Results for 'Calvin Smith'

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  1.  49
    Facilitating 'perspectival reciprocity' in medication: Some reflections on a failed case. [REVIEW]Calvin Smith - 2000 - Human Studies 23 (1):1-21.
    Mediation services arise in contexts where the notions of community cohesion, relationship integrity and social order are valued over their opposites (disorder, dissent, conflict etc). Yet it is not at all clear whether and how the mediation of conflict works to re-establish harmony or consensus. Indeed it is not at all clear that mediation is always effective or just. It has even been suggested that some conflicts (e.g. work-place, commercial and sexual assault) are either not resolved or not resolved justly (...)
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  2.  22
    Compliance, attitudes and barriers to post‐operative colorectal cancer follow‐up.Jonathan Cardella, Natalie G. Coburn, Anna Gagliardi, Barbara-Anne Maier, Elisa Greco, Linda Last, Andrew J. Smith, Calvin Law & Frances Wright - 2008 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 14 (3):407-415.
  3.  28
    Emotions and Choice from Boethius to Descartes (review).Kurt Smith - 2004 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 42 (1):98-99.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 42.1 (2004) 98-99 [Access article in PDF] Henrik Lagerlund and Mikko Yrjönsuuri, editors. Emotions and Choice from Boethius to Descartes. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002. Pp. xi + 342. Paper $38.00. This book contains twelve essays that work together to trace a variety of theories of emotion, intellect, and will, specifically connected to the possibility of moral decision and action, that run (...)
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  4. Calvin: Commentaries.Joseph Haroutunian & Louise Pettibone Smith - 1958
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  5.  19
    Faith and Hinge Epistemology in Calvin’s Institutes.Nicholas Smith - forthcoming - Philosophia Reformata:1-26.
    In mainstream analytic epistemology, Reformed theology has made its presence prominently felt in Reformed epistemology, the view of religious belief according to which religious beliefs can be properly basic and warranted when formed by the proper functioning of the sensus divinitatis, an inborn capacity or faculty for belief in God that can be prompted to generate certain religious beliefs when presented with things (e.g., certain majestic aspects of creation). A major competitor to Reformed epistemology is Wittgensteinian quasi-fideism, a position drawn (...)
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  6. William H. Calvin, How Brains Think. [REVIEW]D. J. Smith - 1997 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 4 (4):381-381.
     
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  7. Calvin and Smith on providence, morality, virtues, and human flourishing.Cornelis van der Kooi - 2022 - In Jordan J. Ballor & Cornelis van der Kooi (eds.), Theology, morality and Adam Smith. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  8. Christian freedom in political economy : the legacy of John Calvin in the thought of Adam Smith.Joe Blosser - 2011 - In Paul Oslington (ed.), Adam Smith as theologian. New York: Routledge.
  9.  13
    Ontological Terror: Blackness, Nihilism, and Emancipation.Calvin L. Warren - 2018 - Duke University Press.
    In _Ontological Terror_ Calvin L. Warren intervenes in Afro-pessimism, Heideggerian metaphysics, and black humanist philosophy by positing that the "Negro question" is intimately imbricated with questions of Being. Warren uses the figure of the antebellum free black as a philosophical paradigm for thinking through the tensions between blackness and Being. He illustrates how blacks embody a metaphysical nothing. This nothingness serves as a destabilizing presence and force as well as that which whiteness defines itself against. Thus, the function of (...)
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  10. Is Buddhism without rebirth ‘nihilism with a happy face’?Calvin Baker - forthcoming - Analysis.
    I argue against pessimistic readings of the Buddhist tradition on which unawakened beings invariably have lives not worth living due to a preponderance of suffering (duḥkha) over well-being.
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  11.  37
    Three Revisionary Implications of Buddhist Animal Ethics.Calvin Baker - forthcoming - Philosophy East and West.
    Many accept the following three theses in animal ethics. First, although animal welfare should not be—or at least, need not be—our top moral priority, it is not a trivial one either. Second, if an animal is sentient, then it is a moral patient. Third, the extinction of an animal species is a tragic outcome that we have moral reason to prevent. I argue that a traditional (i.e., pre-modern) Buddhist perspective pushes against the first thesis and that a naturalized Buddhist perspective (...)
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  12. Non-Archimedean population axiologies.Calvin Baker - forthcoming - Economics and Philosophy.
