Results for 'David Cooper'

976 found
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  1.  5
    Reason & violence: a decade of Sartre's philosophy, 1950-1960.Ronald David Laing & David Graham Cooper - 1983 - New York: Pantheon Books. Edited by D. G. Cooper.
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  2.  79
    Thirty Years After Marr's Vision: Levels of Analysis in Cognitive Science.David Peebles & Richard P. Cooper - 2015 - Topics in Cognitive Science 7 (2):187-190.
    Thirty years after the publication of Marr's seminal book Vision the papers in this topic consider the contemporary status of his influential conception of three distinct levels of analysis for information-processing systems, and in particular the role of the algorithmic and representational level with its cognitive-level concepts. This level has been downplayed or eliminated both by reductionist neuroscience approaches from below that seek to account for behavior from the implementation level and by Bayesian approaches from above that seek to account (...)
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  3.  10
    The Analytic tradition: meaning, thought, and knowledge.David Bell & Neil Cooper (eds.) - 1991 - Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell.
  4. The Analytic Tradition: Roots and Scope.David Bell & Neil Cooper (eds.) - 1990 - Blackwell.
  5.  8
    Constraints, consistency and closure.Peter Jeavons, David Cohen & Martin C. Cooper - 1998 - Artificial Intelligence 101 (1-2):251-265.
  6.  22
    Bruce almighty.Cooper David - 2003 - Free Inquiry 23 (4).
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  7.  6
    Update on the ethical, legal and technical challenges of translating xenotransplantation.Rebecca Thom, David Ayares, David K. C. Cooper, John Dark, Sara Fovargue, Marie Fox, Michael Gusmano, Jayme Locke, Chris McGregor, Brendan Parent, Rommel Ravanan, David Shaw, Anthony Dorling & Antonia J. Cronin - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    This manuscript reports on a landmark symposium on the ethical, legal and technical challenges of xenotransplantation in the UK. King’s College London, with endorsement from the British Transplantation Society (BTS), and the European Society of Organ Transplantation (ESOT), brought together a group of experts in xenotransplantation science, ethics and law to discuss the ethical, regulatory and technical challenges surrounding translating xenotransplantation into the clinical setting. The symposium was the first of its kind in the UK for 20 years. This paper (...)
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  8.  13
    Trust.David E. Cooper - 1985 - Journal of Medical Ethics 11 (2):92-93.
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  9.  8
    Postmodernism, Quietism, and Philosophy.David E. Cooper - 2023 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 32 (1):45-58.
    In my 1993 IJPS paper it was suggested that postmodernist verdicts on ‘the death of philosophy’ relied on a rejection of any ‘substantive’ or ‘metaphysical’ notion of truth. The present paper relates these verdicts to Wittgenstein’s alleged ‘philosophical quietism’. In both cases, for example, there is a rejection of ‘depth’. Various characterisations of Wittgenstein’s position are questioned, including the idea that his quietism consists in showing the impossibility of sceptical challenges to our ‘hinge’ propositions and beliefs. It is then argued, (...)
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  10.  54
    Acknowledgment of external reviewers for 2003.Joel Andreas, Amrita Basu, Fred Block, Davis John Boli, David Buchbinder, Fred Cooper, Clifton Crais, Bronwyn Davies, Frank Dobbin & Bruce G. Carruthers - 2004 - Theory and Society 33 (1):133-134.
  11.  11
    Animals and Misanthropy.David E. Cooper - 2018 - New York: Routledge.
    This engaging volume explores and defends the claim that misanthropy is a justified attitude towards humankind in the light of how human beings both compare with and treat animals. Reflection on differences between humans and animals helps to confirm the misanthropic verdict, while reflection on the moral and other failings manifest in our treatment of animals illuminates what is wrong with this treatment. Human failings, it is argued, are too entrenched to permit optimism about the future of animals, but ways (...)
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  12. A Philosophy of Gardens.David E. Cooper - 2006 - Oxford University Press.
    Why do gardens matter so much and mean so much to people? That is the intriguing question to which David Cooper seeks an answer in this book. Given the enthusiasm for gardens in human civilization ancient and modern, Eastern and Western, it is surprising that the question has been so long neglected by modern philosophy. Now at last there is a philosophy of gardens. David Cooper identifies garden appreciation as a special human phenomenon distinct from both (...)
