Results for 'Mark F. Bear'

997 found
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  1.  6
    Recent progress toward an understanding of experience-dependent visual cortical plasticity at the molecular level.Mark F. Bear - 1991 - In A. Gorea (ed.), Representations of Vision. Cambridge University Press. pp. 73.
  2.  10
    Neural Networks: Test Tubes to Theorems.Leon N. Cooper, Mark F. Bear, Ford F. Ebner & Christopher Scofield - 1990 - In J. McGaugh, Jerry Weinberger & G. Lynch (eds.), Brain Organization and Memory. Guilford Press.
  3.  7
    8 Long-Term Plasticity of Glutamatergic Synaptic Transmission in the Cerebral Cortex.Robert A. Crozier, Benjamin D. Philpot, Nathaniel B. Sawtell & Mark F. Bear - 2004 - In Michael S. Gazzaniga (ed.), The Cognitive Neurosciences Iii. MIT Press.
  4.  36
    Reply to Professor Zagorin.F. R. Ankersmit - 1990 - History and Theory 29 (3):275-296.
    That narrative language has the ontological status of being an object; that it is opaque; that it is self-referential; that it is intentional and, hence, intrinsically aestheticist; that the narrative meaning of an text is undecidable in an important sense of that word and even bears the marks of self-contradiction; that narrative meaning can only be identified in the presence of other meaning ; that as far as narrative meaning is concerned the text refers, but not to a reality outside (...)
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  5. The proper treatment of variables in predicate logic.Kai F. Wehmeier - 2018 - Linguistics and Philosophy 41 (2):209-249.
    In §93 of The Principles of Mathematics, Bertrand Russell observes that “the variable is a very complicated logical entity, by no means easy to analyze correctly”. This assessment is borne out by the fact that even now we have no fully satisfactory understanding of the role of variables in a compositional semantics for first-order logic. In standard Tarskian semantics, variables are treated as meaning-bearing entities; moreover, they serve as the basic building blocks of all meanings, which are constructed out of (...)
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  6.  4
    Book Review: The Educational Imperative: A Defense of Socratic and Aesthetic Learning. [REVIEW]Mark Stocker - 1995 - Philosophy and Literature 19 (2):393-395.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Educational Imperative: A Defense of Socratic and Aesthetic LearningMark StockerThe Educational Imperative: A Defense of Socratic and Aesthetic Learning, by Peter Abbs; x & 250 pp. Bristol, Pennsylvania: Taylor & Francis, 1994, $29.00 paper.O tempora! o mores! Peter Abbs begins by deploring “the cultural catastrophe” of British education in the mid-1990s. He states in his always lucid and accessible prose: “I want to come clean; I want (...)
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  7.  23
    The Story Gestalt: A Model Of Knowledge‐Intensive Processes in Text Comprehension.Mark F. John - 1992 - Cognitive Science 16 (2):271-306.
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  8.  13
    Eric Voegelin and the Continental Tradition: Explorations in Modern Political Thought.Lee Trepanier & Steven F. Mcguire (eds.) - 2011 - University of Missouri.
    Twentieth-century political philosopher Eric Voegelin is best known as a severe critic of modernity. Much of his work argues that modernity is a Gnostic revolt against the fundamental structure of reality. For Voegelin, “Gnosticism” is the belief that human beings can transform the nature of reality through secret knowledge and social action, and he considered it the crux of the crisis of modernity. As Voegelin struggled with this crisis throughout his career, he never wavered in his judgment that philosophers of (...)
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  9.  4
    Il-ktieb tal-filosofija f'Malta, jew, Dizzjunarju enċiklopediku tal-h̳sieb Malta.Mark F. Montebello - 2001 - Il-Pjetà, Malta: Pubblikazzjonijiet Indipendenza.
    L-ewwel volum. A-L -- It-tiena volum. M-Z.
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  10.  9
    Becoming Κλεινοσ in Crete and Magna Graecia: Dionysiac Mysteries and Maturation Rituals Revisited.Mark F. McClay - 2021 - Classical Quarterly 71 (1):108-118.
    This article reconsiders the historical and typological relation between Greek maturation rituals and Greek mystery religion. Particular attention is given to the word κλεινός (‘illustrious’) and its ritual uses in two roughly contemporary Late Classical sources: an Orphic-Bacchic funerary gold leaf from Hipponion in Magna Graecia and Ephorus’ account of a Cretan pederastic age-transition rite. In both contexts, κλεινός marks an elevated status conferred by initiation. (This usage finds antecedents in Alcman'sPartheneia.) Without positing direct development between puberty rites and mysteries, (...)
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  11. Winston Churchill and honor : the complexity of honor and statesmanship.Mark F. Griffith - 2016 - In Laurie Johnson & Dan Demetriou (eds.), Honor in the Modern World: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Lanham: Lexington.