    Non-Archimedean population axiologies – also known as lexical views – claim (i) that a sufficient number of lives at a very high positive welfare level would be better than any number of lives at a very low positive welfare level and/or (ii) that a sufficient number of lives at a very low negative welfare level would be worse than any number of lives at a very high negative welfare level. Such axiologies are popular because they can avoid the (Negative) Repugnant (...)
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  13.  77
    Buddhism and Utilitarianism.Calvin Baker - 2022 - An Introduction to Utilitarianism.
    This article considers the relationship between utilitarianism and the ethics of Early Buddhism and classical Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism. Section 2 discusses normative ethics. I argue (i) that Early Buddhist ethics is not utilitarian and (ii) that despite the many similarities between utilitarianism and Mahāyāna ethics, it is at best unclear whether Mahāyāna ethics is consequentialist in structure. Section 2 closes by reconstructing the Buddhist understanding of well-being and contrasting it to hedonism. -/- Section 3 focuses on applied ethics. I suggest (...)
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  14. Expected choiceworthiness and fanaticism.Calvin Baker - 2024 - Philosophical Studies 181 (5).
    Maximize Expected Choiceworthiness (MEC) is a theory of decision-making under moral uncertainty. It says that we ought to handle moral uncertainty in the way that Expected Value Theory (EVT) handles descriptive uncertainty. MEC inherits from EVT the problem of fanaticism. Roughly, a decision theory is fanatical when it requires our decision-making to be dominated by low-probability, high-payoff options. Proponents of MEC have offered two main lines of response. The first is that MEC should simply import whatever are the best solutions (...)
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  15. Rule-Following, Meaning, and Normativity.George Wilson, E. Lepore & B. C. Smith - 2006 - In Barry C. Smith (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language. Oxford University Press.
  16. A realism-based approach to the evolution of biomedical ontologies.Barry Smith - 2006 - In Proceedings of the Annual AMIA Symposium. Washington, DC: American Medical Informatics Association. pp. 121-125.
    We present a novel methodology for calculating the improvements obtained in successive versions of biomedical ontologies. The theory takes into account changes both in reality itself and in our understanding of this reality. The successful application of the theory rests on the willingness of ontology authors to document changes they make by following a number of simple rules. The theory provides a pathway by which ontology authoring can become a science rather than an art, following principles analogous to those that (...)
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  17. The Cerebral Symphony: Seashore Reflections on the Structure of Consciousness.William H. Calvin - 1989 - New York: Bantam.
    Neurobiologist William Calvin explores the human brain, positing that the neurons in the brain operate in an accelerated version of biological evolution, evolving ideas through random variations and selections, and supports his hypothesis with numerous ca.
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  18.  34
    Generative AI and the Foregrounding of Epistemic Injustice in Bioethics.Calvin Wai-Loon Ho - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (10):99-102.
    OpenAI’s Chat Generative Pre-training Transformer (ChatGPT), Google’s Bard and other generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) technologies can greatly enhance the capability of healthcare profess...
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  19.  46
    Adam Smith's Wealth of NationsAn Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations.Essays on Adam Smith.Donald White, Adam Smith, Andrew S. Skinner & Thomas Wilson - 1776 - Journal of the History of Ideas 37 (4):715.
  20.  19
    Otherness and the problem of evil: How does that which is other become evil?Calvin O. Schrag - 2006 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1-3):149-156.
    In seeking to answer the question "How does that which is other become evil?" the author provides a discussion of four entwined aspects of the issue at stake: difficulty in achieving clarity on the grammar of evil; genocide as a striking illustration of otherness becoming evil; the challenge of postnationalism as a resource for dealing with otherness in the socio-political arena; and the ethico-religious dimension as it relates to the wider problem of evil.
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  21.  64
    From Civil to Political Economy: Adam Smith’s Theological Debt.Adrian Pabst - 2011 - In Paul Oslington (ed.), Adam Smith as theologian. New York: Routledge.
    The present essay contends that progressive readings of Smith ignore the influence of theological concepts and religious ideas on his work, notably three distinct strands: first, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century natural theology; second, Jansenist Augustinianism; third, Stoic arguments of theodicy. Taken together, these theological elements help explain why Smith’s moral philosophy and political economy intensifies the secular early modern and Enlightenment idea that the Fall brought about ‘radical evil’ and a ‘fatherless world’ in need of permanent divine intervention. As (...)
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  22.  18
    How signaling conventions are established.Calvin T. Cochran & Jeffrey A. Barrett - 2021 - Synthese 199 (1-2):4367-4391.
