Results for 'Frederick Jackson Turner'

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  1.  17
    A simple method of improving leverpress avoidance by rats.Frederick J. Manning, Mason C. Jackson & John H. McDonough - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (1):5-8.
  2.  20
    The Christian Philosophy of History.Frederick deW Bolman & Shirley Jackson Case - 1944 - Journal of Philosophy 41 (3):78.
  3.  13
    Rebirth of Value: Meditations on Beauty, Ecology, Religion, and Education.Frederick Turner (ed.) - 1991 - State University of New York Press.
    Taking as his starting-point the emerging scientific view of the universe as a free, unpredictable, self-ordering evolutionary process in which human cultural history plays a leading part, Turner (arts and humanities, U. of Texas at Dallas) ...
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  4.  26
    Beauty: the value of values.Frederick Turner - 1991 - Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.
    In this groundbreaking interdisciplinary work, Frederick Turner presents a new theory of aesthetics based on the argument that beauty is an objective reality in the universe. He identifies the experience of beauty as a pancultural, neurobiological phenomenon. Drawing on recent work in a wide range of fields--ritual and dramatic performance, the oral tradition, paleoanthropology and human evolution, neurobiology, cosmology and theoretic physics, chaos theory and fractal mathematics--the book describes evolution as a self-organizing, emergent process that generates increasingly advanced (...)
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  5.  28
    Shakespeare's Twenty-First Century Economics: The Morality of Love and Money.Frederick Turner (ed.) - 1999 - Oup Usa.
    Based on the proven maxim that "money makes the world go round", this study, drawing from Shakespeare's texts, presents a lexicon of common words as well as a variety of familiar familial and cultural sitations in an economic context. Making constant recourse to well-known material from Shakespeare's plays, Turner demonstrates that terms of money and value permeate our minds and lives even in our most mundane moments. His book offers a new, humane, evolutionary economics that fully expresses the moral, (...)
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  6.  33
    Beauty and the Anima Mundi.Frederick Turner - 1991 - Philosophica 48.
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  7. Deconstructing the zero time theory.Frederick Turner - 2019 - In Carlos Montemayor & Robert R. Daniel (eds.), Time's urgency. Boston: Brill.
     
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  8.  5
    How death was invented and what it is for.Frederick Turner - 2010 - In Jo Alyson Parker, Paul Harris & Christian Steineck (eds.), Time: Limits and Constraints. Brill. pp. 13--329.
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  9.  4
    Knowledge, Belief, and Certitude; an Inquiry with Conclusions.Frederick Storrs Turner - 1901 - Philosophical Review 10 (2):184-190.
  10.  21
    Shakespeare and the Nature of Time: Moral and Philosophical Themes in Some Plays and Poems of William Shakespeare.Frederick Turner - 1971 - Oxford, Clarendon Press.
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  11.  26
    Transcending Biological and Social Reductionism.Frederick Turner - 2001 - Substance 30 (1/2):220.
  12. The prison of avant-gardism. A changing of the avant guard.Frederick Turner - 2016 - In Elizabeth Millán (ed.), After the Avant-Gardes: Reflections on the Future of the Fine Arts. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing Company.
     
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  13.  18
    Modernism: Cure or disease? [REVIEW]Frederick Turner - 1997 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 11 (2):169-180.
    Donald Kuspit's The Cult of the Avant‐Garde Artist traces the therapeutic mission of modern art through its rise and decline into postmodern decadence. The problems Kuspit rightly finds in such artists as Warhol and Koons, however, are endemic to modernism itself: its diagnosis of bourgeois society as sick and in need of cure is fundamentally unsound. The modernist cure is, moreover, worse than the purported disease. What modernists call kitsch is, in many cases, a healthy, tragic view of life. And (...)
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  14. Responses to 'in defense of relativism'.Robert Ackermann, Brian Baigrie, Harold I. Brown, Michael Cavanaugh, Paul Fox-Strangways, Gonzalo Munevar, Stephen David Ross, Philip Pettit, Paul Roth, Frederick Schmitt, Stephen Turner & Charles Wallis - 1988 - Social Epistemology 2 (3):227 – 261.