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  13. Buddhism, Beauty, and Virtue.David Cooper - 2017 - In Kathleen J. Higgins, Shakti Maira & Sonia Sikka (eds.), Artistic Visions and the Promise of Beauty: Cross-Cultural Perspectives. Springer. pp. 123-138.
    The chapter challenges hyperbolic claims about the centrality of appreciation of beauty to Buddhism. Within the texts, attitudes are more mixed, except for a form of 'inner beauty' - the beauty found in the expression of virtues or wisdom in forms of bodily comportment. Inner beauty is a stable presence throughout Buddhist history, practices, and art.
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  14.  66
    Authenticity and Learning: Nietzsche's Educational Philosophy.David E. Cooper - 1983 - Boston: Routledge.
    David E. Cooper elucidates Nietzsche's educational views in detail, in a form that will be of value to educationalists as well as philosophers. In this title, first published in 1983, he shows how these views relate to the rest of Nietzsche's work, and to modern European and Anglo-Saxon philosophical concerns. For Nietzsche, the purpose of true education was to produce creative individuals who take responsibility for their lives, beliefs and values. His ideal was human authenticity. David E. (...)
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  15.  19
    Buddhism and the Ethics of Species Conservation.David E. Cooper & Simon P. James - 2006 - Environmental Values 15 (1):85-97.
    Efforts to conserve endangered species of animal are, in some important respects, at odds with Buddhist ethics. On the one hand, being abstract entities, species cannot suffer, and so cannot be proper objects of compassion or similar moral virtues. On the other, Buddhist commitments to equanimity tend to militate against the idea that the individual members of endangered species have greater value than those of less-threatened ones. This paper suggests that the contribution of Buddhism to the issue of species conservation (...)
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  16.  38
    Wittgenstein, Heidegger and Humility.David E. Cooper - 1997 - Philosophy 72 (279):105 - 123.
  17.  68
    Beautiful people, beautiful things.David E. Cooper - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (3):247-260.
    This paper sympathetically examines the neglected virtue-centric idea that the primary location of beauty is in bodily expressions of human virtues, so that things like buildings are beautiful only because of an appropriate relationship they have to beautiful people. After a brief history of the idea as articulated by, for example, Kant, it is then distinguished from accounts of beauty with which it might be confused, such as the view that something is beautiful only if it helps to instil virtue. (...)
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  18.  41
    Nietzsche and the Analytical Ambition.David Edward Cooper - 2003 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 26 (1):1-11.
  19. Visions of Philosophy.David E. Cooper - 2009 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 65:1-13.
    Characterizations of philosophy abound. It is ‘the queen of the sciences’, a grand and sweeping metaphysical endeavour; or, less regally, it is a sort of deep anthropology or ‘descriptive metaphysics’, uncovering the general presuppositions or conceptual schemes that lurk beneath our words and thoughts. A different set of images portray philosophy as a type of therapy, or as a spiritual exercise, a way of life to be followed, or even as a special branch of poetry or politics. Then there is (...)
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  20.  84
    Beyond Single‐Level Accounts: The Role of Cognitive Architectures in Cognitive Scientific Explanation.Richard P. Cooper & David Peebles - 2015 - Topics in Cognitive Science 7 (2):243-258.
    We consider approaches to explanation within the cognitive sciences that begin with Marr's computational level or Marr's implementational level and argue that each is subject to fundamental limitations which impair their ability to provide adequate explanations of cognitive phenomena. For this reason, it is argued, explanation cannot proceed at either level without tight coupling to the algorithmic and representation level. Even at this level, however, we argue that additional constraints relating to the decomposition of the cognitive system into a set (...)
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  21. The Measure of Things: Humanism, Humility, and Mystery.David E. Cooper - 2005 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 71 (2):497-499.
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  22. A Philosophy of Gardens.David E. Cooper - 2007 - Philosophy 82 (319):187-189.
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  23.  53
    Postmetaphysical Thinking: Philosophical Essays.David E. Cooper, Jurgen Habermas & William Mark Hohengarten - 1993 - Philosophical Quarterly 43 (173):572.
    This collection of Habermas's recent essays on philosophical topics continues the analysis begun in The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity. In a short introductory essay, he outlines the sources of twentieth-century philosophizing, its major themes, and the range of current debates. The remainder of the essays can be seen as his contribution to these debates.Habermas's essay on George Herbert Mead is a focal point of the book. In it he sketches a postmetaphysical, intersubjective approach to questions of individuation and subjectivity. In (...)
