Results for 'Foster Jewell'

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  1. Verse: A Four-Leaf Clover Promised.Foster Jewell - 1963 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 44 (2):174.
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  2. Verse: Flower of Response.Foster Jewell - 1964 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 45 (4):459.
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  3. Verse: Mysterious Desert.Foster Jewell - 1966 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 47 (3):349.
  4. Civilization and Its Discontents.Jewel Spears Brooker - 1995 - Modern Schoolman 73 (1):59-69.
    This essay argues that the revolt against Cartesian dualism in the early 20th century was pivotal in the development of the modern mind and in the revolution in form that occurred in modern literature and the arts.
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  5.  16
    Body Talk: Rhetoric, Technology, Reproduction (review).Jewell Mayberry - 2001 - Symploke 9 (1):200-201.
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  6.  37
    Intellectual Virtues and Reasonable Disagreement.Jewelle Bickel - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Oklahoma
    The contemporary problem of disagreement has two prominent solutions. The Conciliationists think that after discovering a case of disagreement one should be less certain of one’s original position. Those who favor Conciliatory views tend to think that disagreement is epistemically significant because it causes problems for one’s rationality. The Steadfasters, on the other hand, think that one should maintain one’s belief in the face of a disagreement; thus, disagreement appears a less epistemically significant problem to them. But neither of these (...)
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  7.  8
    The hidden premise.Paul Jewell - 1991 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 23 (1):79–88.
  8.  1
    The Hidden Premise.Paul Jewell - 1991 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 23 (1):79-88.
  9.  58
    Fate, Time, and Language: An Essay on Free Will.David Foster Wallace, James Ryerson & Jay Garfield (eds.) - 2010 - New York, NY, USA: Columbia University Press.
    In 1962, the philosopher Richard Taylor used six commonly accepted presuppositions to imply that human beings have no control over the future. David Foster Wallace not only took issue with Taylor's method, which, according to him, scrambled the relations of logic, language, and the physical world, but also noted a semantic trick at the heart of Taylor's argument. _Fate, Time, and Language_ presents Wallace's brilliant critique of Taylor's work. Written long before the publication of his fiction and essays, Wallace's (...)
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  10.  17
    Jewell, from page 9.Paul Jewell - 1993 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 12 (1-2):19-23.
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  11. T. E. Hulme and the Twentiety-Century Mind.Jewel Spears Brooker - 1998 - Modern Schoolman 76 (1):67-71.
    A review of the Collected Writings of T. E. Hulme. Argues that Hulme, a philosopher/journist/poet who was killed in WWI, was a forerunner of the 20th-cent. mind, esp. as reflected in modernist poetry (T. S. Eliot, Imagism, Ezra Pound), aesthetics (Wilhelm Worringer), philosophy (Bergson, Jaspers, Wittgenstein), and politics (Charles Maurras, Georges Sorel).
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  12. The Nature of Perception.John Foster - 2000 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    John Foster addresses the question: what is it to perceive a physical object? He rejects the view that we perceive such objects directly, and argues for a new version of the traditional empiricist account, which locates the immediate objects of perception in the mind. But this account seems to imply that we do not perceive physical objects at all. Foster offers a surprising solution, which involves embracing an idealist view of the physical world.
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  13.  13
    Haunted by Christ: Modern Writers and the Struggle for Faith.Jewel Spears Brooker - 2022 - Common Knowledge 28 (1):146-148.
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  14.  26
    References for Jewell, from page 23.Paul Jewell - 1993 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 12 (1-2):46-46.
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  15. The Case for Idealism.John Foster - 1982 - Boston: Routledge.
  16.  8
    The Philosophy of Matter in the Atomic Era.Robert Jewell - 1965 - Philosophy East and West 15 (3):297-299.
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  17.  2
    Marie Laveau, Voodoo Queen (Novel Excerpt).Jewell Parker Rhodes - 1990 - Feminist Studies 16 (2):331-344.
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  18. Anthony O'Hear, Education, Society and Human Nature: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education Reviewed by.Foster N. Walker - 1983 - Philosophy in Review 3 (4):192-194.
     
