Freedom and Necessity

Freedom and Necessity
Title Freedom and Necessity PDF eBook
Author Steven Brust
Publisher Macmillan
Pages 456
Release 2007-04-17
Genre Fiction
ISBN 9780765316806

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If you liked Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell-or Christopher Priest's The Prestige-or Iain Pears' An Instance of the Fingerpost-here is a classic of magic-tinged adventure you may have missed.

Freedom and Necessity

Freedom and Necessity
Title Freedom and Necessity PDF eBook
Author Joan Robinson
Publisher Routledge
Pages 148
Release 2016-11-10
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1315439026

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Originally published in 1970, this book examines the origins of social organizations, the development of Robinson Crusoe economies and the conception of property or rightful ownership, as well as the origins of agriculture, race and class. Discussing commerce and the nation state, capitalist expansion and war between industrial power, the book is a concise yet comprehensive survey of the evolution of the structures of the world’s economies and of the ideas which underlie them.

Philosophical Essays

Philosophical Essays
Title Philosophical Essays PDF eBook
Author Alfred J. Ayer
Publisher
Pages 289
Release 1965
Genre
ISBN

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Hegel, Marx, and the Necessity and Freedom Dialectic

Hegel, Marx, and the Necessity and Freedom Dialectic
Title Hegel, Marx, and the Necessity and Freedom Dialectic PDF eBook
Author Russell Rockwell
Publisher Springer
Pages 251
Release 2018-04-26
Genre Political Science
ISBN 3319756117

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This book provides close readings of primary texts to analyze the linkage between G.W.F. Hegel’s philosophy and Karl Marx’s critical social theory of necessity and freedom. This is important for three reasons: first, to understand the significance of the changing relationships of work, society, and critical social theory in the origins of Hegelian-Marxism in the US, as documented in the recently published correspondence between the Marxist-Humanist theoretician Raya Dunayevskaya and the critical theorist Herbert Marcuse; second, to identify the intersections of the Critical Theorists Jurgen Habermas’ and Marcuse’s influential reinterpretations of Marx’s “value theory” of economy and society that enables navigation of the changing relationships of the social and economic spheres in the last century, as developed in Marx’s Grundrisse; and, thirdly, to assess the potential of Moishe Postone’s renewal of Marx’s value theory, largely conceived by the notion of a necessity and freedom dialectic intrinsic to capitalism.

Abortion

Abortion
Title Abortion PDF eBook
Author Janet Hadley
Publisher Temple University Press
Pages 294
Release 1997-09
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9781566395915

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Abortion is still not talked about. Few women admit to having one. It is too personal, and it is still taboo. Yet this intimate personal issue has become sensationally and bewilderingly public, it has even brought down governments, a paradox which the author found intriguing enough to start her on the project of this book. In this worldwide survey of abortion politics, Janet Hadley argues that abortion should be legal, accessible, affordable and accepted the world over.

Freedom and Necessity

Freedom and Necessity
Title Freedom and Necessity PDF eBook
Author Gerald Bonner
Publisher CUA Press
Pages 159
Release 2007-02
Genre Religion
ISBN 0813214742

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This book seeks to explain this paradox in Augustine's theology by tracing how these different emphases arose in his thought, and speculating as to why he endorsed, in the end, his theology of predestination. T

Freedom and Necessity in Modern Trinitarian Theology

Freedom and Necessity in Modern Trinitarian Theology
Title Freedom and Necessity in Modern Trinitarian Theology PDF eBook
Author Brandon Gallaher
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 319
Release 2016
Genre Religion
ISBN 0198744609

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Freedom and Necessity in Modern Trinitarian Theology examines the tension between God and the world through a constructive reading of the Trinitarian theologies and Christologies of Sergii Bulgakov (1871-1944), Karl Barth (1886-1968), and Hans Urs von Balthasar (1905-1988). It focuses on what is called "the problematic of divine freedom and necessity" and the response of the writers. "Problematic" refers to God being simultaneously radically free and utterly bound to creation. God did not need to create and redeem the world in Christ. It is a contingent free gift. Yet, on the other side of a dialectic, he also has eternally determined himself to be God as Jesus Christ. He must create and redeem the world to be God as he has so determined. In this way the world is given a certain "free necessity" by him because if there were no world then there would be no Christ. A spectrum of different concepts of freedom and necessity and a theological ideal of a balance between the same are outlined and then used to illumine the writers and to articulate a constructive response to the problematic. Brandon Gallaher shows that the classical Christian understanding of God having a non-necessary relationship to the world and divine freedom being a sheer assertion of God's will must be completely rethought. Gallaher proposes a Trinitarian, Christocentric, and cruciform vision of divine freedom. God is free as eternally self-giving, self-emptying and self-receiving love. The work concludes with a contemporary theology of divine freedom founded on divine election.