Results for 'Richard T. Murphy'

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  1. The Transcendental "A Priori" in Husserl and Kant.Richard T. Murphy - 1974 - Analecta Husserliana 3:66.
  2. Hume and Husserl, Towards Radical Subjectivism.Richard T. Murphy - 1982 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 44 (1):173-174.
  3.  6
    The advent of Husserl's phenomenology.Richard T. Murphy - 1996 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 27 (2):176-187.
  4.  16
    The Phenomenology of Edmund Husserl: Six Essays, by Ludwig Landgrebe, edited with an introduction by Donn Welton.Richard T. Murphy - 1993 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 24 (3):286-289.
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  5. A metaphysical critique of method : Husserl and Merleau-ponty.Richard T. Murphy - 1966 - In Frederick J. Adelmann (ed.), The Quest for the absolute. Chestnut Hill: Boston College.
  6.  25
    Concept and Object.Richard T. Murphy - 1968 - New Scholasticism 42 (2):254-269.
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  7.  16
    Consciousness in Brentano and Husserl.Richard T. Murphy - 1968 - Modern Schoolman 45 (3):227-241.
  8.  47
    Husserl and british empiricism (1886-1895).Richard T. Murphy - 1986 - Research in Phenomenology 16 (1):121-137.
  9.  23
    Hume and Husserl's development of the" a priori".Richard T. Murphy - 1998 - Recherches Husserliennes 9:63-90.
  10.  13
    Husserl and Hume: Overcrowding Scepticism?Richard T. Murphy - 1991 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 22 (2):30-44.
  11.  44
    Husserl and pre-reflexive constitution.Richard T. Murphy - 1965 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 26 (1):100-105.
  12.  28
    Husserl's relation to Hume.Richard T. Murphy - 1979 - Research in Phenomenology 9 (1):198-223.
  13.  52
    Husserl’s Relations to British Empiricism.Richard T. Murphy - 1980 - Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 11 (3):89-106.
  14. William F. Albright. Archaeology and the Religion of Israel. [REVIEW]Richard T. Murphy - 1943 - The Thomist 6:278.
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  15. William F. Albright. From the Stone Age to Christianity: Monotheism and the Historical Process. [REVIEW]Richard T. Murphy - 1941 - The Thomist 3:510.
     
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  16.  10
    Relationship of Estradiol and Progesterone with Partnership and Parity Among Bangladeshi and British Women of European Origin.Gillian R. Bentley, Alejandra Núñez-de la Mora, Michele C. Freed, Khurshida Begum, Shanthi Muttukrishna, Taniya Sharmeen, Lorna Murphy, Robert T. Chatterton, Osul Chowdhury, Richard Gunu & Lynnette Leidy Sievert - 2023 - Human Nature 34 (1):1-24.
    Recent studies in social endocrinology have explored the effects of social relationships on female reproductive steroid hormones—estradiol and progesterone—investigating whether they are suppressed in partnered and parous women. Results have been mixed for these hormones although evidence is more consistent that partnered women and women with young children have lower levels of testosterone. These studies were sequential to earlier research on men, based on Wingfield’s Challenge Hypothesis, which showed that men in committed relationships, or with young children, have lower levels (...)
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  17.  41
    Book Review Section 1. [REVIEW]Theodore Brameld, Midori Matsuyama, Harvey Neufeldt, Lois M. R. Louden, Margaret Gillett, Don Adams, Theodore Hutchcroft, William T. Lowe, Rodney P. Riegle, Timothy J. Bergen Jr, Charles R. Schindler, Gerald L. Gutek, William E. Eaton, Gertrude Langsam, John F. Murphy, Paul D. Travers, Charles M. Dye, Natalie A. Naylor & Richard Edward Kelly - 1977 - Educational Studies 8 (4):395-437.
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  18. Does Critical Thinking Vary According to Culture?T. G. Murphy - 2015 - Teaching Philosophy 38 (4):399-426.
    Psychologist Richard Nisbett argues that fundamental aspects of critical thinking and logic are culturally conditioned. Nisbett’s claims, if correct, have substantial implications for the teaching of logic and critical thinking. In this paper I examine Nisbett’s arguments and conclude that he overstates the degree to which his empirical work justifies his theories about cultural difference. I will argue that we have good reason to be cautious about revising our pedagogy on the basis of assumptions about cultural difference, and that (...)
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  19. Neoplatonism.Richard T. Wallis - 1995 - Indianapolis: Hackett. Edited by Lloyd P. Gerson.