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  19.  4
    Enjoyment and the Activity of Mind: Dialogues on Whitehead and Education.Foster N. Walker (ed.) - 2000 - BRILL.
    This book urges educational institutions to contemplate the harm they have caused to individual and society by their tragic suppression of the energy essential to the flowering of the mind's full potential. No more strident and uncompromising a voice is to be found on this topic than Whitehead's, in _The Aims of Education and Other Essays_. Walker's interpretation of these essays is set in a story of the lives of several teachers, education students, parents, and a professor. Whitehead's presence is (...)
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  20.  17
    Pasolini "Provencal"?Massimo Cacciari & Keala Jane Jewell - 1987 - Substance 16 (2):67.
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  21.  4
    The Nature of Perception.John Foster - 2000 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press on Demand.
    John Foster presents a penetrating investigation into the question: what is it to perceive a physical object? Is perceptual contact with a physical object, he asks, something fundamental, or does it break down into further factors? If the latter, what are these factors, and how do they combine to secure the contact? For most of the book, Foster addressed these questions in the framework of a realist view of the physical world. But the arguments which thereby unfold - (...)
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  22.  31
    Reply To Armstrong.John Foster - 2004 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy 12 (1):27-28.
    The cognitive theory of perception, of which David Armstrong is the originator and most illustrious advocate, claims that sense perception consists in the acquisition of propositional information about the environment. In my book The Nature of Perception, I argue that the theory is vulnerable to two main objections.
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  23.  20
    The Anti-aesthetic: essays on postmodern culture.Hal Foster (ed.) - 1983 - Port Townsend, Wash.: Bay Press.
    In all the arts a war is being waged between modernists and postmodernists. Radicals have tended to side with the modernists against the forces of conservatism. Postmodern Culture is a break with this tendency. Its contributors propose a postmodernism of resistance - an aesthetic that rejects hierarchy and celebrates diversity. Ranging from architecture, sculpture and painting to music, photography and film, this collection is now recognised as a seminal text on the postmodernism debate.The essays are by Hal Foster, Jürgen (...)
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  24.  82
    The power to believe for reasons.Andrew Jewell - 2021 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    An influential view of believing for reasons holds that the reasons for which we believe are causes of our believing. This view has well-known difficulties accounting for the problem of deviant causal chains. I diagnose these difficulties and argue that the problem arises for the causal view because it uses an impoverished set of resources. I offer a novel causal account of believing for reasons that avoids the problem of causal deviance by appealing to teleological resources such as abilities and (...)
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  25.  7
    The Art of Enigma: The de Chirico Brothers and the Politics of Modernism.Keala Jane Jewell - 2004 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    In this interdisciplinary book, Keala Jewell reunites Giorgio de Chirico with his brother, Alberto Savinio, a prolific writer and painter who has been kept at the margins of the discussion of Surrealism and, more generally, the culture politics of twentieth-century Italy. Yet as Jewell demonstrates, the brothers worked together during their formative years in Munich and Paris and always shared, on the one hand, a drive to salvage Mediterranean myth and history and, on the other, a deep involvement (...)
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  26. Current periodicals.Robert Jewell - 1965 - Philosophy East and West 15 (3/4):305.
     
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  27. Joseph Agassi and Ian Charles Jarvie, eds., Rationality: The Critical View Reviewed by.Robert Jewell - 1988 - Philosophy in Review 8 (4):119-121.
     
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  28. News and notes.Robert Jewell - 1965 - Philosophy East and West 15 (3/4):309.
     
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  29.  23
    Perception and reality.Waldo Jewell-Lapan - 1936 - Journal of Philosophy 33 (14):365-373.
  30.  13
    Pasolini: Deconstructing the Roman Palimpsest.Keala Jane Jewell - 1987 - Substance 16 (2):55.
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    Practical Reflection.Robert D. Jewell - 1991 - Philosophical Books 32 (2):101-102.
  32.  9
    Rationality: A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature and the Rationale of Reason.Robert D. Jewell - 1990 - Philosophical Books 31 (1):36-38.
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  33.  40
    Snake Oil, Sophistry and Sterile Syllogism.Paul Jewell - 1993 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 12 (1-2):9-9.
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  34. The great adventure.Louise Pond Jewell - 1911 - New York,: Frederick A. Stokes company.
     
