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Religious experience and the formation of the early englightenment self

In Roy Porter, Rewriting the self: histories from the Renaissance to the present. New York: Routledge (1997)

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  1. A Random Blend: The Self in Philip Larkin’s Poems “Ambulances” and “The Building”.Neil Pickering - 2014 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (2):163-170.
    In two of his great poems, “Ambulances” and “The Building,” Philip Larkin considers a deep fear about human individuality. The fear is that the human self is contingent and disjunctive, lacking any integrity or unity. The arrival of an ambulance on an urban curb and a visit to the hospital are the occasion of reflection on this form of human fragility. But more significant, the ambulance and the hospital are imagined as contexts in which the contingency of the human individual (...)
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  • Reflecting on the Psycholization of TRCs: Comment on “Truth in Reconciliation” by Alphonso Lingis.Zvi Bekerman - 2011 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 8 (4):329-331.
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  • A Timeless Sublime?: reading the feminine sublime in the discourse of the sacred.Patrick Wright - 2010 - Angelaki 15 (2):85-100.
    The main purpose of this paper is to argue that the idea of a feminine sublime – as theorised by critics such as Barbara Claire Freeman, Patricia Yaeger and Joanna Zylinska – opens the way for a no...
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