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Natural law and the common good
pp. 67-88
Résumé
Etienne Gilson (1884–1978) recalls the sense of strangeness produced by his first contact with Thomistic philosophy in Sebastien Reinstadler's Elementa philosophiae scholasticae.1 Gilson, who studied at the Sorbonne with Brunschvicg and Lévy-Bruhl, was shocked by the bad manners of Reinstadler and the Scholastics who tended to label any opinion contradicting their own as absurd.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Rockmore Tom, Gavin William J., Colbert James G., Blakeley Thomas J (1981) Marxism and alternatives: towards the conceptual interaction among Soviet philosophy, neo-thomism, pragmatism, and phenomenology. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 67-88
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-8495-0_6
Citation complète:
Rockmore Tom, Gavin William J., Colbert James G., Blakeley Thomas J, 1981, Natural law and the common good. In T. Rockmore, W. J. Gavin, J. G. Colbert & T.J. Blakeley Marxism and alternatives (67-88). Dordrecht, Springer.