  15.  22
    Universalism Vs. Relativism: Making Moral Judgments in a Changing, Pluralistic, and Threatening World.Richard J. Bernstein, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Amitai Etzioni, William Galston, Franklin I. Gamwell, Timothy Jackson, James Turner Johnson, John Kelsay & Jean Porter (eds.) - 2006 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Has moral relativism run its course? The threat of 9/11, terrorism, reproductive technology, and globalization has forced us to ask anew whether there are universal moral truths upon which to base ethical and political judgments. In this timely edited collection, distinguished scholars present and test the best answers to this question. These insightful responses temper the strong antithesis between universalism and relativism and retain sensitivity to how language and history shape the context of our moral decisions. This important and relevant (...)
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  16.  6
    Individualism: The Cultural Logic of Modernity.Nancy Armstrong, Deborah Cook, James Cruise, Lisa Eck, Megan Heffernan, David Jenemann, Nigel Joseph, Tom McCall, Lucy McNeece, JoAnne Myers, Julie Orlemanski, Jonathon Penny, Dale Shin, Vivasvan Soni, Frederick Turner & Philip Weinstein (eds.) - 2011 - Lexington Books.
    Individualism: The Cultural Logic of Modernity is an edited collection of sixteen essays on the idea of the modern sovereign individual in the western cultural tradition. Reconsidering the eighteenth-century realist novel, twentieth-century modernism, and underappreciated topics on individualism and literature, this volume provocatively revises and enriches our understanding of individualism as the generative premise of modernity itself.
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  17.  64
    Book reviews and notices. [REVIEW]John Grimes, Robin Rinehart, Hillary Rodrigues, John M. Koller, Elaine Craddock, Ludo Rocher, Will Sweetman, Boyd H. Wilson, Edward C. Dimock, Thomas Forsthoefel, Hal W. French, Timothy C. Cahill, William J. Jackson, John Powers, Frederick M. Smith, Gavin Flood, Lelah Dushkin, Sheila McDonough, Frank J. Hoffman, Karni Pal Bhati, Anne E. Monius, Fred Dallmayr, Marcia Hermansen, Joseph A. Bracken, Carl Olson, William P. Harman, Donatella Rossi, Anna B. Bigelow & Jeffrey J. Kripal - 1998 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 2 (2):267-310.
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  18.  63
    William E. Davis, Jr., and Jerome A. Jackson, eds., Contributions to the History of North American Ornithology.Frederick R. Davis - 1997 - Journal of the History of Biology 30 (3):488-489.
  19.  35
    Mind, Ethics, and Conditionals: Themes from the Philosophy of Frank Jackson.Frederick Kroon - 2011 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 89 (2):367 - 370.
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Volume 89, Issue 2, Page 367-370, June 2011.
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  20. A-intensions and communication.Frederick Kroon - 2004 - Philosophical Studies 118 (1-2):279-298.
    In his 'Why We Need A-Intensions', Frank Jackson argues that "representational content [is] how things are represented to be by a sentence in the communicative role it possesses in virtue of what it means," a type of content Jackson takes to be broadly descriptive. I think Jackson overstates his case. Even if we agree that such representational properties play a crucial reference-fixing role, it is much harder to argue the case for a crucial communicative role. I articulate (...)
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  21. Frederick Osborn.Hj Eysenck, Cp Blacker, Ln Jackson & Spiritual Healing - 1957 - The Eugenics Review 52:1.
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  22.  20
    Gainsborough and Turner: The problem of stylistic continuity.Wallace Jackson - 1974 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 32 (4):539-547.
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  23.  4
    Gainsborough and Turner: The Problem of Stylistic Continuity.Wallace Jackson - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (4):539-548.
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  24.  22
    Awakening to Race: Individualism and Social Consciousness in America.Jack Turner - 2012 - University of Chicago Press.