    We consider how human subjects establish signaling conventions in the context of Lewis-Skyrms signaling games. These experiments involve games where there are precisely the right number of signal types to represent the states of nature, games where there are more signal types than states, and games where there are fewer signal types than states. The aim is to determine the conditions under which subjects are able to establish signaling conventions in such games and to identify a learning dynamics that approximates (...)
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  23.  8
    J. David Velleman, "On Being Me: A Personal Invitation to Philosophy.".Calvin Harrison Warner - 2020 - Philosophy in Review 40 (4):168-169.
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  24.  15
    Moral Discourse: Categorical or Institutional?Calvin H. Warner - unknown
    Error theory turns on a particular presupposition about the conceptual commitments of moral realism, namely that the moral facts posited by realists need to be categorical. True moral propositions are said to have an absolute authority in their prescriptions in the sense that an agent, regardless of her own ends, needs or desires, is categorically obligated and has reason to act in accordance with their prescriptions. But, nothing in the world has such a queer property as categoricity, and therefore we (...)
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  25.  3
    Philosophy: A Call To Action.Calvin H. Warner - 2018 - Philosophy Now 129:36-36.
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  26.  14
    Public Reason in a Pandemic: John Rawls on Truth in the Age of COVID-19.Calvin H. Warner - 2022 - Philosophia 50 (3):1503-1513.
    In “Justice as Fairness: Political not Metaphysical,” John Rawls suggests an approach to a public conception of justice that eschews any dependence on metaphysical conceptions of justice in favor of a political conception of justice. This means that if there is a metaphysical conception of justice that actually obtains, then Rawls’ theory would not be sensitive to it. Rawls himself admitted in Political Liberalism that “the political conception does without the truth.” Similarly, in Law of Peoples, Rawls endorses a political (...)
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  27.  4
    Rethinking the Black Will: The Cosmological Body, Nihilism, and Resistance.Calvin Warren - 2021 - Diacritics 49 (4):10-19.
    Abstract:The article interrogates notions of resistance and will against the Black Radical Tradition vis-à-vis a close reading of Friedrich Nietzsche’s Will to Power and through Hortense Spiller’s seminal essay, “Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe.” In reading Spillers alongside Nietzsche, the essay argues that black nihilism presents a more severe problem than Nietzsche could anticipate: that the black will is denied active desire and a cosmological body is left to express its “power”—only to highlight (black) resistance as a question.
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  28.  9
    The Karen Call: Emergency, Destiny, and Surveillance.Calvin Warren - 2022 - Critical Philosophy of Race 10 (2):141-157.
    In this thought experiment, I provide a philosophical reading of the “Karen call” to explain its persistence and impact. I argue the call is an act of shepherding in the twenty-first century—fulling the ethical responsibility and duty of Dasein, as Heidegger presents it in his philosophy. Every call performs ontological labor—a guarding and surveillance of Being—requiring a vigilant policing of ontological boundaries and a marshaling of violence (state sanctioned) to prevent black encroachment (the violation of ontological interdiction). The cell phone, (...)
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  29.  23
    Temporal variables in paired-associate learning: The law of contiguity revisited.Calvin F. Nodine - 1969 - Psychological Review 76 (4):351-362.
  30.  78
    Prior Analytics. Aristotle & Robin Smith - 1989 - New York: Kessinger Publishing. Edited by Gisela Striker.
    WE must first state the subject of our inquiry and the faculty to which it belongs: its subject is demonstration and the faculty that carries it out demonstrative science.
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  31. Communicative Praxis and the Space of Subjectivity.Calvin O. Schrag - 1988 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 50 (4):741-742.
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  32.  60
    Do We Hear Compression Waves?Calvin K. W. Kwok - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy:1-29.
    The spatial misrepresentation objection (SMO) against the wave theory of sound argues that if sounds are compression waves, then our auditory experiences are massively illusory for not representing sounds as propagating in the medium. Thus, it claims that the wave theory should be rejected because it is unreasonable to accept such an error theory of hearing. This paper presents a metaphysics of compression waves to show that the wave theory correctly implies that we cannot hear sounds as propagating. Moreover, I (...)
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  33.  11
    Scaling up the Research Ethics Framework for Healthcare Machine Learning as Global Health Ethics and Governance.Calvin Wai-Loon Ho & Rohit Malpani - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (5):36-38.
    The research ethics framework put forward by McCradden et al. to support systematic inquiry in the development of artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies in healt...
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  34. Buddhism and effective altruism.Calvin Baker - 2022 - In Dominic Roser, Stefan Riedener & Markus Huppenbauer (eds.), Effective Altruism and Religion: Synergies, Tension, Dialogue. Nomos. pp. 17-45.
