Results for 'Marleen Flory'

396 found
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  1.  15
    Caligula's "Inverecundia":: A Note on Dio Cassius 59.12.1.Marleen Flory - 1986 - Hermes 114 (3):365-371.
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  2.  25
    How do self-efficacy beliefs for academic writing and collaboration and intrinsic motivation for academic writing and research develop during an undergraduate research project?Floris M. Van Blankenstein, Nadira Saab, Roeland M. Van der Rijst, Marleen S. Danel, Aaltje S. Bakker-van den Berg & Paul W. Van den Broek - 2018 - Educational Studies 45 (2):209-225.
    Research skills are important for university graduates, but little is known about undergraduates’ motivation for research. In this study, self-efficacy beliefs and intrinsic motivation for several research activities were measured three times during an undergraduate research project. In order to promote self-efficacy for writing and collaboration, a collaboration script was developed and tested on half of the students. Twelve students were interviewed three times to gather in-depth information about motivational and self-efficacy beliefs. All measures except intrinsic motivation for research increased (...)
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  3.  83
    The ‘Operational’ Definition of Self-Control.Marleen Gillebaart - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  4. Patient participation in Dutch ethics support: practice, ideals, challenges and recommendations—a national survey.Marleen Eijkholt, Janine de Snoo-Trimp, Wieke Ligtenberg & Bert Molewijk - 2022 - BMC Medical Ethics 23 (1):1-14.
    Background: Patient participation in clinical ethics support services has been marked as an important issue. There seems to be a wide variety of practices globally, but extensive theoretical or empirical studies on the matter are missing. Scarce publications indicate that, in Europe, patient participation in CESS varies from region to region, and per type of support. Practices vary from being non-existent, to patients being a full conversation partner. This contrasts with North America, where PP seems more or less standard. While (...)
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  5. Algebraic foundations for the semantic treatment of inquisitive content.Floris Roelofsen - 2013 - Synthese 190:79-102.
    In classical logic, the proposition expressed by a sentence is construed as a set of possible worlds, capturing the informative content of the sentence. However, sentences in natural language are not only used to provide information, but also to request information. Thus, natural language semantics requires a logical framework whose notion of meaning does not only embody informative content, but also inquisitive content. This paper develops the algebraic foundations for such a framework. We argue that propositions, in order to embody (...)
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  6.  15
    Articulating Values Through Identity Work: Advancing Family Business Ethics Research.Marleen Dieleman & Juliette Koning - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 163 (4):675-687.
    Family values are argued to enable ethical family business conduct. However, how these arise, evolve, and how family leaders articulate them is less understood. Using an ‘identity work’ approach, this paper finds that the values underpinning identity work: arise from multiple sources, evolve in tandem with the context; and, that their articulation is relational and aspirational, rather than merely historical. Prior research mostly understood family values as rooted in the past and relatively stable, but our rhetorical analysis unlocks a more (...)
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  7.  52
    A pluralist account of the basis of moral status.Giacomo Floris - 2020 - Philosophical Studies 178 (6):1859-1877.
    Standard liberal theories of justice rest on the assumption that only those beings that hold the capacity for moral personality have moral status and therefore are right-holders. As many pointed out, this has the disturbing implication of excluding a wide range of entities from the scope of justice. Call this the under-inclusiveness objection. This paper provides a response to the under-inclusiveness objection and illustrates its implications for liberal theories of justice. In particular, the paper defends two claims: first, it argues (...)
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  8.  8
    De provincieraadsverkiezingen van 24 november 1991.Marleen Brans - 1992 - Res Publica: Tijdschrift Voor Politologie 2:245-262.
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  9. William James. Extraits de sa Correspondance.Floris Delattre, Maurice Le Breton & M. Henri Bergson - 1926 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 33 (3):1-2.
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  10. Law and humanity : exploring organ donation using the Brazier method.Marleen Eijkholt & Ruth Stirton - 2015 - In Catherine Stanton, Sarah Devaney, Anne-Maree Farrell & Alexandra Mullock (eds.), Pioneering Healthcare Law: Essays in Honour of Margaret Brazier. Routledge.
