Results for 'Geoffrey Cupit'

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  1.  37
    Justice as fittingness.Geoffrey Cupit - 1996 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book offers a new approach to a fundamental question: What is justice? In building his theory, Cupit maintains that injustice should be understood as a form of unfitting treatment--typically the treatment of people as less than they are. Justice is therefore closely related to unjustified contempt and disrespect, and ultimately to desert.
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  2. Justice as Fittingness.Geoffrey Cupit - 1998 - Law and Philosophy 17 (1):61-75.
     
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  3. How requests (and promises) create obligations.Geoffrey Cupit - 1994 - Philosophical Quarterly 44 (177):439-455.
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  4.  75
    The basis of equality.Geoffrey Cupit - 2000 - Philosophy 75 (1):105-125.
    This paper considers on what basis justice may require that people be treated as equals. It begins with an examination of the argument that people are to be treated as equals because they are equals, and suggests reasons for thinking that such an argument is unlikely to succeed. The remainder of the paper considers, and tries to make plausible, the argument that justice requires people be treated as equals because they are individuals. Thus the paper offers some support for the (...)
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  5.  56
    Desert and Responsibility.Geoffrey Cupit - 1996 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 26 (1):83 - 99.
    It is often supposed that there is a relationship between desert and responsibility: that to be deserving we must be responsible for that which makes us deserving. Indeed, there seems little doubt that a supposed relationship between desert and responsibility, combined with a growing tendency to view less and less as the responsibility of the individual, contributed to the reluctance to appeal to desert which has been a feature of much recent moral and political philosophy. Certainly, if to be deserving (...)
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  6. Justice as Fitness.Geoffrey Cupit - 1988 - Dissertation, The University of Liverpool (United Kingdom)
    Available from UMI in association with The British Library. ;In 'Justice as Fitness' I have argued that a unifying and coherent account of the concept of justice can be given. Injustice, I have suggested, is to be understood in terms of the notion of treating someone unfittingly, that is, by treating them as if they were less, or lower, than they are. This account of justice suggests that desert is central to justice; to treat someone as less than they are (...)
     
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  7.  42
    Justice, age, and veneration.Geoffrey Cupit - 1998 - Ethics 108 (4):702-718.
  8.  50
    Fraternity and Equality.Geoffrey Cupit - 2013 - Philosophy 88 (2):299-311.
    Is there a connection between the values of fraternity and outcome equality? Is inequality at odds with fraternity? There are reasons to doubt that it is. First, fraternity requires us to want our ‘brothers’ and ‘sisters’ to fare well even when they are already better off than we are and their doing better will increase inequality. Second, fraternity seems not to require equality as a matter of fairness. Fairness requires equality, but fraternity does not require fairness.In examining what fraternity requires (...)
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  9.  51
    Fairness as Order: A Grammatical and Etymological Prolegomenon.Geoffrey Cupit - 2011 - Journal of Value Inquiry 45 (4):389-401.
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  10.  30
    On the injustice of ignoring entitlements.Geoffrey Cupit - 1996 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 74 (2):313 – 318.
  11.  24
    Parents, the State and the Right to Educate.Geoffrey Cupit - 1990 - Philosophical Books 31 (3):177-179.
  12.  14
    Social Humanism A New Metaphysics, by Ellis, Brian: New York: Routledge, 2012, pp. xi + 227, US$125.Geoffrey Cupit - 2014 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 92 (2):411-412.
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  13. 10. Quentin Skinner, Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes Quentin Skinner, Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes (pp. 820-823).Susan Moller Okin, Geoffrey Cupit, Harry Brighouse, Joe Coleman & Martha C. Nussbaum - 1998 - In Stephen Everson (ed.), Ethics. Cambridge University Press.
  14.  10
    Fairness. [REVIEW]Geoffrey Cupit - 2004 - Mind 113 (450):387-390.
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  15.  29
    Review: Fairness. [REVIEW]Geoffrey Cupit - 2004 - Mind 113 (450):387-390.
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  16.  22
    Review of 'Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account', by Gillian Brock. [REVIEW]Geoffrey Cupit - 2012 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 90 (3):602 - 605.
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Volume 90, Issue 3, Page 602-605, September 2012.
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  17.  42
    Geoffrey Cupit: Justice as fittingness. [REVIEW]Roger Panden - 1999 - Journal of Value Inquiry 33 (2):263-266.
