Daniel McInerny
Goodreads Author
Born
South Bend, Indiana, The United States
Website
Twitter
Genre
Influences
Member Since
November 2011
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/danielmcinerny
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The Good Death of Kate Montclair
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Stout Hearts and Whizzing Biscuits
4 editions
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published
2011
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Stoop of Mastodon Meadow (Kingdom of Patria, #2)
by
5 editions
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published
2012
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Beauty and Imitation: A Philosophical Reflection on the Arts
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High Concepts: A Hollywood Nightmare
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published
2012
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The Common Things: Essays on Thomism and Education
3 editions
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published
1999
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The Actor: A Play
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published
2014
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The Bureau of Myths: A Short Story
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published
2014
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The Quest for Clodnus's Collectibles: A Patria Christmas Story (Kingdom of Patria, #3)
3 editions
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published
2014
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The Difficult Good: A Thomistic Approach to Moral Conflict and Human Happiness
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published
2006
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Daniel’s Recent Updates
Daniel McInerny
is now friends with
Artur Rosman
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“it is helpful to keep in mind three ways in which we can know something. The first is by way of theoretical statements. We can learn a lot by listening to a lecture. In this mode of knowing, we endeavor to abstract from the particulars of the case and grasp what is essential to it. Although the lecturer might use examples or illustrations to aid comprehension, the primary mode of delivery is by way of statements and arguments made up out of abstract notions. Another way we can know something is by what we might call the way of doing. There’s real know-how that comes from doing something, especially when we do something so much that our experience of it becomes rich and varied. For example, our sweet, humble Aunt Emily knows a lot about the virtue of humility by having lived humility over many years. Her theoretical knowledge of humility—her knowledge of humility by way of universal statements and arguments—may be nil. She may have never studied moral theology. If asked to give a definition of humility, she would probably be at a loss. And yet, it’s undeniable that Aunt Emily has a real understanding of what it means to be humble, an experiential knowledge embodied in her habitually humble acts. And by imitating Aunt Emily’s humility, we can proceed along this way of doing as well. The third way of knowing is by what we might call the way of showing. By “showing,” I mean the activities of the artistic imagination. A movie is a kind of showing, as is a play. But there are other kinds of showing that do not involve performance either live or recorded. A novel is a kind of showing, as is a poem, as is a short story. These latter arts are showings in the sense that they, just like a movie or play, offer us images of human beings doing things. And whether a showing is performance-based or text-based, it attempts—as we so often say about a work of art—to “say” something. It offers us the experience of something meaningful.”
― Beauty and Imitation: A Philosophical Reflection on the Arts
― Beauty and Imitation: A Philosophical Reflection on the Arts
“offers us the experience of something meaningful.”
― Beauty and Imitation: A Philosophical Reflection on the Arts
― Beauty and Imitation: A Philosophical Reflection on the Arts

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