     
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  11.  23
    Entertaining anti-racism. Multicultural television drama, identification and perceptions of ethnic threat.Floris Müller - 2009 - Communications 34 (3):239-256.
    Television content that contains non-stereotypical representations of ethnic minorities and models positive intercultural interactions may potentially aid in reducing the prejudices of its viewers. However, the exact effect has yet to be demonstrated. Furthermore, the cognitive mechanisms behind such an effect remain unclear. This article tests hypotheses derived from social identity theory and social learning theory that attribute this effect to the identification patterns with ingroup and outgroup characters in television drama. In an experiment, participants either watched episodes of a (...)
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  12.  14
    Towards a Formal Account of Reasoning about Evidence: Argumentation Schemes and Generalisations.Bex Floris, Prakken Henry, Reed Chris & Walton Douglas - 2003 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 11 (2-3):125-165.
    This paper studies the modelling of legal reasoning about evidence within general theories of defeasible reasoning and argumentation. In particular, Wigmore's method for charting evidence and its use by modern legal evidence scholars is studied in order to give a formal underpinning in terms of logics for defeasible argumentation. Two notions turn out to be crucial, viz. argumentation schemes and empirical generalisations.
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  13.  74
    Distributed knowledge.Floris Roelofsen - 2007 - Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 17 (2):255-273.
    This paper provides a complete characterization of epistemic models in which distributed knowledge complies with the principle of full communication (van der Hoek et al., 1999; Gerbrandy, 1999). It also introduces an extended notion of bisimulation and corresponding model comparison games that match the expressive power of distributed knowledge operators.
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  14.  28
    Medicine’s collision with false hope: The False Hope Harms (FHH) argument.Marleen Eijkholt - 2020 - Bioethics 34 (7):703-711.
    The goal of this paper is to introduce the false hope harms (FHH) argument, as a new concept in healthcare. The FHH argument embodies a conglomerate of specific harms that have not convinced providers to stop endorsing false hope. In this paper, it is submitted that the healthcare profession has an obligation to avoid collaborating or participating in, propagating or augmenting false hope in medicine. Although hope serves important functions—it can be ‘therapeutic’ and important for patients’ ‘self-identity as active agents’— (...)
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  15.  8
    The Idea of Equality in Environmental Ethics in advance.Giacomo Floris & Costanza Porro - forthcoming - Environmental Ethics.
    In recent decades, it has often been argued by environmental ethicists that human beings and the natural world ought to be considered as equals in some basic sense. The aim of this paper is to make sense of this view by examining what role, if any, the idea of equality ought to play in environmental ethics. Specifically, we have two aims: the first aim is to identify those environmental claims that are distinctively egalitarian. The second aim is to show these (...)
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  16.  25
    Recognizing Emily and Latisha: Inconsistent Effects of Name Stereotypicality on the Other-Race Effect.Marleen Stelter & Juliane Degner - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  17.  16
    Interview with Dr Evelyn Fox Keller.Marleen Wynants - 2005 - Bioessays 27 (7):748-758.
  18.  20
    Swamplab.Marleen Wynants - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-4.
    ‘SWAMPLAB’ is a strong case for intuitive insights through arts, sciences, and technologies to engage the self and establish meaningful social interactions including humans and non-humans. While zigzagging through processes of privatization, globalization, ecological, economic, social and political challenges, the power of such residencies or labs stems from the interplay with the local context and its habitants, in this case, nature reserve De Zegge, a 111 hectares swamp in the Northern part of Belgium. Mediation and participation are a core condition (...)
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  19.  70
    A hybrid formal theory of arguments, stories and criminal evidence.Floris J. Bex, Peter J. van Koppen, Henry Prakken & Bart Verheij - 2010 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 18 (2):123-152.
    This paper presents a theory of reasoning with evidence in order to determine the facts in a criminal case. The focus is on the process of proof, in which the facts of the case are determined, rather than on related legal issues, such as the admissibility of evidence. In the literature, two approaches to reasoning with evidence can be distinguished, one argument-based and one story-based. In an argument-based approach to reasoning with evidence, the reasons for and against the occurrence of (...)
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  20.  10
    De provincieraadsverkiezingen van 24 november 1991.Marleen Brans - 1992 - Res Publica 34 (2):245-262.