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  18. The many moral realisms.Geoffrey Sayre-McCord - 1986 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 24 (S1):1-22.
  19. Structuralism without structures.Hellman Geoffrey - 1996 - Philosophia Mathematica 4 (2):100-123.
    Recent technical developments in the logic of nominalism make it possible to improve and extend significantly the approach to mathematics developed in Mathematics without Numbers. After reviewing the intuitive ideas behind structuralism in general, the modal-structuralist approach as potentially class-free is contrasted broadly with other leading approaches. The machinery of nominalistic ordered pairing (Burgess-Hazen-Lewis) and plural quantification (Boolos) can then be utilized to extend the core systems of modal-structural arithmetic and analysis respectively to full, classical, polyadic third- and fourthorder number (...)
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  20. An Effective Paradigm for Conditioning Visual Perception in Human Subjects.Peter Davies, Geoffrey Davies, Bennett L. & Spencer - 1982 - Perception 11 (6):663–669.
     
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  21.  47
    Plausible Worlds: Possibility and Understanding in History and the Social Sciences.Geoffrey Hawthorn - 1991 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Possibilities haunt history. The force of our explanations of events turns on the alternative possibilities these explanations suggest. It is these possible worlds which give us our understanding; and in human affairs we decide them by practical rather than theoretical judgement. In his widely acclaimed account of the role of counterfactuals in explanation, Geoffrey Hawthorn deploys extended examples from history and modern times to defend his argument. His conclusions cast doubt on existing assumptions about the nature and place of (...)
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  22.  8
    The Presocratic Philosophers. A Critical History with a Selection of Texts.Geoffrey Stephen Kirk & John Earle Raven - 1983 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by J. E. Raven & Malcolm Schofield.
    A history of the pre-Socratic philosophers, with selected writings and texts.
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  23.  10
    In the Beginning Was the Deed: Realism and Moralism in Political Argument.Geoffrey Hawthorn (ed.) - 2007 - Princeton University Press.
    Bernard Williams is remembered as one of the most brilliant and original philosophers of the past fifty years. Widely respected as a moral philosopher, Williams began to write about politics in a sustained way in the early 1980s. There followed a stream of articles, lectures, and other major contributions to issues of public concern--all complemented by his many works on ethics, which have important implications for political theory.This new collection of essays, most of them previously unpublished, addresses many of the (...)
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  24.  64
    Where Do Features Come From?Geoffrey Hinton - 2014 - Cognitive Science 38 (6):1078-1101.
    It is possible to learn multiple layers of non-linear features by backpropagating error derivatives through a feedforward neural network. This is a very effective learning procedure when there is a huge amount of labeled training data, but for many learning tasks very few labeled examples are available. In an effort to overcome the need for labeled data, several different generative models were developed that learned interesting features by modeling the higher order statistical structure of a set of input vectors. One (...)
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  25.  64
    What Music Teaches about Emotion.Geoffrey Madell - 1996 - Philosophy 71 (275):63 - 82.
    It is a remarkable feature of most contemporary discussions of emotion that they have been conducted without any reference to what it could mean to talk of the expression of emotion in music. This is a crucial absence, I shall argue, since a proper understanding of music's expression of emotion must lead to a correct view of the nature of emotion itself. Such an understanding will yield the view that emotion is a state of consciousness which is both intentional and (...)
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  26.  31
    Functional Neuroimaging: Technical, Logical, and Social Perspectives.Geoffrey K. Aguirre - 2014 - Hastings Center Report 44 (s2):8-18.
    Neuroscientists have long sought to study the dynamic activity of the human brain—what's happening in the brain, that is, while people are thinking, feeling, and acting. Ideally, an inside look at brain function would simultaneously and continuously measure the biochemical state of every cell in the central nervous system. While such a miraculous method is science fiction, a century of progress in neuroimaging technologies has made such simultaneous and continuous measurement a plausible fiction. Despite this progress, practitioners of modern neuroimaging (...)
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  27.  42
    Plato and the love of learning.Geoffrey Hinchliffe - 2006 - Ethics and Education 1 (2):117-131.
    This paper explores the relation between love, learning and knowledge as found in three dialogues of Plato, Symposium, Phaedrus and Republic. It argues that the account of the ascent from carnal desire to the love of beauty, as set out in the Symposium, is best seen in terms of a genealogy of love in which the object of love is transformed into an object of knowledge. The Phaedrus shows us how affection and love between two individuals can help motivate a (...)
