This article argues that the reception of Augustinian ideas in Pascal and Nicole can be used to clarify what is distinctive in La Rochefoucauld’s treatment of self-relations. La Rochefoucauld does not share the Augustinian dichotomy between self-love at the price of forgetting God and love of God at the price of self-contempt that is prominent in both Pascal and Nicole. Rather, La Rochefoucauld develops a conception of an attitude towards the self that could be described as self-acceptance. As he describes it, being open about one’s character faults falls short of self-esteem, if self-esteem is understood as involving a positive evaluation of one’s own character traits. However, it counterbalances these faults and can enhance the esteem in ...
Part I presents a systematic presentation of what is termed 'the Wittgensteinian position', broken d...
Based primarily on his 1981-1982 course, The Hermeneutics of the Subject, I contend that Michel Fouc...
In this article I address a puzzle about one of Francis Hutcheson’s objections to psychological egoi...
This article argues that the reception of Augustinian ideas in Pascal and Nicole can be used to clar...
This article argues that the reception of Augustinian ideas in Pascal and Nicole can be used to clar...
The influence of Saint-August in on the moral literature of the seventeenth-century cannot be overlo...
Thesis advisor: Christopher J. KellyRousseau's Confessions is controversial and influential since it...
International audienceCompared to reflective conception of the return to oneself inherent to the phi...
International audienceCompared to reflective conception of the return to oneself inherent to the phi...
P. 151-167The article analyses the concept of forgiveness, in the context of the contemporary debate...
The main idea of this essay stems from a grammatical peculiarity of ‘being a saint’ in the Christian...
Forgiving is not pardoning, excusing, condoning, forgetting, or reconciling, nor is forgiving just a...
Against the nineteenth century neo-scholastic description of grace as an unfelt state, Thérèse of Li...
Some modern Christian notions of ‘self-sacrifice’ and ‘cruciformity’ abstract an ethic of self-negat...
In the ascetic literature, pride and humility are considered as the mother of ail vices and virtues,...
Part I presents a systematic presentation of what is termed 'the Wittgensteinian position', broken d...
Based primarily on his 1981-1982 course, The Hermeneutics of the Subject, I contend that Michel Fouc...
In this article I address a puzzle about one of Francis Hutcheson’s objections to psychological egoi...
This article argues that the reception of Augustinian ideas in Pascal and Nicole can be used to clar...
This article argues that the reception of Augustinian ideas in Pascal and Nicole can be used to clar...
The influence of Saint-August in on the moral literature of the seventeenth-century cannot be overlo...
Thesis advisor: Christopher J. KellyRousseau's Confessions is controversial and influential since it...
International audienceCompared to reflective conception of the return to oneself inherent to the phi...
International audienceCompared to reflective conception of the return to oneself inherent to the phi...
P. 151-167The article analyses the concept of forgiveness, in the context of the contemporary debate...
The main idea of this essay stems from a grammatical peculiarity of ‘being a saint’ in the Christian...
Forgiving is not pardoning, excusing, condoning, forgetting, or reconciling, nor is forgiving just a...
Against the nineteenth century neo-scholastic description of grace as an unfelt state, Thérèse of Li...
Some modern Christian notions of ‘self-sacrifice’ and ‘cruciformity’ abstract an ethic of self-negat...
In the ascetic literature, pride and humility are considered as the mother of ail vices and virtues,...
Part I presents a systematic presentation of what is termed 'the Wittgensteinian position', broken d...
Based primarily on his 1981-1982 course, The Hermeneutics of the Subject, I contend that Michel Fouc...
In this article I address a puzzle about one of Francis Hutcheson’s objections to psychological egoi...