Volume 9, Number 2 (1972) Proceedings of the Inaugural University of Dayton Philosophy Colloquium
On Friday and Saturday, October 22-23, 1971, the Philosophy Department of UD sponsored a colloquium on the subject of meaning and action. Eleven philosophers representing seven colleges and universities read papers after which criticisms and active discussion followed.
Editor's note: Four of the eleven papers have been omitted here at the request of the authors. The papers were either not ready for publication or were candidates for publication elsewhere.
Front Matter
Front Matter
University of Dayton
Articles
Meaning and Action: A Colloquium
William M. Richards
The Meaning of Being and the Value of Action for the Person
Bernard A. Gendreau
Heidegger and the Problem of Meaning
John Opalek M.S.C.
The Case for Impurity in Philosophical Writing
John D. Sommer
Action in Indian Philosophy
H. James Nersoyan
Wittgenstein, Lions, and Other Animals
William M. Richards
Can Action Be Explained Mechanistically?
William Hasker
Behavioral and Cybernetic Models of Human Sensory Systems
Matthew Kabrisky
The Primacy of Experience for Verified Knowledge in Roger Bacon
Bernard A. Gendreau