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  28.  21
    Scars of the spirit: the struggle against inauthenticity.Geoffrey H. Hartman - 2002 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    In this fascinating collection of essays, noted critic Geoffrey Hartman raises the essential question of where we can find the real or authentic in today's world, and how this affects the way we understand our human predicament. Hartman explores such issues as the fantasy of total information and perfect communication encouraged by the internet, the biographical excesses of tell-all talk shows that serve to shore up a personal sense of unreality, the tendency to motivate violence in the name of (...)
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  29.  15
    The ascetic imperative in culture and criticism.Geoffrey Galt Harpham - 1987 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In this bold interdisciplinary work, Geoffrey Galt Harpham argues that asceticism has played a major role in shaping Western ideas of the body, writing, ethics, ...
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  30. Introduction.Geoffrey Kellow - 2016 - In Geoffrey C. Kellow & Neven Leddy (eds.), On Civic Republicanism: Ancient Lessons for Global Politics. University of Toronto Press.
     
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  31.  75
    The Anxiety of Inheritance: Reinhold Niebuhr and the Literal Truth of Original Sin.Geoffrey Rees - 2003 - Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (1):75 - 99.
    Widely regarded as the most influential proponent of the truth of original sin in the twentieth century, Reinhold Niebuhr worked hard to excise any "literalistic" element from his interpretation of the doctrine. In his attempt to "correct" the Augustinian tradition on original sin by purging it of all "literalistic errors," however, Niebuhr assumed as his starting point the most characteristically modern objection to the doctrine: that birth is a thoroughly natural, animal, and morally meaningless event. As a result, Niebuhr unnecessarily (...)
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  32.  14
    Getting It Right: Language, Literature, and Ethics.Geoffrey Galt Harpham - 1992 - University of Chicago Press.
    In a critical scene deeply troubled by questions of justice and responsibility, and beset by political and moral scandals, no issue in recent years has been more urgent or more unsettled than the question of ethics. Geoffrey Galt Harpham, whose previous book, The Ascetic Imperative in Culture and Criticism, was one of the first to announce the critical renewal of ethics, attempts in this new book to explain why ethical questions resist settlement. He urges a new account of ethics (...)
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  33.  10
    The Language of Nature: Reassessing the Mathematization of Natural Philosophy in the Seventeenth Century.Geoffrey Gorham (ed.) - 2016 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    Although the mathematization of nature is a distinctive and crucial feature of the emergence of modern science in the seventeenth century, this volume shows that it was a far more complex, contested, and context-dependent phenomenon than the received historiography has indicated.0.
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  34. Benevolence as an Environmental Virtue.Geoffrey Frasz - 2005 - In Philip Cafaro & Ronald Sandler (eds.), Environmental Virtue Ethics. Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 241-246.
     
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  35.  67
    Gentle quantum events as the source of explicate order.Geoffrey F. Chew - 1985 - Zygon 20 (2):159-164.
  36.  37
    Proof and implication in mill's philosophy of logic.Geoffrey Scarre - 1984 - History and Philosophy of Logic 5 (1):19-37.
    Following a brief preface, the second section of this paper discusses Mill's early reflections on the problem of how deductive inference can be illuminating. In the third section it is suggested that in his Logic Mill misconstrued the feature that the premises of a logically valid argument contain the conclusion as the ground of a charge that deductive proof is question-begging. The fourth section discusses the nature of the traditional petitio objection to syllogism, and the fifth shows that Mill had (...)
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  37. Quine's ‘Two Dogmas of Empiricism’: or The Power of Bad Logic.Geoffrey Hunter - 1995 - Philosophical Investigations 18 (4):305-328.
    This is a critical examination of Quine's "Two Dogmas" that leaves nothing much of Quine's paper still standing. It concludes with a short study of a bit of bad work in philosophy that results from following the doctrines of "Two Dogmas".
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  38. Utilitarianism and Self-Respect.Geoffrey Scarre - 1992 - Utilitas 4 (1):27.
    Modern utilitarianism has largely abandoned the view that human well-being consists solely in pleasurable sensations. Too much was wanting in that view for it to withstand the critique of a more refined philosophical psychology than was available to Bentham and Mill. The objections are by now familiar and need no detailed rehearsal. The older view failed to characterize adequately the structure of human satisfactions, forgetting that we can care about things that will happen after we are dead, that we generally (...)
