Results for 'William Bradford'

991 found
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  1.  28
    Philosophical commitments and therapy approach preferences among psychotherapy trainees.William J. Lyddon & Evan Bradford - 1994 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 15 (1):1-15.
    Examined the role of philosophical beliefs in psychotherapy approach preference. It was hypothesized that trainees would prefer approaches that most closely correspond to their personal philosophical beliefs. 59 students were given audiotaped presentations. Three dimensions of the Ss' philosophical commitments were examined in relation to their relative preferences for 3 therapy approaches: rationalist, constructivist and behavioral. Results show that Ss tended to prefer a specific approach that most corresponded to their own ontological, epistemological and causal commitments. This suggests a role (...)
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  2. Beyond Good and Evil: The Commensurability of Corporate Profits and Human Rights.William Bradford - 2012 - Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics and Public Policy 26 (1):141-280.
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  3.  32
    Beyond reparations: Justice as indigenism.William Bradford - 2005 - Human Rights Review 6 (3):5-79.
    For the peoples who have inhabited, since time immemorial, the lands within the external borders of the U.S., remediation of genocide, land theft, and ethnocide is a pressing issue. However, monetary reparations would frustrate the reacquisition of the American Indian capacity to self-determine on ancestral lands. Because the injustice at the core of U.S. history is neither broadly acknowledged nor deeply understood, Part I provides historical foundation and sketches the factual predicate to the American Indian claim for redress. Part II (...)
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  4. Views about science—technology—society interactions held by college students in general education physics and sts courses.Cristine Schoneweg Bradford, Peter A. Rubba & William L. Harkness - 1995 - Science Education 79 (4):355-373.
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  5. Acknowledging and rectifying the genocide of american indians: "Why is it that they carry their lives on their fingernails?".William C. Bradford - 2006 - Metaphilosophy 37 (3-4):515–543.
    Although genocide—a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves—remains a sickeningly frequent phenomenon in the twenty‐first century, it is not an immutable aspect of the human condition. Genocide is a choice, and the civilized world must choose its demise. The unique experience of American Indians—a group subjected to genocide in the process of the creation and expansion of the United States—presents a (...)
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  6.  23
    Nonprofit Health Care Organizations and Universal Health Care Coverage.Terry Andrus, William Cox, Bradford Gray, Cleve Killingsworth, Paula Steiner & Bruce McPherson - 2008 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 45 (1):7-14.
    Health care reforms, in particular the expansion of public and/or private health care benefit coverage to some or all population groups, is becoming an increasingly hot topic for discussion—and in some cases for action—at all levels of government. With almost 16% of Americans estimated to be uninsured for at least part of the year, opinion polls show health care near the top of the general public’s list of concerns. Little wonder that presidential candidates for the 2008 election are incorporating ‘‘universal (...)
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  7.  46
    Book Notes. [REVIEW]Bradford R. Cokelet, Yusuf Has, Todd P. Hedrick, Sean McKeever & David A. Williams - 2004 - Ethics 115 (1):187-191.
  8.  6
    The Social Basis of Roman Power in Asia Minor.C. Bradford Welles, William M. Ramsay & J. G. C. Anderson - 1943 - American Journal of Philology 64 (4):491.
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  9.  6
    Papyri from Tebtunis.C. Bradford Welles, Elinor Mullett Husselman, Arthur E. R. Boak & William F. Edgerton - 1946 - American Journal of Philology 67 (1):82.
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  10. Agnew, Clive and Elton, Lewis (1998) Lecturing in Geography, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire: Cheltenham & Gloucester College of Higher Education, Geography Discipline Network. Agnew, John and Corbridge, Stuart (1995) Mastering Space, New York: Routledge. Ainley, Rosa (ed.)(1998) New Frontiers of Space, Bodies and Gender, London. [REVIEW]Gregory H. Aplet, Nels Johnson, Jeffrey T. Olson, V. Sample, Barbara Sundberg Baudot, William R. Moomaw, Greenhaven Press, Jacky Birnie, Kristine Mason O’Connor & Michael Bradford - 2000 - Ethics, Place and Environment 3 (1):125-128.
     
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  11.  8
    The impact of military presence in local labor markets on the employment of women.Mady Wechsler Segal, David R. Segal, William W. Falk & Bradford Booth - 2000 - Gender and Society 14 (2):318-332.
    This article uses Public Use Microsample data drawn from the 1990 census to explore the relationship between military presence, defined as the percentage of the local labor force in the active-duty armed forces, and women's employment and earnings across local labor market areas in the United States. Comparisons of local rates of unemployment and mean women's earnings are made between those LMAs in which the military plays a disproportionate role in the local labor market and those in which military presence (...)
