OAI Archive: Explore Bristol Research

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100 entries most recently downloaded from the archive "Explore Bristol Research"

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  1. Introduction: Stoicism in Modern German Philosophy.Kurt W. Lampe & Andrew Benjamin - 2020 - In Kurt Lampe & Andrew E. Benjamin (eds.), German Stoicisms: From Hegel to Sloterdijk. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Though this chapter is co-authored, I was responsible for eight of its nine sections. Rather than foreshadowing the chapters to come in this edited volume, I have attempted to synthesize and supplement them in order to present an initial picture of the significance of Stoicism for German philosophy roughly since the late 19th century. With the exception of Friedrich Nietzsche, this vast field of Stoic reception has received almost no attention before. Particularly noteworthy elements in this chapter include sections on (...)
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  2. German Stoicisms: From Hegel to Sloterdijk.Kurt Lampe & Andrew E. Benjamin (eds.) - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Stoicism has had a diverse reception in German philosophy. This is the first interpretive study of shared themes and dialogues between late nineteenth-century and twentieth-century experts on classical antiquity and philosophers. Assessing how modern philosophers have incorporated ancient resources with the context of German philosophy, chapters in this volume are devoted to philosophical giants such as Friedrich Nietzsche, Wilhelm Dilthey, Walter Benjamin, Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, Hans Jonas, Hans Blumenberg, and Peter Sloterdijk. Among the ancient Stoics, the focus is on (...)
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  3. Rigour, Proof and Soundness.Oliver M. W. Tatton-Brown - 2020 - Dissertation, University of Bristol
    The initial motivating question for this thesis is what the standard of rigour in modern mathematics amounts to: what makes a proof rigorous, or fail to be rigorous? How is this judged? A new account of rigour is put forward, aiming to go some way to answering these questions. Some benefits of the norm of rigour on this account are discussed. The account is contrasted with other remarks that have been made about mathematical proof and its workings, and is tested (...)
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  4. How Different is Heterodox Economists’ Thinking on Teaching?:A Contrastive Evaluation of Interview Data.Andrew Mearman, Sebastian Berger & Danielle Guizzo - forthcoming - Review of Political Economy.
    This paper explores how differently heterodox and mainstream economists think about teaching. It draws on data from interviews with sixteen leading heterodox economists, which we analyse according to the principles of thematic analysis. We find considerable variety in heterodoxy. Further, we find evidence that suggests at least some heterodox economists share some elements with mainstream counterparts: on pedagogical practice, the role of their teachers, and scant explicit knowledge of educational philosophy. However, we discover different heterodox educational goals when compared to (...)
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  5. Whither Political Economy?:Evaluating the CORE Project as a Response to Calls for Change in Economics Teaching.Andrew Mearman, Danielle Guizzo & Sebastian Berger - 2018 - Review of Political Economy 30 (2).
    This article offers a critique of a major recent initiative in economics teaching: the CORE project. CORE emerged in the wake of the global financial crisis, which was also something of a crisis for economics. The article deploys four evaluative criteria to pose four questions of CORE that address the demands of the student movement. CORE claims to be innovative and responsive to criticism. However, the article concludes that its reforms are relatively minor and superficial. CORE, like curricula that preceded (...)
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  6. ‘TAMA’ economics under siege in Brazil:the threats of curriculum governance reform.Danielle Guizzo, Andrew Mearman & Sebastian Berger - 2021 - Review of International Political Economy 28 (1).
    This article considers the curriculum framework governing economics teaching in Brazilian higher education. We assess economics teaching according to three criteria: its pluralism or monism regarding economic theory and method; its treatment of economics’ wider socio-political dimensions; and its educational philosophical approach and goals. Against these criteria we conclude that Brazilian economics has been pluralist and open, particularly in comparison to other international governance frameworks. However, we argue that Brazil’s prevailing TAMA–There Are Many Alternatives–framework is threatened by strong disciplinary, institutional (...)
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  7. Isn’t Everyone a Little OCD?Lucienne Spencer & Havi Carel - 2021 - Philosophy of Medicine 2 (1).
    This article develops the concept of wrongful depathologization, in which a psychiatric disorder is simultaneously stigmatized and trivialized. We use OCD as a case study to argue that cumulatively these two effects generate a profound epistemic injustice to OCD sufferers, and possibly to those with other mental disorders. We show that even seemingly positive stereotypes attached to mental disorders give rise to both testimonial injustice and wilful hermeneutical ignorance. We thus expose an insidious form of epistemic harm that has been (...)