    Drawing on the works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Frederick Douglass, Ralph Ellison, and James Baldwin, Turner offers an original reconstruction of democratic individualism in American thought.
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  25.  19
    Derrida on the Line.Sarah Jackson - 2017 - Derrida Today 10 (2):142-159.
    By offering us a voice that is both at a distance and inside one's own head, the telephone causes interference in thinking and writing. But despite the multiple telephones that echo in and across Jacques Derrida's work, and specifically his writing to and with Hélène Cixous, it is only since Derrida's death that critical interest in the phone has fully emerged, with work by Royle (2006), Prenowitz (2008), Bennington (2013) and Turner (2014) stressing the value of staying on the (...)
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  26.  13
    Commentary on "Spiritual Experience and Psychopathology".David Lukoff, Francis G. Lu & Robert P. Turner - 1997 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 4 (1):75-77.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Commentary on “Spiritual Experience and Psychopathology”Francis G. Lu (bio), David Lukoff (bio), and Robert P. Turner (bio)Jackson and Fulford have written an impor-tant paper which addresses an area of increasing interest in the United States—the relationship between religious/spiritual experiences and psychopathology. Using primarily the Present State Examination as the diagnostic framework, the authors describe in rich clinical detail three patients where certain phenomena lead to a possible (...)
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  27.  57
    Philosophy Imprisoned: The Love of Wisdom in the Age of Mass Incarceration (book chapter).Eric Anthamatten, Anders Benander, Natalie Cisneros, Michael DeWilde, Vincent Greco, Timothy Greenlee, Spoon Jackson, Arlando Jones, Drew Leder, Chris Lenn, John Douglas Macready, Lisa McLeod, William Muth, Cynthia Nielsen, Aislinn O’Donnell & Andre Pierce - 2014 - Lexington Books.
    Western philosophy’s relationship with prisons stretches from Plato’s own incarceration to the modern era of mass incarceration. Philosophy Imprisoned: The Love of Wisdom in the Age of Mass Incarceration draws together a broad range of philosophical thinkers, from both inside and outside prison walls, in the United States and beyond, who draw on a variety of critical perspectives (including phenomenology, deconstruction, and feminist theory) and historical and contemporary figures in philosophy (including Kant, Hegel, Foucault, and Angela Davis) to think about (...)
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  28.  61
    Pragmatism and the Practice of History: From Turner and Du Bois to Today.James T. Kloppenberg - 2004 - Metaphilosophy 35 (1-2):202-225.
    Pragmatism has affected American historical writing since the early twentieth century. Such contemporaries and students of Peirce, James, and Dewey as Frederick Jackson Turner, W. E. B. Du Bois, James Harvey Robinson, Charles Beard, Mary Beard, and Carl Becker drew on pragmatism when they fashioned what was called the “new history.” They wanted to topple inherited assumptions about the past and replace positivist historical methods with the pragmatists' model of a community of inquiry. Such widely read mid-twentieth-century (...)
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  29.  21
    « Cette frontière qui battait sans cesse en retraite » : Turner et le cas américain.Jean-Michel Durafour - 2007 - Cités 31 (3):47.
    Le livre que l’historien américain Frederick Jackson Turner compila en 1920, à partir de différentes communications prononcées devant autant d’associations ou de sociétés dès la fin du XIXe siècle, The Significance of the Frontier in American History, est l’un de ceux qui eurent le plus d’impact sur les études historiques américaines.
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  30.  68
    The Frontier and Fallibilism: Toward “A More Perfect Union” of Peirce’s Philosophy.Robert Main - 2010 - The Pluralist 5 (3):89-106.
    Toward the close of the nineteenth century, just as American pragmatism began to approach its classic form, Frederick Jackson Turner penned what was to become the single most famous definition of the American character. In the lead essay of his book The Frontier in American History, Turner tells us that "the frontier is the line of most rapid and effective Americanization". What he means is that the idea of the frontier—not the confrontation of slavery or the (...)
