Results for 'Hal Draper'

595 found
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  1.  17
    The Marx-Engels register: a complete bibliography of Marx and Engels' individual writings.Hal Draper - 1985 - New York: Schocken Books.
    Provides information on all of the writings of Socialists Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
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  2.  37
    The Myth of Lenin's 'Concept Of The Party': Or What They Did to What Is To Be Done?Hal Draper - 1999 - Historical Materialism 4 (1):187-214.
    The myth for today is an axiom of what we may call Leninology — a branch of Kremlinology that has rapidly grown in the hands of the various university Russian Institutes, doctoral programs, political journalists, et al. According to this axiom, Lenin's 1902 book What Is To Be Done? represents the essential content of his ‘operational code’ or ‘concept of the party’: all of Bolshevism and eventually Stalinism lies in ambush in its pages; it is the canonical work of ‘Leninism’ (...)
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  3.  18
    [Book review] war and revolution, Lenin and the myth of revolutionary defeatism. [REVIEW]Hal Draper - 1998 - Science and Society 62 (4):592-594.
  4.  29
    Introduction Hal Draper: A Biographical Sketch.Alan Johnson - 1999 - Historical Materialism 4 (1):181-186.
    Hal Draper was born in Brooklyn in 1914, to East European Jewish immigrant parents. In 1932 he became active in the Student League for Industrial Democracy and the Socialist Party youth section, the Young People's Socialist League. A leader of the Student Strikes Against War, he became an associate editor of Socialist Appeal in 1934. In 1937, the socialist youth, led by Draper and Ernest Erber, voted to support the Fourth International after Trotsky's followers entered the Socialist Party. (...)
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  5.  24
    Drapers and Gardeners.Shawn Loht - 2020 - Film and Philosophy 24:98-119.
    This article examines Martin Heidegger's concept of conscience in Being and Time as it is manifested by the characters Don Draper from the television series Mad Men (Matthew Weiner, 2007-2013) and Chauncey Gardiner in the film Being There (Hal Ashby, 1979). The article suggests that Draper hears and occasionally responds to what Heidegger terms the “call of conscience,” whereas Gardiner neither hears this call nor responds to it. Gardiner poses a problem case for Heidegger’s account of Dasein by (...)
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  6.  20
    The Anti-aesthetic: essays on postmodern culture.Hal Foster (ed.) - 1983 - Port Townsend, Wash.: Bay Press.
    In all the arts a war is being waged between modernists and postmodernists. Radicals have tended to side with the modernists against the forces of conservatism. Postmodern Culture is a break with this tendency. Its contributors propose a postmodernism of resistance - an aesthetic that rejects hierarchy and celebrates diversity. Ranging from architecture, sculpture and painting to music, photography and film, this collection is now recognised as a seminal text on the postmodernism debate.The essays are by Hal Foster, Jürgen Habermas, (...)
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  7.  71
    The evolution of conformist social learning can cause population collapse in realistically variable environments.Hal Whitehead - unknown
    Why do societies collapse? We use an individual-based evolutionary model to show that, in environmental conditions dominated by low-frequency variation (“red noise”), extirpation may be an outcome of the evolution of cultural capacity. Previous analytical models predicted an equilibrium between individual learners and social learners, or a contingent strategy in which individuals learn socially or individually depending on the circumstances. However, in red noise environments, whose main signature is that variation is concentrated in relatively large, relatively rare excursions, individual learning (...)
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  8.  18
    FOCUS: Can Britain's NHS managers be business-like and should they adopt the values of business?Heather Draper - 1996 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 5 (4):207–211.
    The NHS differs from a private business in not aiming at profits and in being obliged to provide only the single product of health care. How radically does this affect the requirement to be “business‐like” and adopt business values? Dr Draper is Lecturer in Biomedical Ethics at The Medical School, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT. She wishes to thank Tom Sorell for his comments on the first draft of this article.
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  9.  14
    FOCUS: Can Britain's NHS managers be business-like and should they adopt the values of business?Heather Draper - 1996 - Business Ethics: A European Review 5 (4):207-211.
    The NHS differs from a private business in not aiming at profits and in being obliged to provide only the single product of health care. How radically does this affect the requirement to be “business‐like” and adopt business values? Dr Draper is Lecturer in Biomedical Ethics at The Medical School, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT. She wishes to thank Tom Sorell for his comments on the first draft of this article.
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  10.  15
    FOCUS: Can Britain's NHS managers be business‐like and should they adopt the values of business?Heather Draper - 1996 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 5 (4):207-211.
    The NHS differs from a private business in not aiming at profits and in being obliged to provide only the single product of health care. How radically does this affect the requirement to be “business‐like” and adopt business values? Dr Draper is Lecturer in Biomedical Ethics at The Medical School, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT. She wishes to thank Tom Sorell for his comments on the first draft of this article.