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  8. Freeing uneven and combined development from the whip of external necessity: toward a synthesis with Dussel’s liberation philosophy.Aslak-Antti Oksanen - forthcoming - Cambridge Review of International Affairs.
    This article argues that while uneven and combined development scholars have made great contributions to theorising the causal implications of societal multiplicity, the overtly normative contributions of U&CD scholarship remain thin. To address this gap, I propose a synthesis between U&CD and Enrique Dussel’s normatively oriented liberation philosophy. To enable this, U&CD must be stripped of its more causally oriented concepts, like the ‘whip of external necessity', which constrains the scope of normative analysis by confining it to sovereign states. Incorporating (...)
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  9. Towards ever more extended epistemologies: pluriversality and decolonisation of knowledges in participatory inquiry.Patricia C. Gaya - forthcoming - In Danny Burns, Joanna Howard & Sonia Ospina (eds.), Handbook of Participatory Inquiry.
    This chapter examines extended epistemologies and extended epistemology within participatory inquiry. It positions the notion of extended epistemology alongside contemporary epistemological debates—predominantly originating in the Global South—on epistemicide, colonisation of knowledge, and knowledge democracy. The chapter highlights the substantial contributions of Heron and Reason’s extended epistemology to participatory research, including inspiring methodological innovations, revitalising quality criteria, and establishing legitimacy for more expansive approaches to knowledge-production. Simultaneously, I argue for greater engagement with other distinctive epistemologies and intersecting subaltern perspectives which inform (...)
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  10. Materialism:A Philosophical Inquiry.Robin Gordon Brown & James Ladyman - 2019 - New York: Routledge. Edited by James Ladyman.
    The doctrine of materialism is one of the most controversial in the history of ideas. For much of its history it has been aligned with toleration and englightened thinking, but it has also aroused strong, often violent, passions among both its opponents and proponents. This book explores the deelopment of materialism in an engaging and thought-provoking way and defends the form it takes in the twenty-first century.
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  11. Intension in the Physics of Computation:Lessons from the debate about Landauer's principle.James A. C. Ladyman - 2018 - In Michael E. Cuffaro & Samuel C. Fletcher (eds.), Physical Perspectives on Computation, Computational Perspectives on Physics. Cambridge University Press.
  12. Structure not Selection.James A. C. Ladyman - 2021 - In Contemporary Scientific Realism and the Challenge from the History of Science.
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  13. What is the Quantum Face of Realism.James A. C. Ladyman - 2019 - In Quantum Worlds: Perspectives on the Ontology of Quantum Mechanics. Cambridge.
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  14. In defence of ordinary objects and a naturalistic answer to the special composition question.Jonas M. Waechter & James A. C. Ladyman - 2018 - In Javier Cumpa & Bill Brewer (eds.), The Nature of Ordinary Objects. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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  15. How Quantum is Quantum Counterfactual Communication?Jonte R. Hance, James Ladyman & John Rarity - 2021 - Foundations of Physics 51 (1):1-17.
    Quantum Counterfactual Communication is the recently-proposed idea of using quantum physics to send messages between two parties, without any matter/energy transfer associated with the bits sent. While this has excited massive interest, both for potential ‘unhackable’ communication, and insight into the foundations of quantum mechanics, it has been asked whether this process is essentially quantum, or could be performed classically. We examine counterfactual communication, both classical and quantum, and show that the protocols proposed so far for sending signals that don’t (...)
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  16. Measuring complexity.Karoline Wiesner & James Ladyman - unknown
    Complexity is heterogenous, involving nonlinearity, self-organisation, diversity, adaptive behaviour, among other things. It is therefore obviously worth asking whether purported measures of complexity measure aggregate phenomena, or individual aspects of complexity and if so which. This paper uses a recently developed rigorous framework for understanding complexity to answer this question about measurement. The approach is two-fold: find measures of individual aspects of complexity on the one hand, and explain measures of complexity on the other. We illustrate the conceptual framework of (...)
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  17. Scientism with a Humane Face.James Ladyman - 2018 - In Jeroen de Ridder, Rik Peels & Rene van Woudenberg (eds.), Scientism: Prospects and Problems. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Scientism is usually thought of as sinful, but it can be redeemed for our salvation. Scientism should not be dogmatic, nor should it ignore the actual limitations to current science. Other modes of inquiry deserve epistemic respect, and scientists should not be deferred to about matters beyond their expertise. However, limits should not be placed on what science can study and we cannot say in advance what the limits of future science will be. Where science conflicts with common sense, religion, (...)