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  24.  62
    Estrogens and relationship jealousy.David C. Geary, M. Catherine DeSoto, Mary K. Hoard, Melanie Skaggs Sheldon & M. Lynne Cooper - 2001 - Human Nature 12 (4):299-320.
    The relation between sex hormones and responses to partner infidelity was explored in two studies reported here. The first confirmed the standard sex difference in relationship jealousy, that males (n=133) are relatively more distressed by a partner’s sexual infidelity and females (n=159) by a partner’s emotional infidelity. The study also revealed that females using hormone-based birth control (n=61) tended more toward sexual jealousy than did other females, and reported more intense affective responses to partner infidelity (n=77). In study two, 47 (...)
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  25.  88
    The measure of things: humanism, humility, and mystery.David Edward Cooper - 2002 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    David Cooper explores and defends the view that a reality independent of human perspectives is necessarily indescribable, a "mystery." Other views are shown to be hubristic. Humanists, for whom "man is the measure" of reality, exaggerate our capacity to live without the sense of an independent measure. Absolutists, who proclaim our capacity to know an independent reality, exaggerate our cognitive powers. In this highly original book Cooper restores to philosophy a proper appreciation of mystery-that is what provides (...)
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  26.  12
    Wittgenstein's Early Philosophy: Three Sides of the Mirror.David E. Cooper - 1990
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  27.  17
    Wittgenstein's Early Philosophy: Three Sides of the Mirror.Transcendence and Wittgenstein's Tractatus.David E. Cooper - 1991 - Philosophical Quarterly 41 (164):358-360.
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  28. A Companion to Aesthetics.David Cooper - 1995 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 57 (1):163-163.
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  29.  58
    Cognitive development and teaching business ethics.David E. Cooper - 1985 - Journal of Business Ethics 4 (4):313 - 329.
    This paper discusses how to use cognitive developmental psychology to create a business ethics course that has philosophical integrity. It begins with the pedagogical problem to be overcome when students are not philosophy majors. To provide a context for the practical recommendations, Kohlberg's cognitive developmental theory is summarized and then the relationship between Kohlberg's theory, normative philosophy, and teaching is analyzed. The conclusion recommends strategies that should help overcome some of the vexing pedagogical problems mentioned in the first section. In (...)
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  30.  24
    Existentialism: A Reconstruction.David E. Cooper - 1991 - Philosophical Quarterly 41 (164):362-363.
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  31.  60
    Reactionary Modernism.David E. Cooper - 1999 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 44:291-304.
    ‘Reactionary modernism’ is a term happily coined by the historian and sociologist Jeffrey Herf to refer to a current of German thought during the interwar years. It indicates the attempt to ‘reconcil[e] the antimodernist, romantic and irrationalist ideas present in German nationalism’ with that ‘most obvious manifestation of means–ends rationality … modern technology’. Herf's paradigm examples of this current of thought are two best-selling writers of the period: Oswald Spengler, author of the massive domesday scenario The Decline of the West (...)
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  32. The Epistemology of Testimony.Elizabeth Fricker & David E. Cooper - 1987 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 61 (1):57 - 106.
  33.  3
    The deletion argument.David E. Cooper - 1977 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 2 (1):138-143.
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  34.  39
    A Companion to aesthetics.David E. Cooper (ed.) - 1992 - Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell Reference.
    In this extensively revised and updated edition, 168 alphabetically arranged articles provide comprehensive treatment of the main topics and writers in this area of aesthetics. Written by prominent scholars covering a wide-range of key topics in aesthetics and the philosophy of art Features revised and expanded entries from the first edition, as well as new chapters on recent developments in aesthetics and a larger number of essays on non-Western thought about art Unique to this edition are six overview essays on (...)
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  35.  7
    The complexity of soft constraint satisfaction.David A. Cohen, Martin C. Cooper, Peter G. Jeavons & Andrei A. Krokhin - 2006 - Artificial Intelligence 170 (11):983-1016.
  36.  48
    A companion to aesthetics.Stephen Davies, Kathleen Marie Higgins, Robert Hopkins, Robert Stecker & David E. Cooper (eds.) - 2009 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    A COMPANION TO AESTHETICS This second edition of A Companion to Aesthetics examines questions that were among the earliest discussed by ancient philosophers, such as the nature of beauty and the relation between morality and art, while also addressing a host of new issues prompted by recent developments in the arts and in philosophy, including coverage of non-Western art traditions and of everyday and environmental aesthetics. The volume also canvases debates regarding the nature of representation, the relation between art and (...)
