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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Peter_CawsPeter Caws - Wikipedia

    Peter J. Caws (May 25, 1931 – April 20, 2020) was a British American philosopher and administrator, and University Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Human Sciences at the George Washington University.

  2. Peter Caws was born in 1931 in Southall, Middlesex, now part of west London, in a house that can still be seen from the train between Heathrow and Paddington. He was brought up in a repressive fundamentalist sect, the Exclusive Brethren. After a B.Sc. (hons.) in physics from the University of London he escaped to the United States in 1953 ...

  3. 4 giu 2020 · Watch the GW Memorial Gathering. Photos From the Memorial. Peter Caws, University Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Human Sciences, Emeritus died peacefully at home in Foggy Bottom, on April 20, 2020.

  4. Condensed curriculum vitae Education:. Beaconsfield Road Elementary School. Southall, Middlesex, UK, 1936-42 Southall Grammar School, 1942-48 Imperial College of Science and Technology (Royal College of Science), 1949-51, and Acton

  5. 1 giorno fa · Peter Caws considers how much is lost in translation. There’s a story about an American evangelist who was challenged about something in his preaching that didn’t agree with the Greek of the New Testament. He is supposed to have replied “If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it’s good enough for me.” Very funny, we ...

  6. Peter J. Caws: Writing. 10+ books, on topics including the philosophy of science, political philosophy, structuralism, ethics and Sartre. Click here for details. Articles. O ver 150 articles and reviews, including three edited journal issues - some links here. Miscellaneous and Unpublished Work.

  7. Peter Caws. See Full PDF. Download PDF. Related Papers. Ian Magor. I attempt to provide a succinct account of Lacan's ideas on the unconscious from the 1950's through his two main contributions: “The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis” (1953) and “The Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious” (1957).