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  31.  6
    A “Marvelous Cosmopolitan Preserve”: The Dunes, Chicago, and the Dynamic Ecology of Henry Cowles.Eugene Cittadino - 1993 - Perspectives on Science 1 (3):520-559.
    One of the most influential research and teaching programs to emerge in the new science of ecology in the early twentieth century was that which developed at the University of Chicago under the direction of botanist Henry Chandler Cowles. Not a prolific writer, Cowles was nevertheless author of two of the seminal papers in American plant ecology. On the basis of those early contributions, as well as his considerable abilities as field guide, he was able to draw numerous students into (...)
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  32.  58
    Classical liberalism and american landscape representation: The imperial self in nature.Frank M. Coleman - 2010 - Ethics, Place and Environment 13 (1):75 – 96.
    Here it is shown that 'vacant nature' is deployed as sign in Anglo-American landscape representation of the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries to support a Cartesian imaginary of spatial extension. The referent of this imaginary is variously denoted as 'America' (John Locke), the 'north west' (Jefferson), the 'wilderness' (Ralph Waldo Emerson), and the 'frontier' (Frederick Jackson Turner) but throughout it is essentially the same 'vacant' landscape; its function is to produce a site and space of appearance for an (...)
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  33.  8
    Where Men Hide.James B. Twitchell & Ken Ross - 2006 - Columbia University Press.
    Where Men Hide is a spirited tour of the dark and often dirty places men go to find comfort, camaraderie, relaxation, and escape. Ken Ross's striking photographs and James B. Twitchell's lively analysis trace the evolution of these virtual caves, and question why they are rapidly disappearing. They find that for centuries men have met with each other in underground lairs and clubhouses to conduct business or to bond and indulge in shady entertainments. In these secret dens, certain rules are (...)
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  34.  12
    The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted. Volume IV: Defending the Union: The Civil War and the U.S. Sanitary Commission, 1861-1863. Frederick Law Olmsted, Jane Turner Censer. [REVIEW]Bonnie Ellen Blustein - 1987 - Isis 78 (4):642-643.
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  35.  10
    Sentimentalism, Interracial Romance, and Helen Hunt Jackson and Clorinda Matto de Turner’s Attacks on Abuses of Native Americans in Ramona and Aves sin nido.John C. Havard - 2007 - Intertexts 11 (2):101-121.
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  36.  10
    The Century Yearbook 2021.G. Thomas Tanselle - 2022 - Common Knowledge 28 (2):305-306.
    It may seem odd to review a New York social club's yearbook, with its list of members’ addresses and series of committee reports. But such books sometimes contain material of more general interest. The latest one from the Century Association, for example, devotes 250 of its 685 pages to “Century Memorials”—that is, biographical sketches of recently deceased members, written by other members. Among the well-known figures taken up in these eighty-three sketches are the artists Richard Anuszkiewicz and Robert Motherwell; the (...)
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  37.  49
    Awakening to Race: Individualism and Social Consciousness in America By Jack Turner.Shannon Sullivan - 2014 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 50 (1):170.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Awakening to Race: Individualism and Social Consciousness in America by Jack TurnerShannon SullivanJack Turner Awakening to Race: Individualism and Social Consciousness in America Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2012. xv + 199pp, incl. index.Don’t let the size of this slim volume fool you: Awakening to Race is chock-full of fresh insights and original arguments regarding individualism and race in the American democratic tradition. Individualism in America (...)
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  38. The Bounds of Cognition.Frederick Adams & Kenneth Aizawa - 2008 - Malden, MA, USA: Wiley-Blackwell. Edited by Kenneth Aizawa.
  39. Fake News, Relevant Alternatives, and the Degradation of Our Epistemic Environment.Christopher Blake-Turner - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 1.
    This paper contributes to the growing literature in social epistemology of diagnosing the epistemically problematic features of fake news. I identify two novel problems: the problem of relevant alternatives; and the problem of the degradation of the epistemic environment. The former arises among individual epistemic transactions. By making salient, and thereby relevant, alternatives to knowledge claims, fake news stories threaten knowledge. The problem of the degradation of the epistemic environment arises at the level of entire epistemic communities. I introduce the (...)