    On the 24th of november 1991 the Belgian voters elected the 716 members of the nine provincial councils.The socialists are the biggest losers of this election, with the Volksunie as a close second. Also the Christian Democrats suffered a serious decline, mainly caused by the loss of the CVP in Flanders. The electoral gain of the Flemish Liberals is neutralized by the decline of the Liberal party in Wallonia. The Greens gain 32 seats, the Far Right 35. These national aggregates (...)
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  21.  10
    Stoic Psychology, Classical Rhetoric, and Theories of Imagination in Western Philosophy.Dan Flory - 1996 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 29 (2):147 - 167.
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  22.  28
    Moral Education in Early-Modern Japan: The Kangien Confucian Academy of Hirose Tansō.Marleen Kassel - 1993 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 20 (4):297-310.
  23.  18
    Moving beyond the numbers: a participatory evaluation of sustainability in Dutch agriculture.Marleen Kerkhof, Annemarie Groot, Marien Borgstein & Leontien Bos-Gorter - 2010 - Agriculture and Human Values 27 (3):307-319.
    Environmental pollution, animal diseases, and food scandals have marked the agricultural sector in the Netherlands and elsewhere in the 1990s. The sector was high on the political and societal agenda and plans were developed to redesign the sector into a more sustainable direction. Generally, monitoring of the agricultural sector is done by means of quantitative indicators to measure social, ecological, and economic performance. To give more attention to the normative character of sustainable development, the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature, and (...)
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  24. Descartes’s Dualism.Marleen Rozemond - 1998 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    In her first book, Marleen Rozemond explicates Descartes's aim to provide a metaphysics that would accommodate mechanistic science and supplant scholasticism.
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  25.  16
    Combining explanation and argumentation in dialogue.Floris Bex & Douglas Walton - 2016 - Argument and Computation 7 (1):55-68.
  26.  21
    Exploiting Hope: How the Promise of New Medical Interventions Sustains Us—and Makes Us Vulnerable by Jeremy Snyder.Marleen Eijkholt - 2021 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 31 (3):21-26.
    Snyder’s book ‘Exploiting hope’ is as relevant as ever. His book is about the hope of desperate individuals seeking treatments that cannot be found in conventional medicine. The book engages with hope in the setting of phase I cancer trials, stem cell interventions, right-to-try laws and crowd funding, offering a new language to explain our discomfort with some of these quests. At the same time the book seems particularly relevant given current events. While despair and quests for novel interventions touched (...)
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  27.  26
    Solidarity in the Time of COVID-19?Floris Tomasini - 2021 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 30 (2):234-247.
    This article critically examines how solidarity has been enacted in the first 2 months of the COVID-19 pandemic, mainly, but not exclusively, from a United Kingdom perspective.1 Solidaristic strategies are framed in two ways: aspirations to overcome COVID-19 ; and those that are illusory, incompatible, contradictory, and disrupting of solidaristic ideals. Solidarity can also be understood more widely from a biocentric perspective. In the context of COVID-19 a lack of biocentric solidarity points to a probable cause of the pandemic; where (...)
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  28. What Am I? Descartes and the Mind–Body Problem.Marleen Rozemond - 2004 - Mind 113 (449):147-150.
  29.  31
    Screen Shots: When Patients and Families Publish Negative Health Care Narratives Online.Marleen Eijkholt, Jane Jankowski & Marilyn Fisher - 2017 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 7 (3):245-254.
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  30.  16
    The Hybrid Theory of Stories and Arguments Applied to the Simonshaven Case.Floris J. Bex - 2020 - Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (4):1152-1174.
    Bex analyzes the case with an informal version of his hybrid theory, which combines scenario construction and argumentation. Arguments based on evidence can be used to reason about alternative scenarios. Bex claims that his hybrid theory provides the best of both worlds by combining cognitively feasible story‐based reasoning with more detailed rational argumentation. However, like the argument‐based approach, the hybrid theory does not provide a systematic account of uncertainty.
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  31.  5
    : Desert Edens: Colonial Climate Engineering in the Age of Anxiety.Floris Winckel - 2024 - Isis 115 (2):425-426.
