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    <title>Articles by Jesse A. Goldberg  - Inquiries Journal</title>
    <link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/authors/479/jesse-a-goldberg</link>
    <description>Inquiries Journal provides undergraduate and graduate students around the world a platform for the wide dissemination of academic work over a range of core disciplines.</description>
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				<title>Power and Transgression in &quot;Twelfth Night&quot; and &quot;Measure for Measure&quot;: Artifice and Ideology as Tools of the Elite</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/581/power-and-transgression-in-twelfth-night-and-measure-for-measure-artifice-and-ideology-as-tools-of-the-elite</link>
				<description>By Jesse A. Goldberg - Shakespeare&amp;rsquo;s comedies, at first glance, seem to uniformly end on a positive note, with the fulfillment of desires, the overcoming of obstacles, and the victory over malevolent forces. In Twelfth Night and Measure for Measure, however, this is not the case. The conclusions of both plays are reiterations of problematic power structures present in each play. This is not to say that these comedies are absolutely favorable to strict power structures. In fact, both plays are in favor of bending the rules sometimes, though they seem to suggest that there are rules that are not meant to be bent...</description>
				<pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2011 10:11 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/581/power-and-transgression-in-twelfth-night-and-measure-for-measure-artifice-and-ideology-as-tools-of-the-elite</guid>
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				<title>Free Will in the Christian Cosmology: Comparing Paul and Augustine</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/562/free-will-in-the-christian-cosmology-comparing-paul-and-augustine</link>
				<description>By Jesse A. Goldberg - While numerous religious scholars have approached this essential question, the focus of this paper is Saint Paul, who addresses human beings&amp;rsquo; freedom of choice in Chapter 7 of his letter to the Romans, and Saint Augustine, who formulates a defense of free will in his treatise On Free Choice of the Will. Paul lands on a kind of dualism in his discussion of law, human nature, and salvation, and Augustine approaches a robust version of human autonomy in his account of the problem of evil. While both saints manage to fit an articulation of free will within a Christian cosmology without changing...</description>
				<pubDate>Tue, 16 Aug 2011 08:05 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/562/free-will-in-the-christian-cosmology-comparing-paul-and-augustine</guid>
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				<title>Reading Deeply: How The Internet May Limit Our Autonomy</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/550/reading-deeply-how-the-internet-may-limit-our-autonomy</link>
				<description>By Jesse A. Goldberg - Traditionally, human beings and tools are thought to be in a simple relationship with one another. All agency is located in the person, consequently making the human being the sole object of power which acts on its subject, the tool. As we move forward into an era of increasingly powerful digital technologies, this model has to be re-examined. Instead of a one-way relationship in which the human agent has total control as the sole actor and the tool is merely the object acted upon &amp;ndash; a mere means to an end which the human agent has in mind, it would be more accurate today in the face of digital...</description>
				<pubDate>Tue, 12 Jul 2011 08:05 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/550/reading-deeply-how-the-internet-may-limit-our-autonomy</guid>
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