     
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  12.  76
    Self-determination versus the determination of self: A critical reading of the colonial ethics inherent to the united nations declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples.Mark F. N. Franke - 2007 - Journal of Global Ethics 3 (3):359 – 379.
    The United Nations' (UN) adoption of a Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples is intended to mark a fundamental ethical turn in the relationships between indigenous peoples and the community of sovereign states. This moment is the result of decades of discussion and negotiation, largely revolving around states' discomfort with notion of indigenous self-determination. Member states of the UN have feared that an ethic of indigenous self-determination would undermine the principles of state sovereignty on which the UN is (...)
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  13. The Philosophical Work of Mark Sharlow: an Introduction and Guide.Mark F. Sharlow - manuscript
    Provides an overview of Mark Sharlow's philosophical work with summaries of his positions. Includes references and links to his writings.
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  14.  1
    Internalities of international relations and the politics of externalities : affirming the impossibility of IR with Roberto Esposito.Mark F. N. Franke - 2018 - In Inna Viriasova (ed.), Roberto Esposito: biopolitics and philosophy. Albany, NY: SUNY. pp. 201-217.
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  15.  21
    The patronising Kantianisms of hospitality ethics in International Relations: Towards a politics of imposition.Mark F. N. Franke - forthcoming - Sage Publications: Journal of International Political Theory.
    Journal of International Political Theory, Ahead of Print. The contemporary international regime of law and politics regarding human migration largely follows Immanuel Kant’s contradictory approach, supporting the cosmopolitical rights of humans to move and expect hospitality while privileging the rights of sovereign states to assert territorial security against movement. International Relations scholars informed by Jacques Derrida’s ethical theory argue that one may press this tension to positive dynamics through affirmation of the aporia that a secured home is a requirement for (...)
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  16.  18
    The patronising Kantianisms of hospitality ethics in International Relations: Towards a politics of imposition.Mark F. N. Franke - 2021 - Journal of International Political Theory 17 (3):276-294.
    The contemporary international regime of law and politics regarding human migration largely follows Immanuel Kant’s contradictory approach, supporting the cosmopolitical rights of humans to move and expect hospitality while privileging the rights of sovereign states to assert territorial security against movement. International Relations scholars informed by Jacques Derrida’s ethical theory argue that one may press this tension to positive dynamics through affirmation of the aporia that a secured home is a requirement for the possibility of the hospitality that might undo (...)
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  17.  66
    Proper classes via the iterative conception of set.Mark F. Sharlow - 1987 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 52 (3):636-650.
    We describe a first-order theory of generalized sets intended to allow a similar treatment of sets and proper classes. The theory is motivated by the iterative conception of set. It has a ternary membership symbol interpreted as membership relative to a set-building step. Set and proper class are defined notions. We prove that sets and proper classes with a defined membership form an inner model of Bernays-Morse class theory. We extend ordinal and cardinal notions to generalized sets and prove ordinal (...)
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  18.  38
    Therapeutic Access to the Embryo.Mark F. Repenshek - 2011 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 11 (4):735-756.
    Genomic interventions ex utero and in utero are already a reality in medicine. It is plausible to believe that this reality will lead to therapies at the preimplantation level, especially where such interventions are the only safe and effective way to truly prevent human suffering and disease in offspring. The plausibility of this type of genomic therapy is of particular interest for prospective parents who are Roman Catholic, since in vitro fertilization provides the only means by which an offspring’s genome (...)
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  19. What's really wrong with the argument from design?Mark F. Sharlow - manuscript
    This document is an edited transcript of an impromptu talk by Mark F. Sharlow. In this talk, Dr. Sharlow examines one of the common arguments for God’s existence. He suggests that this argument is wrong, but not for the reason that skeptics usually cite. Instead, he points out a deeper error — and shows that by understanding this mistake, we can gain new insights into evolution and design.
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  20. The Unfinishable Scroll and Beyond: Mark Sharlow's Blogs, July 2008 to March 2011.Mark F. Sharlow - manuscript
    An archive of Mark Sharlow's two blogs, "The Unfinishable Scroll" and "Religion: the Next Version." Covers Sharlow's views on metaphysics, epistemology, mind, science, religion, and politics. Includes topics and ideas not found in his papers.
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  21.  69
    Karl Rahner's Transcendental Christology.Mark F. Fischer - 2014 - Philosophy and Theology 26 (2):383-395.
    Karl Rahner’s transcendental Christology examined the conditions for the possibility of faith in Christ and presented human nature as developing in response to God’s grace. This article affirms Rahner despite the critiques of Michel Henry, Roger Haight, John McDermott, Patrick Burke, and Donald Gelpi. Rahner’s Christology is not a phenomenology but a theology that affirms God’s presence in history. To be sure, some critics have attacked Rahner for emphasizing God’s initiative and diminishing human responsibility and for uncritically accepting Greek metaphysics (...)