    "This is an excellent textbook on Neoplatonism which gives the reader a very concise and lucid overview of the basic doctrines and leading thinkers of the last great philosophy to emerge before the Christianization of the Roman Empire. I’ve no doubt that my students next semester will benefit from the analyses contained in the book. The contents of the chapters are very informative and adequately place developments in their socio-cultural context." --Michael B. Simmons, Auburn University at Montgomery.
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  20.  18
    Richard T. Murphy, Hume and Husserl. Towards radical subjectivism.Y. Sayer - 1994 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 92 (1):116-117.
  21.  34
    The Reality of Time Flow: Local Becoming in Modern Physics.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    It is commonly held that there is no place for the 'now’ in physics, and also that the passing of time is something subjective, having to do with the way reality is experienced but not with the way reality is. Indeed, the majority of modern theoretical physicists and philosophers of physics contend that the passing of time is incompatible with modern physical theory, and excluded in a fundamental description of physical reality. This book provides a forceful rebuttal of such claims. (...)
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  22.  7
    Mario Bunge on Causality: Some Key Insights and Their Leibnizian Precedents.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2019 - In Mario Augusto Bunge, Michael R. Matthews, Guillermo M. Denegri, Eduardo L. Ortiz, Heinz W. Droste, Alberto Cordero, Pierre Deleporte, María Manzano, Manuel Crescencio Moreno, Dominique Raynaud, Íñigo Ongay de Felipe, Nicholas Rescher, Richard T. W. Arthur, Rögnvaldur D. Ingthorsson, Evandro Agazzi, Ingvar Johansson, Joseph Agassi, Nimrod Bar-Am, Alberto Cupani, Gustavo E. Romero, Andrés Rivadulla, Art Hobson, Olival Freire Junior, Peter Slezak, Ignacio Morgado-Bernal, Marta Crivos, Leonardo Ivarola, Andreas Pickel, Russell Blackford, Michael Kary, A. Z. Obiedat, Carolina I. García Curilaf, Rafael González del Solar, Luis Marone, Javier Lopez de Casenave, Francisco Yannarella, Mauro A. E. Chaparro, José Geiser Villavicencio- Pulido, Martín Orensanz, Jean-Pierre Marquis, Reinhard Kahle, Ibrahim A. Halloun, José María Gil, Omar Ahmad, Byron Kaldis, Marc Silberstein, Carolina I. García Curilaf, Rafael González del Solar, Javier Lopez de Casenave, Íñigo Ongay de Felipe & Villavicencio-Pulid (eds.), Mario Bunge: A Centenary Festschrift. Springer Verlag. pp. 185-204.
    Mario Bunge wrote his classic Causality and Modern Science more than 60 years ago, and a third revised edition was published by Dover in 1979. With its impressive scope and historical perspective it was a long way ahead of its time. But many of its insights still have not been sufficiently appreciated by physicists and philosophers alike. These include Bunge’s distinction between causation and other types of determination, his critique of the still-dominant Humean accounts of causality as leaving out the (...)
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  23. Competing with Integrity in International Business.Richard T. Degeorge - 1997 - Journal of Business Ethics 16 (1):6-36.
     
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  24.  5
    Presidential Addresses of the American Philosophical Association, 1911-1920.Richard T. Hull - 1999 - Springer.
    Documents a decade that saw the Association begin negotiations to merge with the Western Philosophical Association that later led to the original organization becoming the Eastern Division of an expanded Association, and a world war that divided friends and colleagues across both geographical and political lines. The addresses, therefore, take on internal and external politics and are often tinged with tragedy. The topics include the problem of transcendence, Bergson and pragmatism, time and the experience of time, the ethics of states, (...)
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  25.  6
    1921-1930 Presidential Addresses of the American Philosophical Association.Richard T. Hull - 1999 - Springer.
    This book traces the further development and emergence of American philosophy, particularly Naturalism and Pragmatism, against the backdrop of still-dominant Hegelian philosophy, during the third decade of the 20th century, through the addresses and biographies of the presidents of its oldest and largest philosophical society. Of special interest is the previously unpublished presidential address of Henry Walgrave Stewart, second president of the Pacific Division of The American Philosophical Association. The work contains the biographies, photographs, and addresses of 24 past presidents, (...)
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  26.  23
    Probability, Frequency and Reasonable Expectation.Richard T. Cox - 1946 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 37 (2):398-399.
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  27. Minkowski spacetime and the dimensions of the present.Richard T. W. Arthur - unknown
    In Minkowski spacetime, because of the relativity of simultaneity to the inertial frame chosen, there is no unique world-at-an-instant. Thus the classical view that there is a unique set of events existing now in a three dimensional space cannot be sustained. The two solutions most often advanced are that the four-dimensional structure of events and processes is alone real, and that becoming present is not an objective part of reality; and that present existence is not an absolute notion, but is (...)