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  39. Memories of Hilary Putnam.Geoffrey Hellman & Roy Cook - 2018 - In John Burgess (ed.), Hilary Putnam on Logic and Mathematics. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  40.  29
    Does Marx Make a Religious Turn?Geoffrey Karabin - 2009 - Philosophy Today 53 (3):317-332.
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  41.  19
    Seeking Subsistence Beyond Death.Geoffrey Karabin - 2010 - Social Philosophy Today 26:135-148.
    The Spanish philosopher Miguel de Unamuno and the American social scientist Ernest Becker see death as humanity’s fundamental anxiety. My essay explores the ethical ramifications attendant upon making that anxiety a well-spring of human activity. More specifically, I am interested in humanity’s effort to escape death via the secular milieu of social remembrance. Does such an effort produce a vista where the other exhibits an intrinsic value? Alternatively, does the other become a mere means in light of one’s project of (...)
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  42.  4
    Seeking Subsistence Beyond Death.Geoffrey Karabin - 2010 - Social Philosophy Today 26:135-148.
    The Spanish philosopher Miguel de Unamuno and the American social scientist Ernest Becker see death as humanity’s fundamental anxiety. My essay explores the ethical ramifications attendant upon making that anxiety a well-spring of human activity. More specifically, I am interested in humanity’s effort to escape death via the secular milieu of social remembrance. Does such an effort produce a vista where the other exhibits an intrinsic value? Alternatively, does the other become a mere means in light of one’s project of (...)
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  43.  30
    The Heavenly Protest: Toward a Liberation Theology of the Afterlife.Geoffrey Karabin - 2012 - Radical Philosophy Review 15 (1):219-239.
    How would a liberation theologian respond to Marx’s famous critique that religious belief and, even more specifically, a hope for heaven is “the opium of the people”? I utilize the conceptual resources found within the work of liberation theologians Gustavo Gutiérrez, Enrique Dussel, and Jon Sobrino to argue that a belief in heaven is able to constitute a protest against oppressed persons’ present hell. To strengthen the connection between a believer’s heavenly hope and a commitment to worldly struggle, I examine (...)
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  44.  17
    The Heavenly Protest.Geoffrey Karabin - 2012 - Radical Philosophy Review 15 (1):219-239.
    How would a liberation theologian respond to Marx’s famous critique that religious belief and, even more specifically, a hope for heaven is “the opium of the people”? I utilize the conceptual resources found within the work of liberation theologians Gustavo Gutiérrez, Enrique Dussel, and Jon Sobrino to argue that a belief in heaven is able to constitute a protest against oppressed persons’ present hell. To strengthen the connection between a believer’s heavenly hope and a commitment to worldly struggle, I examine (...)
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  45.  37
    Marx and Non-Equilibrium Economics Alan Freeman and Guglielmo Carchedi.Geoffrey Kay - 1998 - Historical Materialism 2 (1):240-244.
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  46.  15
    Michael Cowen.Geoffrey Kay - 2000 - Historical Materialism 6 (1):145-147.
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  47.  5
    Taking up the Logical Slack in Natural Language.Geoffrey B. Keene - 1998 - Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 62:115-120.
  48.  12
    La réforme du système de santé et les valeurs libérales.Kelley Geoffrey - 2003 - 5 (1).
    La création d’un système de santé public a été l’un des éléments clés de la Révolution tranquille dans les années 1960 au Québec. Toutefois, le développement de nouveaux traitements et de nouvelles technologies, en particulier des produits pharmaceutiques, ont fait naître un nouveau débat sur la gestion de notre système de santé. En se basant sur une analyse récente des valeurs libérales dans la société québécoise par Claude Ryan, l’auteur souligne l’importance que le gouvernement doit accorder à ces valeurs dans (...)
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  49.  2
    On Civic Republicanism: Ancient Lessons for Global Politics.Geoffrey C. Kellow & Neven Leddy (eds.) - 2016 - University of Toronto Press.
    On Civic Republicanism explores the enduring relevance of the ancient concepts of republicanism and civic virtue to modern questions about political engagement and identity.".
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  50.  8
    Association by contiguity: Role of response availability.Geoffrey Keppel - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (4):624.
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