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  22.  50
    Rahner’s “New Christology” in Foundations of Christian Faith.Mark F. Fischer - 2010 - Philosophy and Theology 22 (1-2):389-404.
    Christologie: Systematisch und exegetisch was published in 1972 by Karl Rahner and Wilhelm Thüsing. When in 1980 the translation appeared as A New Christology, it did not include Rahner’s five chapters from the 1972 volume, but inserted three essays by Rahner whose German originals were unidentified. The present essay identifies the source of the three chapters. It also reveals that Rahner’s original five chapters were published a second time in the 1976 Grundkurs des Glaubens, although in a different form, and (...)
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  23.  19
    Rahner Papers Editor's Page.Mark F. Fischer - 2018 - Philosophy and Theology 30 (2):601-603.
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  24.  11
    Rahner Papers Editor's Page.Mark F. Fischer - 2019 - Philosophy and Theology 31 (1):251-254.
  25.  5
    Rahner Papers Editor's Page.Mark F. Fischer - 2021 - Philosophy and Theology 33 (1):97-100.
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  26.  4
    The Karl Rahner Society in the Twenty-First Century (1998–2019).Mark F. Fischer - 2020 - Philosophy and Theology 32 (1-2):251-264.
    This essay traces the history of the Karl Rahner Society between the years 1998 and 2019. It lists the achievements of the society’s coordinators, many of the books and articles about Rahner published by members of the society, and the role played in the society by Presidents of the Catholic Theological Society of America. The essay also identifies three persistent themes of the society: Rahner and his contemporaries, Rahner and the Catholic Church, and Rahner and ecumenism.
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  27.  16
    The Soteriologies of Karl Rahner and Hans Urs Von Balthasar in advance.Mark F. Fischer - forthcoming - Philosophy and Theology.
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  28.  7
    The Soteriologies of Karl Rahner and Hans Urs Von Balthasar.Mark F. Fischer - 2016 - Philosophy and Theology 28 (2):513-525.
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  29.  46
    Did St. Thomas Attribute a Doctrine of Creation to Aristotle?Mark F. Johnson - 1989 - New Scholasticism 63 (2):129-155.
    Back in the 1980's I was a River Forest Thomist, eager to show that Thomas's debt to Aristotle on fundamental metaphysical issues was deep. And what's more deep than creation?
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  30.  12
    Physician Assisted Suicide: A Variety of Religious Perspectives.Mark F. Carr (ed.) - 2008 - Wheatmark.
    The "California Compassionate Choices Act," AB 374, is inching its way into the voter's booth. Are you ready to vote for or against physician-assisted suicide? California is not the only state facing this issue, and as a responsible citizen you will not be able to escape taking a position on this important social and personal moral question. This collection of essays was gleaned from the Jack W. Provonsha Lecture Series on physician-assisted suicide. Representing a variety of religious perspectives, the speakers (...)
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  31.  9
    Passionate deliberation: emotion, temperance, and the care ethic in clinical moral deliberation.Mark F. Carr - 2001 - Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    "Application of the possibilities for this renewal of temperance comes with an examination of how emotion will help moral deliberation in the clinical practice of medicine. Sir William Osler (1849-1919) and his doctrine of aequanimitas is greatly misunderstood to be the founder of emotional detachment in physician/patient relations. This book offers the most detailed look at aequanimitas in print and equates it with a normative view of temperance as a moral virtue." "For upper-level undergraduate and graduate-level students interested in ethics, (...)
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  32.  10
    The Spectrum of Religion and Science in Clinical Encounters.Mark F. Carr - 2008 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 19 (4):360-370.
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  33.  14
    Internationalism and democracy.Mark F. Plattner - 2005 - Philosophy 80 (4):495-512.
    The current transatlantic debate over multilateralism reveals that the traditional understanding of liberal internationalism is being transcended in favor of “globalism.” The latter is a doctrine that goes well beyond favoring international cooperation among states; in fact, the new globalism is intrinsically hostile to the sovereignty of the nation-state. Thus it runs counter to the basic liberal understanding of the nature of the political order, as reflected in the American Declaration of Independence and, on a more philosophical level, in the (...)
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  34.  30
    The effects of probability ambiguity on preferences for uncertain two-outcome prospects.Mark F. Stasson, William G. Hawkes, H. David Smith & Walter M. Lakey - 1993 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 31 (6):624-626.
  35. Leon N. Cooper mark F. bear Ford F. Ebner Christopher Scofield.Christopher Scofield - 1990 - In J. McGaugh, Jerry Weinberger & G. Lynch (eds.), Brain Organization and Memory. Guilford Press. pp. 306.