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  28. Presupposition, Aggregation, and Leibniz’s Argument for a Plurality of Substances.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2011 - The Leibniz Review 21:91-115.
    This paper consists in a study of Leibniz’s argument for the infinite plurality of substances, versions of which recur throughout his mature corpus. It goes roughly as follows: since every body is actually divided into further bodies, it is therefore not a unity but an infinite aggregate; the reality of an aggregate, however, reduces to the reality of the unities it presupposes; the reality of body, therefore, entails an actual infinity of constituent unities everywhere in it. I argue that this (...)
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  29. Newton's fluxions and equably flowing time.Richard T. W. Arthur - 1995 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 26 (2):323-351.
  30.  16
    Leibniz’s syncategorematic infinitesimals.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2013 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 67 (5):553-593.
    In contrast with some recent theories of infinitesimals as non-Archimedean entities, Leibniz’s mature interpretation was fully in accord with the Archimedean Axiom: infinitesimals are fictions, whose treatment as entities incomparably smaller than finite quantities is justifiable wholly in terms of variable finite quantities that can be taken as small as desired, i.e. syncategorematically. In this paper I explain this syncategorematic interpretation, and how Leibniz used it to justify the calculus. I then compare it with the approach of Smooth Infinitesimal Analysis, (...)
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  31. Leibniz’s Theory of Space.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2013 - Foundations of Science 18 (3):499-528.
    In this paper I offer a fresh interpretation of Leibniz’s theory of space, in which I explain the connection of his relational theory to both his mathematical theory of analysis situs and his theory of substance. I argue that the elements of his mature theory are not bare bodies (as on a standard relationalist view) nor bare points (as on an absolutist view), but situations. Regarded as an accident of an individual body, a situation is the complex of its angles (...)
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  32.  24
    Leibniz’s Syncategorematic Actual Infinite.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2018 - In Igor Agostini, Richard T. W. Arthur, Geoffrey Gorham, Paul Guyer, Mogens Lærke, Yitzhak Y. Melamed, Ohad Nachtomy, Sanja Särman, Anat Schechtman, Noa Shein & Reed Winegar (eds.), Infinity in Early Modern Philosophy. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 155-179.
    It is well known that Leibniz advocated the actual infinite, but that he did not admit infinite collections or infinite numbers. But his assimilation of this account to the scholastic notion of the syncategorematic infinite has given rise to controversy. A common interpretation is that in mathematics Leibniz’s syncategorematic infinite is identical with the Aristotelian potential infinite, so that it applies only to ideal entities, and is therefore distinct from the actual infinite that applies to the actual world. Against this, (...)
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  33.  17
    Exacting a Philosophy of Becoming From Modern Physics.Richard T. W. Arthur - 1982 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 63 (2):101-110.
  34. Time Lapse and the Degeneracy of Time: Gödel, Proper Time and Becoming in Relativity Theory.Richard T. W. Arthur - unknown
    In the transition to Einstein’s theory of Special Relativity (SR), certain concepts that had previously been thought to be univocal or absolute properties of systems turn out not to be. For instance, mass bifurcates into (i) the relativistically invariant proper mass m0, and (ii) the mass relative to an inertial frame in which it is moving at a speed v = βc, its relative mass m, whose quantity is a factor γ = (1 – β2) -1/2 times the proper mass, (...)
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  35. An Introduction to Logic: Using Natural Deduction, Real Arguments, a Little History, and Some Humour.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2016 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    In lively and readable prose, Arthur presents a new approach to the study of logic, one that seeks to integrate methods of argument analysis developed in modern “informal logic” with natural deduction techniques. The dry bones of logic are given flesh by unusual attention to the history of the subject, from Pythagoras, the Stoics, and Indian Buddhist logic, through Lewis Carroll, Venn, and Boole, to Russell, Frege, and Monty Python. A previous edition of this book appeared under the title _Natural (...)
     
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  36.  9
    An Introduction to Logic - Second Edition: Using Natural Deduction, Real Arguments, a Little History, and Some Humour.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2016 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    In lively and readable prose, Arthur presents a new approach to the study of logic, one that seeks to integrate methods of argument analysis developed in modern “informal logic” with natural deduction techniques. The dry bones of logic are given flesh by unusual attention to the history of the subject, from Pythagoras, the Stoics, and Indian Buddhist logic, through Lewis Carroll, Venn, and Boole, to Russell, Frege, and Monty Python. A previous edition of this book appeared under the title _Natural (...)
