en Filón de Alejandría: formas, valor y consecuencias escatológicas.Laura Pérez - 2020 - Circe de Clásicos y Modernos 24 (2):103-127.
    El presente estudio tiene por objeto analizar los principales pasajes sobre la μετάνοια en los textos de Filón, con especial atención a la sección dedicada a este tema en Sobre las virtudes 175-186, a fin de determinar qué valor tienen el arrepentimiento y la conversión para el filósofo judío, cuáles son las formas en que se producen y expresan, y cuáles son sus efectos desde el punto de vista moral y escatológico.
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  • (1 other version)Me and My Shadows: On the Accumulation of Body-Images in Western Society Part One - The Image and the Image of the Body in Pre-Modern Society.Harvie Ferguson - 1997 - Body and Society 3 (3):1-31.
    Granting that the `soul' was only an attractive and mysterious thought, from which philosophers rightly, but reluctantly, separated themselves - that which they have since learnt to put in its place is perhaps even more attractive and even more mysterious. The human body, in which the whole of the most distant and most recent past of all organic life once more becomes living and corporal, seems to flow through this past and right over it like a huge and inaudible torrent: (...)
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