It proclaims not only a bill of rights, most of which have now in fact become embodied in international law, but a moral and
philosophical vision which aspires to universality.
Not exact matches
It should be clear by now that Teilhard's
vision can offer an authentic way to a Christian future only if it is buttressed by a
philosophical understanding,
which Teilhard himself only partially and precariously achieved.
Furthermore, there are other
visions of reality from
which to learn:
visions that, like Whitehead's perspective, can serve as
philosophical underpinnings for a responsible environmental ethic.
And most of Man's
Vision of God, The Divine Relativity, 33 and the editorial contributions to Philosophers Speak of God34 is a careful and extensive argument for the
philosophical superiority and rational elegance of the «dipolar» conception of God in
which the abstract, absolute side of God is balanced by a concrete, relative side.
By adopting a purely reactionary stance against the idealism of Hegel (and the
philosophical tradition in general) Nietzsche ends up providing us with a
vision of nature and the world
which is overly narrow in scope.
In two recent works, The Uncertain Phoenix and Eros and Irony, David L. Hall presents a systematic and radical critique of the Western cultural and
philosophical tradition, and (in The Uncertain Phoenix) a provocative
vision of a future
which might result front a movement away from certain aspects of that tradition.
Tomasi tries to deflect worries about capitalism in practice by claiming the high ground of ideal theory: the
philosophical choice between free market fairness and its alternatives ultimately rests not on empirical and feasibility concerns, but rather on
which vision of justice is most compelling at a moral level.
There, together with all the phases of the graphic creation — objects, furniture, audiovisuals, actions and tableaux vivant — there are
visions and obsessions filled with
philosophical, historical and artistic instances mixed with events, circumstances and coincidences by
which the artificer likes to be surprised.
As clients decide
which process (or another process such as mediation or co-mediation) is right for them, I think it is important for them to spend time thinking about the overall culture and philosophy of the processes available to them in order to make an informed decision, making sure their
vision of the divorce matches the
philosophical framework of the divorce process they choose.