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  37. Takeuchi Yoshimi: displacing the west.Richard F. Calichman, Joseph A. Murphy, David G. Goodman, Shu-Ning Sciban, Fred Edwards, Robert J. Antony, Jane Kate Leonard, Pilwun Shih Wang, Sarah Wang & Kim Su-Young - 2013 - Philosophy East and West 63 (2).
  38.  13
    Marginalia in Russell's Copy of Gerhardt's Edition of Leibniz's Philosophische Schriften.Richard T. W. Arthur, Jolen Galaugher & Nicholas Griffin - 2017 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 37 (1).
    Russell’s most important source for his book on Leibniz was C. I. Gerhardt’s seven-volume Die philosophischen Schriften von Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Russell heavily annotated his copy of this important edition of Leibniz’s works. The present paper records all Russell’s marginalia, with the exception of passages marked merely by vertical lines in the margin, and provides explanatory commentary.
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  39.  61
    The ethics of information technology and business.Richard T. De George - 2003 - Malden, MA: Blackwell.
    This is the first study of business ethics to take into consideration the plethora of issues raised by the Information Age. The first study of business ethics to take into consideration the plethora of issues raised by the Information Age. Explores a wide range of topics including marketing, privacy, and the protection of personal information; employees and communication privacy; intellectual property issues; the ethical issues of e-business; Internet-related business ethics problems; and the ethical dimension of information technology on society. Uncovers (...)
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  40. Leibniz’s Actual Infinite in Relation to His Analysis of Matter.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2015 - In David Rabouin, Philip Beeley & Norma B. Goethe (eds.), G.W. Leibniz, Interrelations Between Mathematics and Philosophy. Springer Verlag.
  41. Actual Infinitesimals in Leibniz's Early Thought.Richard T. W. Arthur - unknown
    Before establishing his mature interpretation of infinitesimals as fictions, Gottfried Leibniz had advocated their existence as actually existing entities in the continuum. In this paper I trace the development of these early attempts, distinguishing three distinct phases in his interpretation of infinitesimals prior to his adopting a fictionalist interpretation: (i) (1669) the continuum consists of assignable points separated by unassignable gaps; (ii) (1670-71) the continuum is composed of an infinity of indivisible points, or parts smaller than any assignable, with no (...)
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  42.  41
    Geoffrey Hellman* and Stewart Shapiro.**Varieties of Continua—From Regions to Points and Back.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2019 - Philosophia Mathematica 27 (1):148-152.
    HellmanGeoffrey* * and ShapiroStewart.** ** Varieties of Continua—From Regions to Points and Back. Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN: 978-0-19-871274-9. Pp. x + 208.
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  43. Proverbs.Richard J. Clifford & Roland E. Murphy - 1999
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  44.  22
    Russell's Leibniz Notebook.Richard T. W. Arthur & Nicholas Griffin - 2017 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 37 (1).
    In preparation for his lectures on Leibniz delivered in Cambridge in Lent Term 1899, Russell started in the summer of 1898 to keep notes on writings by and about Leibniz in a large notebook of the type he commonly used for notetaking at this time. This article prints, with annotation, all the material on Leibniz in that notebook.
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  45.  77
    Leibniz’s Mechanical Principles : Commentary and Translation.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2013 - The Leibniz Review 23:101-105.
  46.  47
    Leibniz’s Causal Theory of Time Revisited.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2016 - The Leibniz Review 26:151-178.
    Following the lead of Hans Reichenbach in the early twentieth century, many authors have attributed a causal theory of time to Leibniz. My exposition of Leibniz’s theory of time in a paper of 1985 has been interpreted as a version of such a causal theory, even though I was critical of the idea that Leibniz would have tried to reduce relations among monadic states to causal relations holding only among phenomena. Since that time previously unpublished texts by Leibniz have become (...)
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  47.  21
    Christian Science's Right to Refuse.Richard T. DeGeorge, Margaret Pabst Battin, H. Hamner Hill & Kenneth Kipnis - 1995 - Hastings Center Report 25 (4):2-3.
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  48. Intellecutal property rights.Richard T. DeGeorge - 2010 - In George G. Brenkert & Tom L. Beauchamp (eds.), The Oxford handbook of business ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.
  49. On the genuine queerness of moral properties and facts.Richard T. Garner - 1990 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 68 (2):137 – 146.
  50.  21
    Collective and Corporate Responsibility.Richard T. De George - 1987 - Noûs 21 (3):448-450.
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