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  37. Birds, beasts and the Dao.David E. Cooper - 2014 - The Philosophers' Magazine 65:84-90.
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  38. Metaphor.David E. Cooper - 1994 - Noûs 28 (2):252-258.
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  39.  7
    Illusions of Equality.David E. Cooper - 1980 - Routledge.
    Educational policy and discussion, in Britain and the USA, are increasingly dominated by the confused ideology of egalitarianism. David E. Cooper begins by identifying the principles hidden among the confusions, and argues that these necessarily conflict with the ideal of educational excellence - in which conflict it is this ideal that must be preserved. He goes on to criticize the use of education as a tool for promoting wider social equality, focussing especially on the muddles surrounding 'equal opportunities', (...)
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  40.  19
    Philosophy: The Classic Readings.David E. Cooper & Peter S. Fosl (eds.) - 2010 - San Diego, CA, USA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    Philosophy: The Classic Readings is a collection of accessible readings from the history of philosophy specifically focused on metaphysics and epistemology. The philosophers include Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Locke, Hume, Russell and Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia.
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  41.  14
    Figuratively Speaking, by Robert J. Fogelin. [REVIEW]David E. Cooper - 1991 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 51 (2):471-473.
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  42.  12
    Buddhism, Virtue and Environment.David E. Cooper & Simon P. James - 2005 - Routledge.
    Buddhism, one increasingly hears, is an 'eco-friendly' religion. It is often said that this is because it promotes an 'ecological' view of things, one stressing the essential unity of human beings and the natural world. Buddhism, Virtue and Environment presents a different view. While agreeing that Buddhism is, in many important respects, in tune with environmental concerns, Cooper and James argue that what makes it 'green' is its view of human life. The true connection between the religion and environmental (...)
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  43.  34
    Buddhism as Pessimism.David E. Cooper - 2021 - Journal of World Philosophies 6 (2):1-16.
    This paper defends the description of Buddhism—by Schopenhauer and many other nineteenth-century figures—as pessimistic. Pessimism, in the relevant sense, is a dark, negative judgment on the psychological, social, and moral condition of humankind and the prospects for its amelioration. After discussing texts in the Pali canon that provide prima facie support for the charge of pessimism, two familiar responses are considered. One emphasizes the positive aspects of the human condition recognized by the Buddha; the other emphasizes the prospect held out (...)
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  44. Existentialism: A Reconstruction.David E. Cooper - 1990 - Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell.
    First published in 1990, _Existentialism_ is widely regarded as a classic introductory survey of the topic, and has helped to renew interest in existentialist philosophy. The author places existentialism within the great traditions of philosophy, and argues that it deserves as much attention from analytic philosophers as it has always received on the continent.
  45.  26
    This Island of Japon: Joao Rodrigues' Account of 16th-Century Japan.David R. Knechtges & Michael Cooper - 1977 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 97 (3):358.
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  46.  13
    Art, nature, significance.David E. Cooper - 2009 - The Philosophers' Magazine 44:27-35.
    It is by now something of a cliché of Green discourse that environmental degradation and devastation is grounded in a sharp opposition – the legacy, it is often charged, of Christian metaphysics – between the human and the non-human, between the realms of culture and nature. If one is to understand, let alone endorse, the very general environmentalist ambition to dissolve the dualism of the human and the non-human, it is by questioning rather more tractable and particular dichotomies, like that (...)
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  47. Daoism, nature, and humanity.David E. Cooper - 2014 - In Anthony O'Hear (ed.), Philosophical Traditions. Cambridge University Press.
     
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  48.  7
    Experience and the Growth of Understanding.David E. Cooper - 1979 - Philosophical Books 20 (1):26-29.
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  49.  6
    Education, Values and Mind: Essays for R. S. Peters.David E. Cooper (ed.) - 1986 - Boston: Routledge.
    R. S. Peters has not only been the major philosopher of education in Britain during second half of the twentieth century, but by common consent, he has transformed the subject and brought it into the mainstream of contemporary philosophy. The ten essays in this book attest to his influence whether by critical examination of his ideas or by original treatment of topics in which has has inspired a new interest.
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  50.  2
    Finding the music again.David E. Cooper - 2007 - The Philosophers' Magazine 38:45-46.
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