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  1. Heidegger and 'Being and Time'.Stephen Mulhall - 1997 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 59 (1):177-177.
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  • Truth in Thomas Aquinas.John F. Wippel - 1946 - Review of Metaphysics 43 (2):295 - 326.
    THOMAS AQUINAS IS WELL-KNOWN for having defended the view that truth consists of an adequation between the intellect and a thing. Perhaps no discussion of this within his literary corpus is better known than that offered in qu. 1 of his Disputed Questions on Truth. Even so, in addition to describing truth as an adequation of the intellect and a thing, he there considers a number of other definitions. Most importantly, he develops a notion of truth of being along with (...)
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  • Metaphysics. Aristotle - 1941 - In Ross W. D. (ed.), The Basic Works of Aristotle. Random House.
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  • Towards Non-Being: The Logic and Metaphysics of Intentionality.Graham Priest - 2005 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 14 (1):116-118.
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  • Reply to Zimmerman.William F. Vallicella - 1990 - International Philosophical Quarterly 30 (2):245-254.
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  • The Problem of Being in the Early Heidegger.William F. Vallicella - 1981 - The Thomist 45 (3):388.
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  • On Movement and the Destruction of Ontology.Thomas Sheehan - 1981 - The Monist 64 (4):534-542.
    Two problems continue to haunt Heideggerian scholarship and to pose needless obstacles to those who seek to enter his thought. One is the almost ritualistic repetition of the master’s terminology—especially at its most manneristic—on the part of his disciples. Another is the tendency, which is found in Heidegger as well as in his disciples, to hypostasize “being” into an autonomous “other” that seems to function on its own apart from entities and from man. Both of these problems gather around Heidegger’s (...)
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  • Heidegger’s Concept of Truth.Edward Witherspoon - 2002 - Philosophical Review 111 (3):449-452.
    Given Heidegger’s inflammatory remarks about the intellectual poverty of modern logic, it may come as a surprise to be told that he has something to contribute to the philosophy of logic. One of the rewards of Daniel Dahlstrom’s Heidegger’s Concept of Truth is its argument that Heidegger can illuminate such issues in the philosophy of logic as the character of propositions, the nature of bivalence, and the concept of truth. Dahlstrom focuses on Heidegger’s work in the years immediately before and (...)
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  • Being and Time.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1964 - Philosophical Quarterly 14 (56):276.
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  • Heidegger’s Reduction of Being to Truth.William F. Vallicella - 1985 - New Scholasticism 59 (2):156-176.
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  • On Vallicella’s Critique of Heidegger.Michael E. Zimmerman - 1990 - International Philosophical Quarterly 30 (1):75-100.
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  • Thomist realism and the linguistic turn: Toward a more perfect form of existence.John O'Callaghan - 2005 - Ars Disputandi 5:122-124.
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  • God As Truth.John Peterson - 1995 - Faith and Philosophy 12 (3):342-360.
    The view of Aristotle and Brentano that ‘true’ applies straightforwardly to statements (judgments, beliefs, propositions) and derivatively to other things makes for awkward and unintuitive definitions in the cases of derived truth. This is corrected by construing ‘true’ as applying analogically to statements and other things. Under this view, six senses of ‘true’ are distinguished. Following the logic of analogy, these senses are partly the same and partly different. These six senses also exhibit an analogy of proportionality. This yields three (...)
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  • Reply to Vallicella: Heidegger and Idealism.Quentin Smith - 1991 - International Philosophical Quarterly 31 (2):231-235.
    Vallicella argued that Heidegger's idealism is incoherent but that absolute idealism is coherent. I argue the reverse. There is no contradiction in the supposition that Being is dependent upon Dasein, that entities are dependent upon Being, and therefore that all entities are dependent upon Dasein. This may be false, but it is consistent. The absolute idealism of Fichte and the like is incoherent, however, because it supposes that all human minds are but representations in the Absolute Mind, and it is (...)
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  • Kant, Heidegger, and the Problem of the Thing in Itself.William F. Vallicella - 1983 - International Philosophical Quarterly 23 (1):35-43.
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  • Reply to Vallicella: Heidegger and Idealism.Quentin Smith - 1991 - International Philosophical Quarterly 31 (2):231-235.
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  • Where is Philosophy at the Start of the Twenty-First Century?Graham Priest - 2003 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 103 (1):85-99.
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  • Heiddegger and Aquinas: An Essay on Overcoming Metaphysics.John D. Caputo - 1984 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 16 (2):177-177.
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