The novels are shot through with a Burkean fear of enlightenment rationalism. |
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His romantic longings are a strategic critique of the faceless rationalism of Bolshevism. |
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Yet I am not advocating a crass rationalism in which reverence, empathy and love have no place. |
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This battle for God was an attempt to fill the void at the heart of a society based on scientific rationalism. |
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These women rejected their contemporaries' scientific rationalism and positivism in favour of a profound respect for local knowledges. |
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For 2000 years, philosophers had to choose whether they followed Plato and his rationalism, or Aristotle and his empiricism. |
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Confucian thought is characterized by a spirit of humanism, rationalism, and moralism. |
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The hidden premiss of rationalism led Spinoza to the conclusion that there is only one substance. |
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Even philosophical critics of rationalism pay reason the back-handed compliment of arguing against its pretensions. |
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The result of these new realizations is that we can now problematize or relativize secular rationalism. |
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Despite the advances of rationalism, a belief in the supernatural has stubbornly remained. |
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Her description of economic rationalism is primarily based on its enemies' assumptions, not on economic rationalists' actual views. |
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Scientific rationalism is grounded on normative principles and expresses a specific hierarchy of values. |
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It must ask, as Kant asked about metaphysics after Hume's critique of rationalism, how is philosophy still possible? |
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Contemporary historians of philosophy challenge this traditional distinction between rationalism and empiricism. |
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Democratic culture is far richer and more diverse, Stout argues, than the terms of Rawls's etiolated rationalism can capture. |
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As different as Locke and Hume's empiricism was from Descartes' rationalism, they had something in common. |
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Gandy asserts that surveillance is a system based on rationalism, which is illustrated in various practices at Jones and Smith. |
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Their approach to science was symbolic of a new style, following on from the experimental rationalism of Boyle and Newton. |
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By operationalizing Godel and set theory, Badiou's rationalism makes no concessions at all to the worldly or to the empirical. |
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Indeed, there is some danger that we are approaching the sunset of the second great experiment with rationalism. |
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Sadly, such distinctive rationalism of non-Hindu religions finds no place in this textbook. |
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Occidentalism, say the authors, is a revolt against rationalism, secularism and individualism. |
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From a theoretical standpoint ideological libertarianism is just another form of rationalism and not at all conservative. |
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If the transcendental philosophy is not a version of Leibnizian rationalism, why is it not a repetition of the sceptical empiricism of Hume? |
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Our intellectual culture demands that every idea or phenomenon be subjected to the unrelenting rigour of rationalism, or excesses of scientism. |
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The long conservative debate with liberals and secularists gave the movement more than a tinge of rationalism and empiricism. |
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Secularist rationalism and the growth of constructive atheism have created a spiritual vacuum obvious to religious believers. |
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Thus, Hegel's rationalism was seen as a threat not only to orthodox religion but to orthodox politics as well. |
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As a result, he develops more arguments against rationalism, and finds them more and more nonsensical and therefore less worthwhile reading. |
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The breakthrough toward subjectivism is indeed compelling but rationalism was not finished yet for all that. |
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I've always believed in the twin values of rationalism and humanism, but humanism has often felt as though it got short shrift in our community. |
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Moreover, in place of relativistic cosmology's inductive empiricism, Milne opted for a hypothetico-deductive rationalism. |
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Stephen's bullying self-pity and edgy rationalism ran up sharply against Anny's fancifulness, extravagance and sentiment. |
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But rationalism is about intellectual integrity and consistency, not fudge and sentimentality. |
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In this sense, perhaps the best way to fight irrationalism is by promoting rationalism. |
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Overnight, the tendency of naturalistic rationalism to decay into postmodern irrationalism became a national joke. |
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Prof. Pangle, despite rhetorical flourishes in this direction, finally reveals little interest in such a radical questioning of rationalism. |
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This is inadequate and misleading because it depends on a crude kind of rationalism. |
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For one thing, the division between empiricism and rationalism is not as neat as many philosophy primers would have you believe. |
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At the beginning of university, I was influenced by rationalism and humanism. |
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Essentially positivist in outlook, the quest for explanation is sometimes labelled critical rationalism. |
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Values such as scientific rationalism and secularism are today on the retreat in all areas of life, and across the board in education. |
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The rest of the time, they assumed that economic rationalism implies support for radical free-market reform. |