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  12.  35
    William James and Methodological Pluralism: Bridging the Qualitative and Quantitative Divide.Bradford Wiggins - 2009 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 30 (3).
    In recent years pluralism has emerged as a popular approach for overcoming the method wars in psychological research, with advocates of mixed-methods approaches arguing for the integration of qualitative and quantitative methods. They contend that a plurality of methods will allow researchers to draw upon the strengths of one method to overcome the weaknesses of another. In this article I argue that mixed-methods approaches fall short of a true methodological pluralism in the tradition of William James because they rely (...)
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  13.  2
    Thickening the discussion: William James and contemporary educational psychology.Bradford S. Woods & P. Karen Murphy - 2002 - Educational Theory 52 (1):43-59.
  14. What makes time different from space?Bradford Skow - 2007 - Noûs 41 (2):227–252.
    No one denies that time and space are different; and it is easy to catalog differences between them. I can point my finger toward the west, but I can’t point my finger toward the future. If I choose, I can now move to the left, but I cannot now choose to move toward the past. And (as D. C. Williams points out) for many of us, our attitudes toward time differ from our attitudes toward space. We want to maximize our (...)
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  15.  13
    Creation's Diversity: Voices from Theology and Science. Edited by William B. Drees, Hubert Messinger, and T. A. Smedes.Bradford McCall - 2011 - Heythrop Journal 52 (2):346-347.
  16.  16
    Can God Be Free? By William L. Rowe.Bradford Mccall - 2009 - Heythrop Journal 50 (2):331-332.
  17.  66
    God, Actually: Why God Probably Exists, Why Jesus Was Probably Divine, and Why the ‘Rational’ Objections to Religion Are Unconvincing. By Roy Williams.Bradford McCall - 2011 - Heythrop Journal 52 (2):345-346.
  18.  27
    The End of Christianity: Finding a Good God in an Evil World. By William A. Dembski.Bradford McCall - 2011 - Heythrop Journal 52 (2):324-324.
  19. 'A Burning Bush': A New Light On The Relations Between William Cowper And John Newton.Mary Bradford Whiting - 1926 - Hibbert Journal 23:303-13.
     
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  20. Religion and the Challenges of Science. By William Sweet and Richard Feist, eds. [REVIEW]Bradford McCall - 2008 - Heythrop Journal 49 (4):705-706.
  21.  7
    The Allure of Things: Process and Object in Contemporary Philosophy Edited by Roland Faber and Andrew Goffey. [REVIEW]Bradford McCall - 2016 - William James Studies 12 (2).
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  22. By William A. Dembski.William A. Dembski - unknown
    I have before me a letter dated January 5, 2000 from Bradford Wilson, the executive director of the NAS. It begins, “I really enjoyed your contribution to the recent symposium in the January issue of First Things, so much so that I’ve also decided to invite you to join the NAS. Many of your fellow contributors including Robert George, Jeffrey Satinover, and Father Neuhaus are among our current members, and I think you’d find it well worth your while if (...)
     
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  23. Nomic dependencies & contrary-to-fact conditionals.William Boardman - unknown
    Consider Dretske's measles example (from page 74 in his Knowldege and the Flow of Information (MIT/Bradford: 1981) ): since the question of whether Alice's being one of Herman's children carries the information that she has the measles is a question about conditional probabilities, we must be careful about our specification of the condition, the antecedent. Although we are to suppose that it is a true generalization that all of Herman's children have the measles, since that is a coincidence, we (...)
     
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  24. Paul Gross's dilemma: An open letter to the national association of scholars in response to Paul Gross's article on intelligent design in the nas's september 2003 issue of science insights.William Dembski - manuscript
    I have before me a letter dated January 5, 2000 from Bradford Wilson, the executive director of the NAS. It begins, “I really enjoyed your contribution to the recent symposium in the January issue of First Things, so much so that I’ve also decided to invite you to join the NAS. Many of your fellow contributors including Robert George, Jeffrey Satinover, and Father Neuhaus are among our current members, and I think you’d find it well worth your while if (...)
     
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  25.  18
    Marlene Bradford. Scanning the Skies: A History of Tornado Forecasting. 256 pp., illus., tables, notes, bibl., index. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001. $24.95. [REVIEW]William B. Meyer - 2003 - Isis 94 (4):779-780.
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  26.  99
    Knowing Who.Steven Boër & William Lycan - 1986 - MIT Press.
    This is the first detailed study to explore the little-understood notions of "knowing who someone is," "knowing a person's identity," and related locutions. It locates these notions within the context of a general theory of believing and a semantical theory of belief- and knowledge-ascriptions.The books's main contention is that what one knows, when one knows who someone is, is not normally an identity in the numerical sense of "a = b," but rather a certain sort of predication to know who (...)