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  11.  9
    ‘If those to whom the W/word of God came were called gods...’– Logos, wisdom and prophecy, and John 10:22–30.Jonathan A. Draper - 2015 - HTS Theological Studies 71 (1).
    Jesus’ quotation of Psalm 82:6, ‘I said, You are gods’, a riposte to the accusation that he had blasphemed by making himself equal to God, has attracted considerable attention. The latest suggestion by Jerome H. Neyrey rightly insists that any solution to the problem should take account of the internal logic of the Psalm and argues that it derives from or prefigures a rabbinic Midrash on the Psalm which refers it to the restoration of the immortality lost by Adam to (...)
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  12. Distributive justice, welfare economics, and the theory of fairness.Hal R. Varian - 1975 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 4 (3):223-247.
  13.  12
    Serve Somebody: Musings of a Pastoral Care Practitioner on the Covenant of Care.Hal Morse - forthcoming - Christian Bioethics.
    In this article, I explore what it means to “serve somebody,” drawing from my own experience as a full-time chaplain. Chaplains must serve many different parties, but are ultimately called to care for their patients via a covenental relationship of care.
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  14. Attributions of Implicit Prejudice, or "Would Jesse Jackson 'Fail' the Implicit Association Test?".Hal R. Arkes & Philip E. Tetlock - 2004 - Psychological Inquiry 15 (4):257-78.
  15.  45
    Digital Publishing.Hal Robinson - 2012 - Logos 23 (4):7-20.
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  16.  25
    Sacred Relics of Human History and the Discovery of Cosmic Mind.Cox Hal - 2017 - Cosmos and History 13 (2):106-110.
    The human loss of the sense of sacred has been driven by a mechanization of the world that privileges the mundane and the material. Yet the earliest surviving history of the human mind reveals a widespread, embodied human faculty for perception of the cosmos and an intimate human relation to the cosmos. This history hints of an origin story that may be partly recovered by sacred relics of human prehistory.
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  17.  30
    Live liver donation, ethics and practitioners: 'I am between the two and if I do not feel comfortable about this situation, I cannot proceed'.H. Draper, S. R. Bramhall, J. Herington & E. H. Thomas - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (3):157-162.
    This paper discusses the views of 17 healthcare practitioners involved with transplantation on the ethics of live liver donations . Donations between emotionally related donor and recipients increased the acceptability of an LLD compared with those between strangers. Most healthcare professionals disapproved of altruistic stranger donations, considering them to entail an unacceptable degree of risk taking. Participants tended to emphasise the need to balance the harms of proceeding against those of not proceeding, rather than calculating the harm-to-benefits ratio of donor (...)
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  18.  3
    Book Review: Terence Keel, Divine Variations: How Christian Thought Became Racial Science. [REVIEW]Andrew T. Draper - 2020 - Studies in Christian Ethics 33 (2):279-283.
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  19.  19
    Bridging the Digital Publishing Divide.Hal Robinson - 2021 - Logos 31 (4):44-68.
    An anthropological view of the publishing industry sees it as a culture with its own assumptions and patterns, in which publishing companies are macro-communities associated with micro-communities of readers. Anthropology sees ‘digital culture’ in a comparable way. Awareness of the cultural characteristics of publishing as a culture and of digital culture can turn their differences into synergies that benefit both. Examples from anthropological research and from publishing show that some processes are comparable. One is the process in which material value (...)
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  20. Dworkin on Equality of Resources.Hal R. Varian - 1985 - Economics and Philosophy 1 (1):110-125.
    This essay is a review of Ronald Dworkin's recent essay on equality of resources. Many of the ideas discussed by Dworkin have also been examined by economists with, I believe, considerable insight. Unfortunately, economists tend to write for economists, not for philosophers, and their insights are seldom communicated properly to noneconomists. Of course, the same criticism can be levied on philosophers! But perhaps legal theorists are less subject to this criticism. One of the great contributions of Dworkin is that he (...)
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  21. The Anti-aesthetic: essays on postmodern culture.Hal Foster (ed.) - 1983 - Port Townsend, Wash.: Bay Press.
    For the past thirty years, Hal Foster has pushed the boundaries of cultural criticism, establishing a vantage point from which the seemingly disparate agendas of artists, patrons, and critics have a telling coherence. In The Anti-Aesthetic, preeminent critics such as Jean Baudrillard, Rosalind Krauss, Fredric Jameson, and Edward Said consider the full range of postmodern cultural production, from the writing of John Cage, to Cindy Sherman's film stills, to Barbara Kruger's collages. With a redesigned cover and a new afterword that (...)