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  35.  7
    The Meteorological Judgment of Vilhelm Bjerknes.Ralph Jewell - 1984 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 51.
  36. The meteorological judgment of bjerknes, Vilhelm.R. Jewell - 1984 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 51 (3):783-807.
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    The Beginnings of the Teaching of Modern Subjects in England.Foster Watson - 1972 - British Journal of Educational Studies 20 (1):107-107.
  38.  10
    The Case for Idealism.John Foster - 1982 - Boston: Routledge.
    Originally published in 1982, the aim of this book is a controversial one - to refute, by the most rigorous philosophical methods, physical realism and to develop and defend in its place a version of phenomenalism. Physical realism here refers to the thesis that the physical world is an ingredient of ultimate reality, where ultimate reality is the totality of those entities and facts which are not logically sustained by anything else. Thus, in arguing against physical realism, the author sets (...)
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  39.  8
    Regularities, Laws of Nature, and the Existence of God.John Foster - 2001 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 101 (1):145-161.
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    The routinisation of genomics and genetics: implications for ethical practices.M. W. Foster, C. D. M. Royal & R. R. Sharp - 2006 - Journal of Medical Ethics 32 (11):635-638.
    Among bioethicists and members of the public, genetics is often regarded as unique in its ethical challenges. As medical researchers and clinicians increasingly combine genetic information with a range of non-genetic information in the study and clinical management of patients with common diseases, the unique ethical challenges attributed to genetics must be re-examined. A process of genetic routinisation that will have implications for research and clinical ethics, as well as for public conceptions of genetic information, is constituted by the emergence (...)
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  41.  19
    Defining Moral Realism.Jennifer Foster & Mark Schroeder - 2023 - In Paul Bloomfield & David Copp (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Moral Realism. Oxford University Press. pp. 3-17.
    Wherever philosophers disagree, one of the things at issue is likely to be what they disagree about, itself. In addition to asking whether moral realism is true, and which forms of moral realism are more likely to be true than others, we can also ask what it would mean for some form of moral realism to be true. The usual aspiration of such inquiry is to find definitions that all can agree on, so that we can use terms in a (...)
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  42. A Defense of Dualism.John A. Foster - 1989 - In John R. Smythies & John Beloff (eds.), The Case for Dualism. Charlottesville: Univ Pr of Virginia.
  43. A brief defense of the cartesian view.John A. Foster - 2001 - In Kevin Corcoran (ed.), Soul, body, and survival: essays on the metaphysics of human persons. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
     
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  44.  16
    A Brief Defense of the Cartesian View.John Foster - 2001 - In Kevin Corcoran (ed.), Soul, body, and survival: essays on the metaphysics of human persons. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
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  45. Choreographing empathy.Susan Leigh Foster - 2004 - Topoi 24 (1):81-91.
    The paper builds an argument about empathy, kinesthesia, choreography, and power as they were constituted in early eighteenth century France. It examines the conditions under which one body could claim to know what another body was feeling, using two sets of documents – philosophical examinations of perception and kinesthesia by Condillac and notations of dances published by Feuillet. Reading these documents intertextually, I postulate a kind of corporeal episteme that grounds how the body is constructed. And I endeavor to situate (...)
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  46. The Immaterial Self: A Defence of the Cartesian Dualist Conception of the Mind.John Foster - 1991 - Routledge.
    Dualism argues that the mind is more than just the brain. It holds that there exists two very different realms, one mental and the other physical. Both are fundamental and one cannot be reduced to the other - there are minds and there is a physical world. This book examines and defends the most famous dualist account of the mind, the cartesian, which attributes the immaterial contents of the mind to an immaterial self. John Foster's new book exposes the (...)
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  47.  13
    Agroecology in the North: Centering Indigenous food sovereignty and land stewardship in agriculture “frontiers”.Mindy Jewell Price, Alex Latta, Andrew Spring, Jennifer Temmer, Carla Johnston, Lloyd Chicot, Jessica Jumbo & Margaret Leishman - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 39 (4):1191-1206.
    Warming temperatures in the circumpolar north have led to new discussions around climate-driven frontiers for agriculture. In this paper, we situate northern food systems in Canada within the corporate food regime and settler colonialism, and contend that an expansion of the conventional, industrial agriculture paradigm into the Canadian North would have significant socio-cultural and ecological consequences. We propose agroecology as an alternative framework uniquely accordant with northern contexts. In particular, we suggest that there are elements of agroecology that are already (...)
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  48. External Capabilities.James E. Foster & Christopher Handy - 2008 - In Kaushik Basu & Ravi Kanbur (eds.), Arguments for a Better World: Essays in Honor of Amartya Sen: Volume I: Ethics, Welfare, and Measurement. Oxford University Press.
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  49.  15
    The Apotheosis of the Voice in Alberto Moravia's "Vita interiore".Biancamaria Frabotta & Keala Jewell - 1987 - Substance 16 (2):44.
  50. Erasmus at Louvain.Foster Watson - 1917 - Hibbert Journal 16 (3):467.
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