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  40.  49
    Conditionals.Frank Jackson - 1992 - Philosophical Quarterly 42 (167):266.
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  41.  10
    The Darkness of God: Negativity in Christian Mysticism.Denys Turner - 1995 - Cambridge University Press.
    A closely argued book about what the negative tradition in Western theology involves.
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  42. Applied Ethics: An Impartial Introduction.Elizabeth Jackson, Tyron Goldschmidt, Dustin Crummett & Rebecca Chan - 2021 - Indianapolis, IN: Hackett Publishing. Edited by Tyron Goldschmidt, Dustin Crummett & Rebecca Chan.
    This book is devoted to applied ethics. We focus on six popular and controversial topics: abortion, the environment, animals, poverty, punishment, and disability. We cover three chapters per topic, and each chapter is devoted to a famous or influential argument on the topic. After we present an influential argument, we then consider objections to the argument, and replies to the objections. The book is impartial, and set up in order to equip the reader to make up her own mind about (...)
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  43. Local Underdetermination in Historical Science.Derek Turner - 2005 - Philosophy of Science 72 (1):209-230.
    David Lewis defends the thesis of the asymmetry of overdetermination: later affairs are seldom overdetermined by earlier affairs, but earlier affairs are usually overdetermined by later affairs. Recently, Carol Cleland has argued that since the distinctive methodologies of historical science and experimental science exploit different aspects of this asymmetry, the methodology of historical science is just as good, epistemically speaking, as that of experimental science. This paper shows, first, that Cleland's epistemological conclusion does not follow from the thesis of the (...)
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  44.  73
    A history of philosophy.Frederick C. Copleston - 1947 - New York, N.Y.: Image Books.
    Book 1. Volume I, Greece and Rome ; Volume II, Augustine to Scotus ; Volume III, Ockham to Suarez.
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  45. Logical pluralism without the normativity.Christopher Blake-Turner & Gillian Russell - 2018 - Synthese:1-19.
    Logical pluralism is the view that there is more than one logic. Logical normativism is the view that logic is normative. These positions have often been assumed to go hand-in-hand, but we show that one can be a logical pluralist without being a logical normativist. We begin by arguing directly against logical normativism. Then we reformulate one popular version of pluralism—due to Beall and Restall—to avoid a normativist commitment. We give three non-normativist pluralist views, the most promising of which depends (...)
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  46. The Hereby-Commit Account of Inference.Christopher Blake-Turner - 2022 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 100 (1):86-101.
    An influential way of distinguishing inferential from non-inferential processes appeals to representational states: an agent infers a conclusion from some premises only if she represents those premises as supporting that conclusion. By contrast, when some premises merely cause an agent to believe the conclusion, there is no relevant representational state. While promising, the appeal to representational states invites a regress problem, first famously articulated by Lewis Carroll. This paper develops a novel account of inference that invokes representational states without succumbing (...)
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  47.  12
    The Idea of a University.Frank M. Turner (ed.) - 1996 - Yale University Press.
    Since its publication almost 150 years ago, The Idea of a University has had an extraordinary influence on the shaping and goals of higher education. The issues that John Henry Newman raised--the place of religion and moral values in the university setting, the competing claims of liberal and professional education, the character of the academic community, the cultural role of literature, the relation of religion and science--have provoked discussion from Newman's time to our own. This edition of The Idea of (...)
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  48.  43
    The Confucian Creation of Heaven: Philosophy and the Defense of Ritual Mastery.Karen Turner - 1992 - Philosophy East and West 42 (2):365-368.
  49.  25
    Knowledge, Possibility, and Consciousness.Frank Jackson - 2004 - Mind 113 (449):207-210.
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  50.  25
    Philosophical Papers, Volume II.Frank Jackson - 1989 - Journal of Philosophy 86 (8):433-437.
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