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  22.  38
    Sport and Moral Relativity.Hal Charnofsky - 2003 - Philosophy Now 41:20-20.
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  23. Zen : does it make sense?Hal French - 2008 - In Jay Goulding (ed.), China-West interculture: toward the philosophy of world integration: essays on Wu Kuang-Ming's thinking. New York: Global Scholarly Publications.
     
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  24.  30
    COVID-19 and beyond: the ethical challenges of resetting health services during and after public health emergencies.Paul Baines, Heather Draper, Anna Chiumento, Sara Fovargue & Lucy Frith - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (11):715-716.
    COVID-19 continues to dominate 2020 and is likely to be a feature of our lives for some time to come. Given this, how should health systems respond ethically to the persistent challenges of responding to the ongoing impact of the pandemic? Relatedly, what ethical values should underpin the resetting of health services after the initial wave, knowing that local spikes and further waves now seem inevitable? In this editorial, we outline some of the ethical challenges confronting those running health services (...)
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  25. Hal fo er (1 955-).Hal Foster - 2007 - In Diarmuid Costello & Jonathan Vickery (eds.), Art: key contemporary thinkers. New York: Berg. pp. 66.
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  26.  4
    The miracle morning: the not-so-obvious secret guaranteed to transform your life (before 8 AM).Hal Elrod - 2023 - Dallas, TX: BenBella Books.
    Getting everything you want out of life isn't about doing more. It's about becoming more. Hal Elrod and The Miracle Morning have helped millions of people become the person they need to be to create the life they've always wanted. Now, it's your turn.
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  27.  93
    American Mysticism: From William James to Zen.Hal Bridges - 1971 - Philosophy East and West 21 (3):337-338.
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  28.  36
    Being-in-Love: an Enquiry Into the Ontological Foundation of Ethics.Hal St John Broadbent - 2007 - Studies in Christian Ethics 20 (3):345-363.
    This paper takes issue with those commentators of Heidegger's philosophy whose point of entry into his thinking is the inherited prejudices of others. It demonstrates that if prior judgments are suspended, so that Heidegger's texts are permitted to speak for themselves, the truth of his `position', more a wege than a static motionless point, gradually and inexorably begins to emerge. I take Pope Benedict's first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est, to draw the theological contours of a truly post-modern ethic. I then (...)
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  29. The Discourse of Others: Feminists and Postmodernism.Hal Foster - 1983 - In The Anti-aesthetic: essays on postmodern culture. Port Townsend, Wash.: Bay Press. pp. 62.
  30.  63
    Markets for public goods?Hal R. Varian - 1993 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 7 (4):539-557.
    There is a presumption in some circles that the identification of an externality or a public good presents a prima facie case for government intervention. Tyler Cowen has assembled a group of articles that challenge this view by arguing that the market, broadly construed, can handle many problems of public goods and externalities that are normally considered the province of the state. Although these articles present a stimulating perspective on problems of externalities and public goods, several of the essays overstate (...)
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  31.  22
    A post mortem for the Communications Decency Act.Hal Berghel - 1997 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 27 (4):8-11.
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  32.  8
    Countryman: a summary of belief.Hal Borland - 1965 - Philadelphia,: Lippincott.
  33.  9
    The Lessons of Tragedy: Statecraft and World Order.Hal Brands & Charles N. Edel - 2019 - Yale University Press.
    The ancient Greeks hard‑wired a tragic sensibility into their culture. By looking disaster squarely in the face, by understanding just how badly things could spiral out of control, they sought to create a communal sense of responsibility and courage—to spur citizens and their leaders to take the difficult actions necessary to avert such a fate. Today, after more than seventy years of great‑power peace and a quarter‑century of unrivaled global leadership, Americans have lost their sense of tragedy. They have forgotten (...)
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  34.  13
    The Lessons of Tragedy: Statecraft and World Order.Hal Brands & Charles N. Edel - 2019 - Yale University Press.
    _An eloquent call to draw on the lessons of the past to address current threats to international order_ The ancient Greeks hard‑wired a tragic sensibility into their culture. By looking disaster squarely in the face, by understanding just how badly things could spiral out of control, they sought to create a communal sense of responsibility and courage—to spur citizens and their leaders to take the difficult actions necessary to avert such a fate. Today, after more than seventy years of great‑power (...)
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  35.  36
    A Chestertonian View of the Monarchy in Australia.Hal Colebatch - 1998 - The Chesterton Review 24 (3):375-376.
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  36.  61
    Chesterton and King Edward VII.Hal Gp Colebatch & Owen Dudley Edwards - 2005 - The Chesterton Review 31 (1/2):252-253.