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  27. Gavagai Again.Robert Williams - 2008 - Synthese 164 (2):235 - 259.
    Quine (1960, "Word and object". Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, ch. 2) claims that there are a variety of equally good schemes for translating or interpreting ordinary talk. 'Rabbit' might be taken to divide its reference over rabbits, over temporal slices of rabbits, or undetached parts of rabbits, without significantly affecting which sentences get classified as true and which as false. This is the basis of his famous 'argument from below' to the conclusion that there can be no fact of the (...)
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  28.  12
    From Physical to Spiritual Errand: The Immigrant Experience in John Winthrop, William Bradford, and Samuel Danforth.Justyna Fruzińska - 2015 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 5 (1):149-159.
    The paper analyzes early colonial representations of the New World, connected with immigration of the first- and second-generation religious dissenters in what was to become America. Taking into account the well-documented influence of Puritans on American identity, the paper elaborates on the Puritans’ and Pilgrims’ mindsets as they arrived in the New World, connected not only with their religious beliefs but most of all with a practical need to organize themselves effectively. Be it in John Winthrop’s “A Modell of Christian (...)
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  29.  34
    Consciousness William G. Lycan Collection «A Bradford Book» Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 1987, xvi, 165 p.Daniel Laurier - 1992 - Dialogue 31 (4):723-.
  30.  26
    Steven E. Boër and William G. Lycan. Knowing who. Bradford books. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., and London, 1986, xiv + 212 pp. [REVIEW]Scott Soames - 1988 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 53 (2):657-659.
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  31.  12
    Human subjects in medical experimentation: a sociological study of the conduct and regulation of clinical research.Bradford H. Gray - 1975 - Huntington, N.Y.: R.E. Krieger Pub. Co..
  32. A Teleological Strategy for Solving the Meta-Problem of Consciousness.Bradford Saad - 2019 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 26 (9-10):205-216.
    Following Chalmers, I take the most promising response to the meta-problem to be a realizationist one on which (roughly) consciousness plays a role in realizing the processes that explain why we think that there is a hard problem of consciousness. I favour an interactionist dualist version of realizationism on which experiences are non-physical states that non-redundantly cause problem judgments. This view is subject to the challenges of specifying laws that would enable experiences to cause problem judgments and of explaining why (...)
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  33. Shame and Necessity.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Apeiron 27 (1):45-76.
  34.  3
    The Wisdom of the Body: Rev. and Enl. Ed. [Illustr.].Walter Bradford Cannon - 1939 - Peter Smith.
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  35.  15
    Bioethics commissions: What can we learn from past successes and failures.Bradford H. Gray - 1995 - In Ruth Ellen Bulger, Elizabeth Meyer Bobby & Harvey V. Fineberg (eds.), Society's Choices: Social and Ethical Decision Making in Biomedicine. National Academy Press. pp. 261--306.
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  36. On the Elements of Being: I.Donald C. Williams - 2004 - In Tim Crane & Katalin Farkas (eds.), Metaphysics: a guide and anthology. Oxford University Press UK.
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  37.  32
    Shame and Necessity.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Berkeley: University of California Press.
    We tend to suppose that the ancient Greeks had primitive ideas of the self, of responsibility, freedom, and shame, and that now humanity has advanced from these to a more refined moral consciousness. Bernard Williams's original and radical book questions this picture of Western history. While we are in many ways different from the Greeks, Williams claims that the differences are not to be traced to a shift in these basic conceptions of ethical life. We are more like the ancients (...)
  38. Lessons from the Void: What Boltzmann Brains Teach.Bradford Saad - forthcoming - Analytic Philosophy.
    Some physical theories predict that almost all brains in the universe are Boltzmann brains, i.e. short-lived disembodied brains that are accidentally assembled as a result of thermodynamic or quantum fluctuations. Physicists and philosophers of physics widely regard this proliferation as unacceptable, and so take its prediction as a basis for rejecting these theories. But the putatively unacceptable consequences of this prediction follow only given certain philosophical assumptions. This paper develops a strategy for shielding physical theorizing from the threat of Boltzmann (...)
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  39.  51
    Stand Out of Our Light: Freedom and Resistance in the Attention Economy.James Williams - 2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    Former Google advertising strategist, now Oxford-trained philosopher James Williams launches a plea to society and to the tech industry to help ensure that the technology we all carry with us every day does not distract us from pursuing our true goals in life. As information becomes ever more plentiful, the resource that is becoming more scarce is our attention. In this 'attention economy', we need to recognise the fundamental impacts of our new information environment on our lives in order to (...)
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  40. Consequences of Calibration.Robert Williams & Richard Pettigrew - forthcoming - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science:14.
