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  1. Project Professor Catherine Pickstock is a Mellon Teaching Fellow 2016-17. She will be convening a series of seminars with Dr Heather Webb to be held at CRASSH in Michaelmas 2016. Gesture, Perception and Event Whilst the Middle Ages were influenced by certain Greek philosophical traditions which regarded truth and science as an abstraction from matter,

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  3. Catherine Pickstock engages in lengthy debate with Derrida regarding proper readings of Plato and the notion of (authorial or oral) presence, attempting to move beyond the dichotomy of absence/presence through a particular account of the eucharistic liturgy (AW: 3–46).

  4. 29 de dic. de 1997 · Catherine Pickstock asking for a cup of tea: 'The optimum receptaclised transcendental infusion of enchauffed camellia sinensis with a modicum of bovine lactational excretion...please.' There are three reasons why philosophy might be difficult to read: 1. It is so unfathomably deep that ordinary mortals are not able to understand it. 2.

  5. 22 de oct. de 2020 · Catherine Pickstock is the Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge. Her books include After Writing: On the Liturgical Consummation of Philosophy (1997), Thomas d'Aquin et la Quête Eucharistique (2001) and Repetition and Identity (2014). In addition, she was co-editor - with John Milbank and Graham Ward - of the ...

  6. 29 de dic. de 1997 · Catherine Pickstock shows how Platonic philosophy did not assume a primacy of metaphysical presence, as had previously been thought, but a primacy of liturgical theory and practice. The author also provides a significant rethinking of Christian understandings of language, temporal and bodily life, and notions of the presence of God by ...

  7. 25 de ago. de 2020 · Catherine Pickstock. Catherine Pickstock is the Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge. Her books include After Writing and the forthcoming Aspects of Truth. Read more by Catherine Pickstock. Previous Article. Yves Congar and the Future of the Church in Its Past;