Ad
related to: jacques maritain bibliography
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Jacques Maritain (French: [ʒak maʁitɛ̃]; 18 November 1882 – 28 April 1973) was a French Catholic philosopher. Raised as a Protestant , he was agnostic before converting to Catholicism in 1906.
3.2 Bibliography. Toggle the table of contents. ... La personne et le bien commun) is a 1947 book about social philosophy by the French philosopher Jacques Maritain ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The Degrees of Knowledge is a 1932 book by the French philosopher Jacques Maritain, [1] in which the author adopts St. Thomas Aquinas’s view called critical realism and applies it to his own epistemological positions. [1]
Art and Scholasticism (French: Art et scolastique) is a 1920 book by the French philosopher Jacques Maritain. It is considered his major contribution to aesthetics . [ 1 ] According to Gary Furnell, the work "was a key text that guided the work of writers such as Allen Tate , Caroline Gordon , Sally and Robert Fitzgerald , Francois Mauriac ...
The Range of Reason is a 1952 book of essays by the Catholic philosopher Jacques Maritain.The text presents a Thomist philosophy regarding religion and morality. It contains a study of Atheism, titled "The Meaning of Contemporary Atheism", which has had a considerable impact on Catholic views of Atheism.
Raïssa Maritain (née Oumansoff) (September 12, 1883 in Rostov-on-Don – November 4, 1960 in Paris [1]) was a French poet and philosopher.She was the wife of Jacques Maritain, with whom she worked and whose companion she was for more than half a century, at the center of a circle of French Catholic intellectuals.
Jacques Maritain, Integral Humanism: Temporal and Spiritual Problems of a New Christendom, 1936; John Dewey, Freedom and Culture, 1939; Jacques Maritain, The Rights of Man and Natural Law, 1942; Friedrich Hayek, The Road to Serfdom, 1944; Karl Popper, The Open Society and Its Enemies, 1945; Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 1951