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  18. An Apology for Naturalized Metaphysics.James Ladyman - 2017 - In Matthew H. Slater & Zanja Yudell (eds.), Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Science: New Essays. New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press.
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  19. Don’t Play Politics with Academic Freedom.James Ladyman - unknown
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  20. The New College is a Business Designed to Profit from Fear.James Ladyman - unknown
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  21. How HEFCE and the Research Councils are Undermining Science and the National Interest.James Ladyman - 2011 - Science in Parliament 68.
  22. In Praise of Specialization.James Ladyman - 2015 - Philosophers' Magazine 53.
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  23. Things aren't what they used to be: on the immateriality of matter and the reality of relations.James Ladyman - 2015 - In C. Cox, J. Jaskey & S. Malik (eds.), Realism Materialism Art.
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  24. Are there individuals in physics, and if so what are they?James Ladyman - 2015 - In A. Guay & T. Pradeu (eds.), Individuals across the sciences.
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  25. The Foundations of Structuralism and the Metaphysics of Relations.James Ladyman - 2016 - In A. Marmodoro & D. Yates (eds.), The Metaphysics of Relations.
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  26. Going Round in Circles: Landauer vs. Norton on the Thermodynamics of Computation.James Ladyman & Katie Robertson - 2014 - Entropy 16.
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  27. Philosophy of Science.James A. C. Ladyman - 2012 - In Research Techniques for Biomedical Scientists: A Student's Guide to Recognising Best Practice in Research.
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  28. Free Inquiry:The Haldane Principle and the Significance of Scientific Research.Alexander J. Bird & James A. C. Ladyman - 2013 - Social Epistemology 2 (7).
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  29. Theories and Theoretical Terms.James A. C. Ladyman - 2005 - In Donald Borchert (ed.), Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  30. Physics and Computation:The Statues of Landauer's Principle.James A. C. Ladyman - 2007 - In S. B. Cooper, B. Löwe & A. Sorbi (eds.), Computation and Logic in the Real World. CiE 2007. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 4497.
    Realism about computation is the view that whether or not a particular physical system is performing a particular computation is at least sometimes a mindindependent feature of reality. The caveat ’at least sometimes’ is necessary here because a realist about computation need not believe that all instances of computation should be realistically construed. The computational theory of mind presupposes realism about computation. If whether or not the human nervous system implements particular computations is not a natural fact about the world (...)
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  31. Review of 'Identity in Physics: A Historical, Philosophical, and Formal Analysis', French, S.Jac Ladyman - 2007 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007.
    Review of Steven French, Décio Krause: 'Identity in Physics: A Historical, Philosophical and Formal Analysis', Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.
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  32. What Does it Mean to Say a Physical System is Implements a Computation?Jac Ladyman - 2009 - Theoretical Computer Science 410 (4-5).
    When we are concerned with the logical form of a computation and its formal properties, then it can be theoretically described in terms of mathematical and logical functions and relations between abstract entities. However, actual computation is realised by some physical process, and the latter is of course subject to physical laws and the laws of thermodynamics in particular. An issue that has been the subject of much controversy is that of whether or not there are any systematic connections between (...)
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  33. Explanation and Scientific realism.Jac Ladyman - 2005 - Metascience 14.
    Review Symposium on Peter Lipton: 'Inference to the Best Explanation', London: Routledge, 2004.
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  34. Idealisation.Jac Ladyman - unknown
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  35. Modality and Constructive Empiricism: a reply to Monton and van Fraassen.Jac Ladyman - 2004 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 55.
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  36. What's Really Wrong with Constructive Empiricism? Van Fraassen and the Metaphysics of Modality.Jac Ladyman - 2000 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 51 (4):837-856.
    Constructive empiricism is supposed to offer a positive alternative to scientific realism that dispenses with the need for metaphysics. I first review the terms of the debate before arguing that the standard objections to constructive empiricism are not decisive. I then explain van Fraassen's views on modality and counterfactuals, and argue that, because constructive empiricism recommends on epistemological grounds belief in the empirical adequacy rather than the truth of theories, it requires that there be an objective modal distinction between the (...)