    This article considers the contemporary effective altruism (EA) movement from a classical Indian Buddhist perspective. Following barebones introductions to EA and to Buddhism (sections one and two, respectively), section three argues that core EA efforts, such as those to improve global health, end factory farming, and safeguard the long-term future of humanity, are futile on the Buddhist worldview. For regardless of the short-term welfare improvements that effective altruists impart, Buddhism teaches that all unenlightened beings will simply be reborn upon their (...)
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  35.  21
    Heidegger, Afropessimism, and the Harlem Renaissance: An Interview with Calvin Warren.Calvin Warren, Michelle E. Banks, Robert Savino Oventile & Yuliana Samson - 2022 - Diacritics 50 (2):112-121.
    Abstract:Calvin Warren talks about Heidegger's influence on Afropessimism, and about the philosophical significance of the Harlem Renaissance.
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  36. Communicative Praxis and the Space of Subjectivity.Calvin O. Schrag - 1988 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 21 (4):294-304.
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  37.  14
    The efficacy of human learning in Lewis signalling games.Calvin Thomas Cochran & Jeffrey Barrett - forthcoming - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.
  38. Hearing Waves: A Philosophy of Sound and Auditory Perception.Calvin K. W. Kwok - 2020 - Dissertation, The University of Hong Kong
    This dissertation aims to revive wave theory in the philosophy of sound. Wave theory identifies sounds with compression waves. Despite its wide acceptance in the scientific community as the default position, many philosophers have rejected wave theory and opted for different versions of distal theory instead. According to this current majority view, a sound has its stationary location at its source. I argue against this and other alternative philosophical theories of sound and develop wave theory into a more defensible form. (...)
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  39. Future contingents.Calvin Normore - 1982 - In Norman Kretzmann, Anthony Kenny & Jan Pinborg (eds.), Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 358--381.
  40.  27
    10. Meaning and Objective Being: Descartes and His Sources.Calvin Normore - 1986 - In Amélie Oksenberg Rorty (ed.), Essays on Descartes’ Meditations. University of California Press. pp. 223-242.
  41.  6
    The Way of the Human Being.Calvin Martin - 1999 - Yale University Press.
    Explains how Native Americans understand the world and their place in it and discusses what other cultures can learn by studying Native American beliefs and traditions.
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  42.  24
    The Resources of Rationality: A Response to the Postmodern Challenge.Calvin O. Schrag - 1992 - Indiana University Press.
    . This work will be useful to all who wonder what to do about the largely negative results of postmodern thought.Ó ÑJoseph C. Flay The Resources of Rationality addresses the postmodernist assault on the claim of reason and develops a ...
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  43.  22
    Two Meanings of Historicism in the Writings of Dilthey, Troeltsch, and Meinecke.Calvin G. Rand - 1964 - Journal of the History of Ideas 25 (4):503.
  44.  36
    Oneirics and Psychosomatics. Rolf Loehrich. McHenry, Ill.: The Compass Press, 1953. Pp. xiv, 157. $6.00.Calvin S. Hall - 1955 - Philosophy of Science 22 (1):69-69.
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  45.  17
    Civic Discourse amid Cultural Transformation.Calvin Massey - 2000 - Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature 12 (1):193-215.
  46.  57
    Inequality and inequity in the emergence of conventions.Calvin Cochran & Cailin O’Connor - 2019 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 18 (3):264-281.
    Many societies have norms of equity – that those who make symmetric social contributions deserve symmetric rewards. Despite this, there are widespread patterns of social inequity, especially along gender and racial lines. It is often the case that members of certain social groups receive greater rewards per contribution than others. In this article, we draw on evolutionary game theory to show that the emergence of this sort of convention is far from surprising. In simple cultural evolutionary models, inequity is much (...)
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  47.  23
    Developing critical thinking in undergraduate courses: a philosophical approach.Calvin S. Kalman - 2002 - Science & Education 11 (1):83-94.
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  48. The necessity in deduction: Cartesian inference and its medieval background.Calvin G. Normore - 1993 - Synthese 96 (3):437 - 454.
  49. [Omnibus Review].Calvin C. Elgot - 1960 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 25 (2):163-164.
  50.  20
    Radical reflection and the origin of the human sciences.Calvin O. Schrag - 1980 - West Lafayette, Ind.: Purdue University Press.
    This is a book about the human sciences. However, it is not a treatise on scientific methodology nor is it a proposal for a unification of the human sciences through an integration of their findings within a general conceptual scheme.
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