  32. Schemes of Inference, Conflict, and Preference in a Computational Model of Argument.Floris Bex & Chris Reed - 2011 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 23 (36).
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  33.  7
    Alternatieve consumptie als vorm van politieke participatie? : Een onderzoek naar de politieke motivatie voor het lidmaatschap van Voedselteams in Vlaanderen.Marleen Baetens & Marc Hooghe - 2004 - Res Publica 46 (1):33-55.
    Despite the fact that various authors have expressed concern about a general decline of civic engagement in Western societies, other indicators portray a transition from traditional and formal participation formats to more informal participation forms. This replacement thesis, however, entails the question whether these new forms can still be regarded as a form of political participation. The Alternative Food Circles in Belgium can be considered as a typical grass-roots example of 'political consumerism', which is portrayed as a contemporary alternative for (...)
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  34.  19
    Looking Backward—Fondly: Personal and Professional Texts/Contexts Derived from Knowing Lyman Tower Sargent for Forty Years.Marleen S. Barr - 2020 - Utopian Studies 31 (2):287-293.
    Lyman Tower Sargent has had a personal and professional impact upon me. I cannot separate the effects of reading his work from engaging with him as a mentor—and more. Hence, this piece will focus on personal and professional texts and their contexts. I revisit Sargent's “An Ambiguous Legacy: The Role and Position of Women in the English Eutopia,” an essay he contributed to my Future Females: A Critical Anthology. I include passages from my novels Oy Pioneer! and Oy Feminist Planets: (...)
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  35.  20
    On database query languages for K-relations.Floris Geerts & Antonella Poggi - 2010 - Journal of Applied Logic 8 (2):173-185.
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  36.  10
    Topological elementary equivalence of regular semi‐algebraic sets in three‐dimensional space.Floris Geerts & Bart Kuijpers - 2018 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 64 (6):435-463.
    We consider semi‐algebraic sets and properties of these sets that are expressible by sentences in first‐order logic over the reals. We are interested in first‐order properties that are invariant under topological transformations of the ambient space. Two semi‐algebraic sets are called topologically elementarily equivalent if they cannot be distinguished by such topological first‐order sentences. So far, only semi‐algebraic sets in one and two‐dimensional space have been considered in this context. Our contribution is a natural characterisation of topological elementary equivalence of (...)
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  37.  7
    Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, Who’s the Bravest of Them All? Female Heroism and Emancipated Princesses in Once Upon a Time.Florie Maurin - 2022 - Iris 42.
    In Storybrooke, the city in which Once Upon a Time takes place, live many characters of fantastic stories. A plethora of princesses resides in this town, and their history, like their representation, undergoes important variations. Moving away from the role of “damsel in distress” often found in fairy tales and their adaptations, Emma, Snow White or Little Red Riding Hood, gain independence and freedom. However, clichés are tough and heroines often get involved in stereotypical love stories, where motherhood seems to (...)
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  38.  24
    The End of the West: The Once and Future Europe / An Identity for Europe: The Relevance of Multiculturalism in EU Construction.Floris Meens - 2014 - The European Legacy 19 (7):936-938.
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  39.  14
    Giorgio Agamben (2020), Homo Sacer. De soevereine macht en het naakte leven.Floris Schleicher - 2021 - Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 113 (2):322-325.
    Amsterdam University Press is a leading publisher of academic books, journals and textbooks in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Our aim is to make current research available to scholars, students, innovators, and the general public. AUP stands for scholarly excellence, global presence, and engagement with the international academic community.
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  40.  73
    Did he jump or was he pushed?: Abductive practical reasoning.Floris Bex, Trevor Bench-Capon & Katie Atkinson - 2009 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 17 (2):79-99.
    In this paper, we present a particular role for abductive reasoning in law by applying it in the context of an argumentation scheme for practical reasoning. We present a particular scheme, based on an established scheme for practical reasoning, that can be used to reason abductively about how an agent might have acted to reach a particular scenario, and the motivations for doing so. Plausibility here depends on a satisfactory explanation of why this particular agent followed these motivations in the (...)
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  41. Analyzing stories using schemes.Floris Bex - 2008 - In Hendrik Kaptein (ed.), Legal Evidence and Proof: Statistics, Stories, Logic. Ashgate.
