In this Issue
Since 1992 Common Knowledge has opened lines of communication among schools of thought in the academy, as well as between the academy and the community of thoughtful people outside its walls. Common Knowledge has formed a new intellectual model, one based on conversation and cooperation rather than on metaphors (adopted from war and sports) of "sides" that one must "take." The pages of Common Knowledge regularly challenge the ways we think about scholarship and its relevance to humanity.
published by
Duke University Pressviewing issue
Volume 13, Issue 2-3, Spring-Fall 2007Table of Contents
- Geertz's Gifts
- pp. 206-210
- The Crowd Parts
- pp. 211-213
Symposium
A "Dictatorship of Relativism"? Symposium in Response to Cardinal Ratzinger’s Last Homily
- Relativism, Today and Yesterday
- pp. 227-249
- T. S. Eliot's Small Boat of Thought
- pp. 337-361
- Fallibilism and Faith
- pp. 379-384
- Overkill, or History that Hurts
- pp. 404-428
Little Reviews
- The Shakespeare First Folio (review)
- pp. 460-461
Fiction and Poetry
- From The Witness
- pp. 463-476
- Twenty Poems
- pp. 477-496
Articles
- Road to Jerusalem
- pp. 512-530
Contributors
- Notes on Contributors
- pp. 531-535