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  37. A Semantic Perspective on Idealisation in Quantum Mechanics.Jac Ladyman & S. French - 1998 - In Shanks N. (ed.), Idealization IX: Idealization in Contemporary Physics.
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  38. Bouncing unitary cosmology II. Mini-superspace phenomenology:Mini-Superspace Phenomenology.Sean Gryb & Karim P. Y. Thébault - unknown
    A companion paper provides a proposal for cosmic singularity resolution based upon general features of a bouncing unitary cosmological model in the mini-superspace approximation. This paper analyses novel phenomenology that can be identified within particular solutions of that model. First, we justify our choice of particular solutions based upon a clearly articulated and observationally-motivated principle. Second, we demonstrate that the chosen solutions follow a classical mini-superspace cosmology before smoothly bouncing off the classically singular region. Third, and most significantly, we identify (...)
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  39. Stiegler, Foucault, and Epictetus:The Therapeutics of Reading and Writing.Kurt W. Lampe - forthcoming - Symposium: The Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy.
    Why does Bernard Stiegler speak of “this culture, which I have named, after Epictetus, my melete?” In the first part of this article, I elucidate Stiegler’s claims about both Stoic exercises of reading and writing and their significance for the interpretive questions he has adapted from Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida. In particular, I address the relations among care for oneself and others, the use of material technologies, and resistance to subjection or “freedom.” In the second part, I consider the (...)
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  40. Quantitative methods I:The world we have lost – or where we started from.Ron Johnston, Richard J. Harris, Kelvyn Jones, David Manley, Wenfei Winnie Wang & Levi Wolf - 2019 - Progress in Human Geography 43 (6):1133- 1142.
    Although pioneering studies using statistical methods in geographical data analysis were published in the 1930s, it was only in the 1960s that their increasing use in human geography led to a claim that a ‘quantitative revolution’ had taken place. The widespread use of quantitative methods from then on was associated with changes in both disciplinary philosophy and substantive focus. The first decades of the ‘revolution’ saw quantitative analyses focused on the search for spatial order of a geometric form within an, (...)
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  41. What science can do for democracy – A complexity science approach.T. Eliassi-rad, H. Farrell, Stephan da GarciaLewandowsky, Patricia Palacios, Don A. Ross, Didier Sornette, Karim P. Y. Thebault & Karoline Wiesner - 2020 - Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 7.
    Political scientists have conventionally assumed that achieving democracy is a one-way ratchet. Only very recently has the question of ‘democratic backsliding’ attracted any research attention. We argue that democratic instability is best understood with tools from complexity science. The explanatory power of complexity science arises from several features of complex systems. Their relevance in the context of democracy is discussed. Several policy recommen- dations are offered to help stabilize current systems of representative democracy.
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  42. On the Limits of Experimental Knowledge.Peter Evans & Karim P. Y. Thebault - 2020 - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 378 (2177).
    To demarcate the limits of experimental knowledge, we probe the limits of what might be called an experiment. By appeal to examples of scientific practice from astrophysics and analogue gravity, we demonstrate that the reliability of knowledge regarding certain phenomena gained from an experiment is not circumscribed by the manipulability or accessibility of the target phenomena. Rather, the limits of experimental knowledge are set by the extent to which strategies for what we call ‘inductive triangulation’ are available: that is, the (...)
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  43. Constitutive rules for guiding the use of the Viable System Model:Reflections on practice.David Lowe, Angela Espinosa & Mike Yearworth - forthcoming - European Journal of Operational Research.
    The Viable System Model provides a well-established framework to aid the design and diagnosis of organisations to survive and thrive in complex operating environments. However, the cognitive accessibility of the VSM presents a significant barrier to its application with non-expert stakeholders. In the face of such difficulties, VSM practitioners will often take steps to adapt the classic presentation of VSM to suit the needs of their particular operational context. We propose a set of constitutive rules, including an explicit epistemology, that (...)
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  44. Opportunity and Impasse:Social Change and the Limits of International Legal Strategy.Lee McConnell - unknown
    A diverse range of actors, from practitioners and academics to civil society groups and activists, appear to see hope in international law for the advancement of their causes. This article examines whether this optimism is well-founded. It explores whether international law can serve as an agent of social change, and whether it can accommodate radical changes in social order. It begins by exposing a formalist stance that is immanent to much ‘legal activist’ discourse. It then explores links between this mode (...)