     
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  42.  75
    Legal stories and the process of proof.Floris Bex & Bart Verheij - 2013 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 21 (3):253-278.
    In this paper, we continue our research on a hybrid narrative-argumentative approach to evidential reasoning in the law by showing the interaction between factual reasoning (providing a proof for ‘what happened’ in a case) and legal reasoning (making a decision based on the proof). First we extend the hybrid theory by making the connection with reasoning towards legal consequences. We then emphasise the role of legal stories (as opposed to the factual stories of the hybrid theory). Legal stories provide a (...)
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  43. Can Matter Think? The Mind-Body Problem in the Clarke-Collins Correspondence.Marleen Rozemond - 2009 - In Jon Miller (ed.), Topics in Early Modern Philosophy of Mind. Springer.
    The Clarke-Collins correspondence was widely read and frequently printed during the 18th century. Its central topic is the question whether matter can think. Samuel Clarke defends the immateriality of the human soul against Anthony Collins’ materialism. Clarke argues that consciousness must belong to an indivisible entity, and matter is divisible. Collins contends that consciousness could belong to a composite subject by emerging from material qualities that belong to its parts. While many early modern thinkers assumed that this is not possible, (...)
     
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  44.  10
    The feeling of the passage of time against the time of the external clock.Sylvie Droit-Volet, Florie Monier & Natalia N. Martinelli - 2023 - Consciousness and Cognition 113 (C):103535.
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  45.  48
    Exploring ethical justification for self-demand amputation.Floris Tomasini - 2006 - Ethics and Medicine 22 (2).
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  46.  83
    Is post-mortem harm possible? Understanding death harm and grief.Floris Tomasini - 2008 - Bioethics 23 (8):441-449.
    The purpose of this article is not to affirm or deny particular philosophical positions, but to explore the limits of intelligibility about what post-mortem harm means, especially in the light of improper post-mortem procedures at Bristol and Alder Hey hospitals in the late 1990s. The parental claims of post-mortem harm to dead children at Alder Hey Hospital are reviewed from five different philosophical perspectives, eventually settling on a crucial difference of perspective about how we understand harm to the dead. On (...)
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  47. Towards a formal account of reasoning about evidence: Argumentation schemes and generalisations. [REVIEW]Floris Bex, Henry Prakken, Chris Reed & Douglas Walton - 2003 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 11 (2-3):125-165.
    This paper studies the modelling of legal reasoning about evidence within general theories of defeasible reasoning and argumentation. In particular, Wigmore's method for charting evidence and its use by modern legal evidence scholars is studied in order to give a formal underpinning in terms of logics for defeasible argumentation. Two notions turn out to be crucial, viz. argumentation schemes and empirical generalisations.
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  48.  81
    Condition B effects in two simple steps.Floris Roelofsen - 2010 - Natural Language Semantics 18 (2):115-140.
    This paper is concerned with constraints on the interpretation of pronominal anaphora, in particular Condition B effects. It aims to contribute to a particular approach, initiated by Reinhart (Anaphora and semantic interpretation, 1983) and further developed elsewhere. It proposes a modification of Reinhart’s Interface Rule, and argues that the resulting theory compares favorably with others, while being compatible with independently motivated general hypotheses about the interaction between different interpretive mechanisms.
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  49.  29
    Crying and mood change: A cross-cultural study.Marleen C. Becht & Ad J. J. M. Vingerhoets - 2002 - Cognition and Emotion 16 (1):87-101.
  50. The Achilles Argument and the Nature of Matter in the Clarke-Collins Correspondenc.Marleen Rozemond - 2008 - In Tom Lennon & Robert Stainton (eds.), The Achilles of Rational Psychology.
    The Clarke-Collins correspondence was widely read and frequently printed during the 18th century. Its central topic is the question whether matter can think, or be conscious. Samuel Clarke defends the immateriality of the subject of the mental against Anthony Collins’ materialism. This paper examines important assumptions about the nature of body that play a role in their debate. Clarke argued that consciousness requires an “individual being”, an entity with some sort of significant unity as its subject. They agree that body (...)
     
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