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They see economics as a product of Enlightenment rationalism, along with deism, atheism, the chaos of the French Revolution and other un-Christian aspects of the modern age. |
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While he drew upon the arcana of the Rosicrucian and Hermetic traditions for his novel, his belief in prolongevity was grounded in Enlightenment rationalism. |
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Often, empiricism is contrasted with rationalism, a theory which holds that the mind may apprehend some truths directly, without requiring the medium of the senses. |
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During the half-century after J. S. Bach's death in 1750, musical standards in Lutheranism declined rapidly in the face of triumphant Enlightenment rationalism and pietism. |
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Christopher stated that the attack on liberal humanism, and economic rationalism and globalisation, reflect a common factor, fear of change, fear of the unknown. |
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This is to extend the ambition of rationalism to practical reason. |
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But sometimes the problem is thought to lie deeper, for example, in Kant's rationalism in moral theory and his ideas of teleology and race in anthropology. |
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It is therefore contrary to the spirit of rationalism to force people to do anything which could plausibly be left to the individual to decide for themselves. |
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If you have an interest in what is driving the economic rationalism and enormous social and environmental dislocation we are experiencing then this is the meeting for you. |
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It is difficult to know how far down the social scale this rationalism extended. |
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The dominant intellectual currents of the Enlightenment promoted rationalism, and most Protestant leaders preached a sort of deism. |
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Shrugging off Enlightenment rationalism, Protestants embraced romanticism, with the stress on the personal and the invisible. |
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This, reacting to a world dominated by Enlightenment rationalism, expressed a romantic view of a Golden Age of chivalry. |
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According to Reinhold Zippelius many advances in law and jurisprudence take place by operations of critical rationalism. |
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The extreme rationalism and skepticism of the age led naturally to deism and also played a part in bringing the later reaction of romanticism. |
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Late orthodoxy was torn by influences from rationalism, philosophy based on reason, and Pietism, a revival movement in Lutheranism. |
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Philosophical discourse was stimulated by the rediscovery of Aristotle and his emphasis on empiricism and rationalism. |
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Romantics idealised the Celts as a primitive, bucolic people who were far more poetic, spiritual, and freer of rationalism than their neighbours. |
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It is one of several views of epistemology, the study of human knowledge, along with rationalism and skepticism. |
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This view is commonly contrasted with rationalism, which states that knowledge may be derived from reason independently of the senses. |
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Burke imitated Bolingbroke's style and ideas in a reductio ad absurdum of his arguments for atheistic rationalism, demonstrating their absurdity. |
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His A Satyr Against Reason and Mankind is assumed to be a Hobbesian critique of rationalism. |
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It was also a measure of Baldwin's rationalism, in place of Churchill's more reactionary stance. |
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Papyri preserve complex accounting methods that suggest elements of economic rationalism, and the Empire was highly monetized. |
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Ward's and Holland's evaluations revolve around the question of whether the poem resists or reflects the supposed insipidness of rationalism. |
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The Surrealists rejected rationalism and focused their attention on the imagination. |
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The epistemological position of Ritschl, in our author's exposition of it, is little more than idealistic rationalism. |
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The beginning of rationalism is commonly called the Age of Reason. |
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The later form of rationalism, represented by Wolff and the neologists, was rejected by figures like Ewald in part because such rationalism does not lead to happiness. |
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Bourgeois values are dependent on rationalism, which began with the economic sphere and moves into every sphere of life which is formulated by Max Weber. |
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Breton's return to France after the War, began a new phase of Surrealist activity in Paris, and his critiques of rationalism and dualism found a new audience. |
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When we say economism, we mean one of the forms of social rationalism. |
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Culturally there was a transition away from the rationalism of the Georgian period and toward romanticism and mysticism with regard to religion, social values, and arts. |
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Civic nationalism lies within the traditions of rationalism and liberalism, but as a form of nationalism it is contrasted with ethnic nationalism. |
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His championing of the imagination as the most important element of human existence ran contrary to Enlightenment ideals of rationalism and empiricism. |
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This religious approach was influenced by the spiritual qualities of medieval art, in opposition to the alleged rationalism of the Renaissance embodied by Raphael. |
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In contrast to surrealism, an aesthetic effect produced by European rationalism, magical realism is a device used by Latin American intellectuals reacting to Eurocentrism. |
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He was also influenced by strands of Dutch pietism, continental rationalism, and British evangelicalism, along with a variety of pietistic movements. |
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There, professor Adolf von Harless, though previously an adherent of rationalism and German idealism, made Erlangen a magnet for revival oriented theologians. |
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