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  45. French and Italian Stoicisms: From Sartre to Agamben.Kurt Lampe (ed.) - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    The importance of Stoicism for Gilles Deleuze's Logic of Sense and Michel Foucault's Hermeneutics of the Subject and The Care of the Self is well known. However, few students of either classics or philosophy are aware of the breadth of French and Italian receptions of Stoicism. This book firstly presents this broad field to readers, and secondly advances it by renewing dialogues with ancient Stoic texts. The authors in this volume, who combine expertise in continental and Hellenistic philosophy, challenge our (...)
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  46. How to look and what to see: noticing in a mathematics community.Julian Brown - 2017 - Proceedings of the British Society for Research Into Learning Mathematics 37 (2):6.
    As a new researcher in mathematics education, I am seeking to work through the ontological and epistemological challenges associated with setting aside the modes of observing that I have assumed, consciously or otherwise, and develop seeing in other ways. In this account of a workshop, I will discuss the presentation of different accounts of the same classroom episode constructed with different protocols and reflect on the mediating effect of the protocol and observer. Comparison with the experience of a direct viewing (...)
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  47. Introduction:Ethics, politics and organizing.Martin Parker - 2003 - Organization 10 (2).
    This introduction to the special issue consists of some arguments that are intended to fold the concepts 'ethics' and 'politics' into one another. The aim of this exercise is to take business ethics to task for having a narrowly 'ethical' view of its ambitions. Instead, I propose that business ethics needs to embrace political theory in addition to the moral philosophy that it has treated as canonical. I argue that such an enlargement will encourage those who currently practise business ethics (...)
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  48. What has debt got to do with it?:The Valuation of Homeownership in the Era of Financialization.Christian Poppe, Sharon B. Collard & Turf Bocker Jakobsen - 2016 - Housing, Theory and Society 33:59-76.
    Based on comparative focus group data from Norway, Denmark and England, this article asks why people take on substantial mortgages to become homeowners. It argues that financialization of the housing market has resulted in a widespread investment philosophy at the household level and changed the way people think and talk about “the home”. High levels of mortgage borrowing have become commonplace and are justified by social valuations of owner-occupation based on beliefs around freedom through homeownership. Like previous research, the study (...)
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  49. The Logos of Ethics in Gorgias' Palamedes, On Nature, and Helen.Kurt W. Lampe - 2020 - In David Conan Wolfsdorf (ed.), Early Greek Ethics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter focuses on Gorgias' suriviving works: esp. _Palamedes_, but also _On Nature_, _Helen_, and the _Funeral Oration_. While I'm at pains to bring out the diversity of interpretive traditions currently co-existing, I aim to offer a substantially new reading of what these works offer our reflection on the nature of ethical truth.
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  50. Assisted dying and the context of debate: 'medical law' versus 'end-of-life law'.John Coggon - 2010 - Medical Law Review 18 (4):541-563.
    This paper provides a reflective analysis of the nature of normative critiques of law generally, and within medical law specifically. It first seeks to establish the context within which critical analysis of law and legal measures takes place, and develops an argument that critiques should focus on political norms. Entailed in this claim is the contention that positions that seek to address controversial social problems can not resort simply to moral philosophy. It then provides a brief account of political liberalism (...)
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  51. Problems with claims that sanctity leads to 'pro-life' law, and reasons for doubting it to be a convincing 'middle way'.John Coggon - 2008 - Medicine and Law 27 (1):203-213.
    This paper focuses on the idea of pro-life arguments and the sanctity of life doctrine in the context of debates on end-of-life law. Advocates of the sanctity doctrine are often thought of as being pro-life, which has potentially troublesome implications in policy debate. I explore what it means to be pro-life, and consider sanctity's relation to this. I question the coherence and appeal of truly pro-life law, and law that is premised on the sanctity doctrine. The analysis allows me to (...)
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  52. Mind outside Brain: a radically non-dualist foundation for distributed cognition.Francis Heylighen & Shima Beigi - 2018 - In J. A. Carter, A. Clark, Jesper Kallestrup, S. Orestis Palermos & Duncan Pritchard (eds.), Socially Extended Epistemology. Oxford University Press. pp. 59-86.
    We approach the problem of the extended mind from a radically non-dualist perspective. The separation between mind and matter is an artefact of the outdated mechanistic worldview, which leaves no room for mental phenomena such as agency, intentionality, or feeling. We propose to replace it by an action ontology, which conceives mind and matter as aspects of the same network of processes. By adopting the intentional stance, we interpret the catalysts of elementary reactions as agents exhibiting desires, intentions, and sensations. (...)
