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In this unique work, Ken Gale and Jonathan Wyatt bring together three areas of scholarship: collaborative writing as method of inquiry, the philosophical approaches of the French philosopher, Gilles Deleuze, and the performativity of both writing and the 'self'. The book is a reflexive exploration into the theory and practice of collaborative writing, Other their between-the-twos - sequences of exchanged writings using a variety of forms and genres - at the book's heart. Their collaboration o...
Literature -- Philosophy. --- Literature. --- Self in literature. --- Writing -- Philosophy. --- Second language acquisition. --- Music in education. --- Music and language. --- Language and music --- Language and languages --- Education --- Second language learning --- Language acquisition --- Literature --- Writing --- Philosophy.
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"The Hebrew Bible is a philosophical testament. Abraham, the first biblical philosopher, calls out to the world in God's name exactly as Plato calls out in the name of the Forms. Abraham comes forward as a critic of pagan thought about, specifically, persons. Moses, to whom the baton is passed, spells out the practical implications of the Bible's core anthropological teachings. In Persons and Other Things Mark Glouberman explores the Bible's philosophy, roughing out in the course of a defence of it how men and women who see themselves in the biblical portrayal (as he argues that most of us do once the "religious" glare is reduced) are committed to conduct their personal affairs, arrange their social ties, and act in the natural world. Persons and Other Things is also the author's testament about the practice of philosophy. Glouberman sets out, and in the chapters that pursue the theme he puts into practice, the lessons he has acquired as a lifelong learner about thinking philosophically, about writing philosophy, and about philosophers. Persons and Other Things looks closely at the Bible as a philosophical work, asking insightful questions about how to interpret the Hebrew Bible, what it means to be Jewish, and how to live a meaningful and moral life."--
Jewish philosophy. --- Bible. --- Philosophy. --- Christopher Hitchens. --- God in the Hebrew Bible. --- Jewish. --- Judaism. --- halakhah. --- metaphysics. --- monotheism. --- ontology. --- persons. --- philosophy. --- religion and religiosity. --- the category of the particular. --- writing philosophy. --- Religion.
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