    Drawing on a passage from Ramsey's Truth and Probability, we formulate a simple, plausible constraint on evaluating the accuracy of credences: the Calibration Test. We show that any additive, continuous accuracy measure that passes the Calibration Test will be strictly proper. Strictly proper accuracy measures are known to support the touchstone results of accuracy-first epistemology, for example vindications of probabilism and conditionalization. We show that our use of Calibration is an improvement on previous such appeals by showing how it answers (...)
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  41.  12
    Morality: An Introduction to Ethics.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Bernard Williams's remarkable essay on morality confronts the problems of writing moral philosophy, and offers a stimulating alternative to more systematic accounts which seem nevertheless to have left all the important issues somewhere off the page. Williams explains, analyses and distinguishes a number of key positions, from the purely amoral to notions of subjective or relative morality, testing their coherence before going on to explore the nature of 'goodness' in relation to responsibilities and choice, roles, standards, and human nature. The (...)
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  42. Publicity and Common Commitment to Believe.J. R. G. Williams - 2021 - Erkenntnis 88 (3):1059-1080.
    Information can be public among a group. Whether or not information is public matters, for example, for accounts of interdependent rational choice, of communication, and of joint intention. A standard analysis of public information identifies it with (some variant of) common belief. The latter notion is stipulatively defined as an infinite conjunction: for p to be commonly believed is for it to believed by all members of a group, for all members to believe that all members believe it, and so (...)
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  43. Internal Reasons and the Obscurity of Blame.Bernard Williams - 1989 - In William J. Prior (ed.), Reason and Moral Judgment, Logos, vol. 10. Santa Clara University.
  44. Developmental Constraints, Generative Entrenchment, and the Innate-Acquired Distinction.William C. Wimsatt - 1986 - In William Bechtel (ed.), Integrating Scientific Disciplines. University of Chicago Press. pp. 185--208.
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  45.  55
    The Logical Analysis of Colour Statements in Wittgenstein’s Tractatus.Bradford F. Blue - 2021 - Philosophical Investigations 45 (2):107-129.
    Philosophical Investigations, Volume 45, Issue 2, Page 107-129, April 2022.
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  46.  48
    The “Epidemic” of Cheating Depends on Its Definition: A Critique of Inferring the Moral Quality of “Cheating in Any Form”.Bradford Barnhardt - 2016 - Ethics and Behavior 26 (4):330-343.
    The incidence and moral implications of cheating depend on how it is defined and measured. Research that defines and operationalizes cheating as an inventory of acts, that is, “cheating in any form,” has often fueled concern that cheating is reaching “epidemic proportions.” Such inventory measures appear, however, to conflate moral and administrative conceptions of the problem. Inasmuch as the immorality of behavior is a function of moral judgment, academic misconduct is immoral only when it is intentional, and the greatest moral (...)
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  47. Achievement.Gwen Bradford - 2015 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Gwen Bradford presents the first systematic account of what achievements are, and why they are worth the effort. She argues that more things count as achievements than we might have thought, and offers a new perfectionist theory of value in which difficulty, perhaps surprisingly, plays a central part in characterizing achievements.
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  48.  74
    When Aristotelian virtuous agents acquire the fine for themselves, what are they acquiring?Bradford Jean-Hyuk Kim - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (4):674-692.
    In the Nicomachean Ethics, one of Aristotle’s most frequent characterizations of the virtuous agent is that she acts for the sake of the fine (to kalon). In IX.8, this pursuit of the fine receives a more specific description; virtuous agents maximally assign the fine to themselves. In this paper, I answer the question of how we are to understand the fine as individually and maximally acquirable. I analyze Nicomachean Ethics IX.7, where Aristotle highlights virtuous activity (energeia) as central to the (...)
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  49.  59
    Objective Becoming.Bradford Skow - 2015 - Oxford: Oxford University Press UK.
    What does the passage of time consist in? There are some suggestive metaphors. âEvents approach us, pass us, and recede from us, like sticks and leaves floating on the river of time.â âWe are moving from the past into the future, like ships sailing into an unknown ocean.â There is surely something right and deep about these metaphors. But how close are they to the literal truth? In this book Bradford Skow argues that they are far from the literal (...)
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  50.  26
    Responsibility.Garrath Williams - 2012 - In Ruth Chadwick (ed.), Encyclopedia of Applied Ethics (Second Edition). pp. 821-828.
    Discusses what is involved in describing a person as responsible: she has responsibilities that she is duty-bound to undertake, and may be held responsible when she fails to fulfill these. Considers why societies and organizations divide responsibilities between persons. Also considers how questions of responsibility arise in the spheres of morality, law, organizational life and politics, and how different modes of holding responsible may be appropriate in each. Concludes with a brief discussion of some questions about collective responsibility.
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