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  53. Science, Metaphysics and Method.Jac Ladyman - 2008 - Philosophy of Science 75 (5).
    While there are many examples of metaphysical theorising being heuristically and intellectually important in the progress of scientific knowledge, many people wonder how metaphysics not closely informed and inspired by empirical science could lead to rival or even supplementary knowledge about the world. This paper assesses the merits of a popular defence of the a priori methodology of metaphysics that goes as follows. The first task of the metaphysician, like the scientist, is to construct a hypothesis that accounts for the (...)
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  54. The Alleged Coupling/Constitution Fallacy and Mature Sciences.Jac Ladyman & Don Ross - 2010 - In Richard Menary (ed.), The Extended Mind. MIT Press. pp. 155 - 166.
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  55. The Middle English Wise Book of Philosophy and Astronomy:A Parallel-Text Edition.Carrie Griffin (ed.) - 2013 - Heidelberg, Deutschland: Universitätsverlag Winter.
    The ‘Wise Book of Philosophy and Astronomy’, surviving in thirty-four manuscripts ranging in date from c. 1380 to c. 1600, was one of the most widely-copied, consistently read, and arguably influential treatises of its kind in the vernacular in the medieval and early modern periods in Britain. This pseudo-Aristotelian text, with its roots in the ‘Secreta secretorum’ tradition, reveals contemporary, widely held views regarding several strands of medieval thought: philosophy, astronomy/astrology, physiognomy, ‘computus’, and theology. The ‘Wise Book’ never circulated in (...)
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  56. Culture-bound syndromes.Havi H. Carel - 2010 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 41 (4).
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  57. A Phenomenology of Tragedy: Illness and Body Betrayal in The Fly.Havi H. Carel - unknown - Journal of Media Arts Culture.
    Many interpretations of David Cronenberg’s 1986 film The Fly read it as a film about monstrosity. Within this framework, the protagonist Seth Brundle’s progressive illness and decay are subsumed under his metamorphosis into a monster. Illness is taken to be a metaphor for the changes in Seth, changes that continuously turn him away from the human and towards the monstrous. Seth’s monstrosity, in turn, arises from the fusion of human and non-human, in this case the fusion of a man with (...)
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  58. ‘I Am Well, Apart from the Fact that I Have Cancer’: Explaining Wellbeing within Illness.Havi H. Carel - 2009 - In Lisa Bortolotti (ed.), Philosophy and Happiness. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 82-99.
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  59. Illness and authenticity.Havi H. Carel - 2010 - In Art and authenticity. Australian Scholarly Publishing. pp. 197-204.
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  60. A Comparison of Identity in Physics and Mathematics.James A. C. Ladyman - 2011 - In Bartosz Brozek, Janusz Maczka & Wojciech P. Grygiel (eds.), Philosophy in Science. Krakow: Copernicus Center Press.
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  61. Commentary: Reply to Hawthorne: Physics before Metaphysics 1.James Ladyman - 2010 - In Simon Saunders, Jonathan Barrett, Adrian Kent & David Wallace (eds.), Many Worlds?: Everett, Quantum Theory, and Reality. Oxford University Press.
    The metaphysical conception of the generation of the macroworld from fundamental physics that Hawthorne considers is criticized in this Commentary, and compared with the scientific account offered by Halliwell and Hartle. It is argued that Hawthorn's critique of Everettian quantum mechanics fails.
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  62. The Alleged Coupling/Constitution Fallacy and Mature Sciences.James Ladyman & Don Ross - 2010 - In Richard Menary (ed.), The Extended Mind. Bradford Book.
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  63. Does Physics Answer Metaphysical Questions?James Ladyman - 2007 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 61:179-201.
    According to logical positivism, so the story goes, metaphysical questions are meaningless, since they do not admit of empirical confirmation or refutation. However, the logical positivists did not in fact reject as meaningless all questions about for example, the structure of space and time. Rather, key figures such as Reichenbach and Schlick believed that scientific theories often presupposed a conceptual framework that was not itself empirically testable, but which was required for the theory as a whole to be empirically testable. (...)
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  64. Ontological Epistemological and Methodological Positions.James Ladyman - 2007 - In Theo Kuipers (ed.), General Philosophy of Science. Amsterdam: Elsevier. pp. 303-376.
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