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  37.  49
    The Meanings of.Hal G. P. Colebatch - 1999 - The Chesterton Review 25 (4):437-449.
  38.  19
    Social insects, merely a “fun house” mirror of human social evolution.Hal B. Levine - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39.
    Social insects show us very little about the evolution of complex human society. As more relevant literature demonstrates, ultrasociality is a cause rather than an effect of human social evolution.
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  39.  29
    Some principles of Elizabethan stage costume.Hal H. Smith - 1962 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 25 (3/4):240-257.
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  40.  40
    William Wilberforce: A Biography.Hal Weidner - 2008 - Newman Studies Journal 5 (2):85-86.
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  41.  72
    Euthanasia.Heather Draper & Anne Slowther - 2008 - Clinical Ethics 3 (3):113-115.
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  42. Justice: A Role-Immersion Game for Teaching Political Philosophy.Noel Martin, Matthew Draper & Andy Lamey - 2020 - Teaching Philosophy 43 (3):281-308.
    We created Justice: The Game, an educational, role-immersion game designed to be used in philosophy courses. We seek to describe Justice in sufficent detail so that it is understandable to readers not already familiar with role-immersion pedagogy. We hope some instructors will be sufficiently interested in using the game. In addition to describing the game we also evaluate it, thereby highlighting the pedagogical potential of role-immersion games designed to teach political philosophy. We analyze the game by drawing on our observations (...)
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  43.  12
    The structure and function of HFE.Hal Drakesmith & Alain Townsend - 2000 - Bioessays 22 (7):595-598.
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  44.  47
    Women’s work, child care, and helpers-at-the-nest in a hunter-gatherer society.Raymond Hames & Patricia Draper - 2004 - Human Nature 15 (4):319-341.
    Considerable research on helpers-at-the-nest demonstrates the positive effects of firstborn daughters on a mother’s reproductive success and the survival of her children compared with women who have firstborn sons. This research is largely restricted to agricultural settings. In the present study we ask: “Does ‘daughter first’ improve mothers’ reproductive success in a hunting and gathering context?” Through an analysis of 84 postreproductive women in this population we find that the sex of the first- or second-born child has no effect on (...)
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  45. Robot carers, ethics, and older people.Tom Sorell & Heather Draper - 2014 - Ethics and Information Technology 16 (3):183-195.
    This paper offers an ethical framework for the development of robots as home companions that are intended to address the isolation and reduced physical functioning of frail older people with capacity, especially those living alone in a noninstitutional setting. Our ethical framework gives autonomy priority in a list of purposes served by assistive technology in general, and carebots in particular. It first introduces the notion of “presence” and draws a distinction between humanoid multi-function robots and non-humanoid robots to suggest that (...)
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  46. On the time scales in the approach to equilibrium of macroscopic quantum systems.Hal Tasaki, Sheldon Goldstein & Takashi Hara - unknown
    The recent renewed interest in the foundation of quantum statistical mechanics and in the dynamics of isolated quantum systems has led to a revival of the old approach by von Neumann to investigate the problem of thermalization only in terms of quantum dynamics in an isolated system [1, 2]. It has been demonstrated in some general or concrete settings that a pure initial state evolving under quantum dynamics indeed approaches an equilibrium state [3–9]. The underlying idea that a single pure (...)
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  47.  61
    Definitions of intent suitable for algorithms.Hal Ashton - 2022 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 31 (3):515-546.
    This article introduces definitions for direct, means-end, oblique (or indirect) and ulterior intent which can be used to test for intent in an algorithmic actor. These definitions of intent are informed by legal theory from common law jurisdictions. Certain crimes exist where the harm caused is dependent on the reason it was done so. Here the actus reus or performative element of the crime is dependent on the mental state or mens rea of the actor. The ability to prosecute these (...)
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  48.  95
    Appropriate methodologies for empirical bioethics: It's all relative.Jonathan Ives & Heather Draper - 2009 - Bioethics 23 (4):249-258.
    In this article we distinguish between philosophical bioethics (PB), descriptive policy orientated bioethics (DPOB) and normative policy oriented bioethics (NPOB). We argue that finding an appropriate methodology for combining empirical data and moral theory depends on what the aims of the research endeavour are, and that, for the most part, this combination is only required for NPOB. After briefly discussing the debate around the is/ought problem, and suggesting that both sides of this debate are misunderstanding one another (i.e. one side (...)
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  49. Postmodernism: a preface.Hal Foster - 1983 - In The Anti-aesthetic: essays on postmodern culture. Port Townsend, Wash.: Bay Press. pp. 3--15.
  50. James Beilby (ed.), Naturalism Defeated? Essays on Plantinga's Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism. [REVIEW]Paul Draper - 2004 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 55 (1):65-68.
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