     
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  36. Poetry's Secret Truth.Mark F. Sharlow - manuscript
    Poetry, it is said, can reveal truth. Yet despite the best efforts of philosophers and poets to describe this truth, very few understand what kinds of truth poetry can convey.* One fact seems clear: only a few of the truths of poetry can be captured equally well in prose. Poetry also conveys truths of a different kind — truths that seem to exist on a level entirely different level from that of ordinary, factual truth. Some poems try to teach moral (...)
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  37.  26
    St. Thomas’s De Trinitate, Q. 5, A. 2 Ad 3.Mark F. Johnson - 1989 - New Scholasticism 63 (1):58-65.
    My first article, back in 1989! Thanks, forever, Ralph McInerny. Here I take issue with John F.X. Knasas, a strong supporter of the existential Thomism of Etienne Gilson and Joseph Owens. Knasas's desire to sequester Thomas away from allowing the discipline of natural philosophy to arrive at a fully immaterial reality through its proper demonstrative methods seemed to me to be at odds with Thomas's text.
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  38.  9
    Another Look at St. Thomas and the Plurality of the Literal Sense of Scripture.Mark F. Johnson - 1992 - Medieval Philosophy & Theology 2:117-141.
  39. Another Look at St. Thomas and the Plurality of the Literal Sense of Scripture.Mark F. Johnson - 1992 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 2:117-141.
     
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  40.  22
    Another Look at St. Thomas and the Plurality of the Literal Sense of Scripture.Mark F. Johnson - 1992 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 2:117-141.
  41. God's Knowledge in Our Frail Mind.Mark F. Johnson - unknown
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  42.  29
    Immateriality and the Domain of Thomistic Natural Philosophy.Mark F. Johnson - 1990 - Modern Schoolman 67 (4):285-304.
  43.  35
    St. Thomas’s De Trinitate, Q. 5, A. 2 Ad 3.Mark F. Johnson - 1989 - New Scholasticism 63 (1):58-65.
  44. St. Thomas, obediential potency, and the infused virtues: De virtutibus in communi, A. 10, ad 13.Mark F. Johnson - 1995 - In E. Manning (ed.), Thomistica. Peeters.
     
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  45. St Thomas, Obediential Potency, and The Person of Jesus Christ.Mark F. Johnson - 1995 - Thomistica.
    This is paper from my graduate school days that has had chunks of it published, but which I never did develop fully—nor do I think I ever shall. It is useful for getting a sense on how the notion 'obediential potency' was used in Thomas's day, however, and visits key moments in Thomas's writing that illustrate how he applies the notion in his teaching.Oh, the paper was written for Fr Walter Principe, who had no love for the notion of obediential (...)
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  46.  51
    Why Five Ways?Mark F. Johnson - 1991 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 65:107-121.
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  47. Which Systems Are Conscious?Mark F. Sharlow - manuscript
    This document consists primarily of an excerpt (chapter 14) from the author’s book From Brain to Cosmos. In that excerpt, the author uses the concept of subjective fact developed earlier in the book to address a question about consciousness: which physical systems (organisms or machines) are conscious? (This document depends heavily upon the concept of subjective fact developed in From Brain to Cosmos. Readers unfamiliar with that concept are strongly advised to read chapters 2 and 3 of From Brain to (...)
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  48.  61
    Cortical feedback and the ineffability of colors.Mark F. Sharlow - 2005 - PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 11.
    Philosophers long have noted that some sensations (particularly those of color) seem to be ineffable, or refractory to verbal description. Some proposed neurophysiological explanations of this ineffability deny the intuitive view that sensations have inherently indescribable content. The present paper suggests a new explanation of ineffability that does not have this deflationary consequence. According to the hypothesis presented here, feedback modulation of information flow in the cortex interferes with the production of narratives about sensations, thereby causing the subject to assess (...)
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  49. An Introduction to Subjective Facts: Readings in From Brain to Cosmos.Mark F. Sharlow - manuscript
    This collection serves as an introduction to the concept of subjective fact, which plays a central role in some of the author's philosophical writings. The collection contains two book chapters and a paper. The first chapter (Chapter 2 of From Brain to Cosmos) begins with an informal characterization of the concept of subjective fact. Then it fleshes out this concept with examples, gives a more precise characterization, and addresses some potential weaknesses of the concept. This chapter shows how subjective fact (...)
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  50. Conscious Subjects in Detail: Readings in From Brain to Cosmos.Mark F. Sharlow - manuscript
    This document consists primarily of excerpts (chapters 5 and 10-12) from the author’s book From Brain to Cosmos. These excerpts address several traditional problems about the histories of conscious subjects, using the concept of subjective fact that the author developed earlier in the book. Topics include the persistence of conscious subjects through time, the unity or disunity of the self, and the possibility of splitting conscious subjects. (These excerpts depend heavily upon the author’s concept of subjective fact as developed in (...)
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