Results for 'Mark Conard'

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  1. Albert A. Anderson, Steven V. Hicks, and Lech Witkowski, eds., Mythos and Logos. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2004, 268 pp.(indexed). ISBN 90-420-1020, $73.00 (pb). Kevin Bales, Disposable People. Berkley, Calif.: University of California Press, 2004, 298 pp.(indexed). ISBN 0-520-24384-6, $17.95 (pb). [REVIEW]Mark Coeckelbergh, Mark T. Conard, Aeon J. Skoble, William Lane Craig & Walter Sinnott-Armstrong - 2005 - Journal of Value Inquiry 39:139-141.
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  2.  39
    Overcoming Dualism: A Critique of Some Recent Interpretations of Nietzschean Perspectivism.Mark T. Conard - 1994 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 32 (3):251-269.
  3.  20
    Nietzsche’s Kantianism.Mark T. Conard - 2001 - International Studies in Philosophy 33 (3):25-36.
  4.  51
    Allison's Reading of Kant's Paradox of Inner Sense.Mark T. Conard - 1994 - Philosophy Today 38 (3-4):317-325.
  5.  3
    Nietzsche’s Kantianism.Mark T. Conard - 2001 - International Studies in Philosophy 33 (3):25-36.
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  6. Nietzsche and the Meaning and Definition of Noir.Mark T. Conard - 2006 - In Mark T. Conard & Robert Porfirio (eds.), The Philosophy of Film Noir. University Press of Kentucky.
     
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  7.  10
    Nietzsche and the Philosophers.Mark T. Conard (ed.) - 2016 - New York: Routledge.
    Nietzsche is undoubtedly one of the most original and influential thinkers in the history of philosophy. With ideas such as the overman, will to power, the eternal recurrence, and perspectivism, Nietzsche challenges us to reconceive how it is that we know and understand the world, and what it means to be a human being. Further, in his works, he not only grapples with previous great philosophers and their ideas, but he also calls into question and redefines what it means to (...)
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  8. Lorne Falkenstein, Kant's Intuitionism: A Commentary on the Transcendental Aesthetic Reviewed by.Mark T. Conard - 1996 - Philosophy in Review 16 (5):333-335.
  9. Michael Bauer and John Russon, eds., Hegel and the Tradition: Essays in Honour of BS Harris Reviewed by.Mark T. Conard - 1999 - Philosophy in Review 19 (1):1-3.
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  10.  85
    Symbolism, Meaning & Nihilism in Tarantino’s ‘Pulp Fiction’.Mark Conard - 1997 - Philosophy Now 19:10-14.
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  11. The philosophy of film noir.Mark T. Conard & Robert Porfirio (eds.) - 2006 - Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
    The Philosophy of Film Noir explores philosophical themes and ideas inherent in classic noir and neo-noir films, establishing connections to diverse thinkers ...
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  12.  25
    The Simpsons and Philosophy : the D'oh! of Homer.William Irwin, Mark T. Conard & Aeon J. Skoble - unknown
    This unconventional and lighthearted introduction to the ideas of the major Western philosophers examines The Simpsons — TV’s favorite animated family. The authors look beyond the jokes, the crudeness, the attacks on society — and see a clever display of irony, social criticism, and philosophical thought. The writers begin with an examination of the characters. Does Homer actually display Aristotle’s virtues of character? In what way does Bart exemplify American pragmatism? The book also examines the ethics and themes of the (...)
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  13.  41
    Woody Allen and Philosophy: You Mean My Whole Fallacy Is Wrong?Aeon J. Skoble & Mark T. Conard (eds.) - 2004 - Chicago: Open Court.
    In fifteen witty essays, fifteen philosophers answer the questions of what writer, director, actor, comedian, musician, and deep thinker Woody Allen is trying to say and why anyone should care. Original.
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  14.  37
    Nietzsche and Metaphysics. [REVIEW]Mark T. Conard - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 51 (2):420-421.
    This is a collection of essays devoted to the issue of Nietzsche’s complex relationship to metaphysics. In the preface, Haar claims that the overcoming of metaphysics “marks without a doubt the entire development of [Nietzsche’s] thought...”. He goes on to wonder whether or not Nietzsche “remains prisoner to the categories that he overturns”. Was Nietzsche successful in overcoming metaphysics, or was he, as Heidegger claims, the last exemplar of the metaphysics of the subject?
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  15. Liébert, Georges. Nietzsche and Music, translated by David Pellauer and Graham Parkes. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2004. [REVIEW]Mark Conard - 2004 - Reason Papers 27:163-168.
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  16.  18
    Nietzsche’s Critiques. [REVIEW]Mark T. Conard - 2006 - Review of Metaphysics 60 (2):403-404.
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  17. Nietzsche’s Postmoralism: Essays on Nietzsche’s Prelude to Philosophy’s Future, edited by Richard Schacht. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [REVIEW]Mark Conard - 2003 - Reason Papers 26:105-108.
     
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  18.  4
    Nietzsche's System. [REVIEW]Mark T. Conard - 1996 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (2):420-420.
    The debate continues as to whether Nietzsche is a proto-postmodernist, who rejects truth, metaphysics, and objective values, or a thinker still part of the philosophical tradition, offering us a picture of how the world is actually put together. Richardson enters this fray with an ambitious project to lay out the implicit system running through Nietzsche's work. The system consists in an ontology around which his other views are organized. A key problem here is making such claims to knowledge about the (...)
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  19.  31
    Richardson, John. Nietzsche's System. [REVIEW]Mark T. Conard - 1996 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (2):420-421.
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  20. The Cambridge Companion to Spinoze, Don Garrett, ed. [REVIEW]Mark Conard - 1997 - Reason Papers 22:169-173.
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  21.  88
    Mark T. Conard, ed. (2009) The Philosophy of the Coen Brothers.Taylor Benjamin Worley - 2011 - Film-Philosophy 15 (1):240-246.
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  22.  8
    Mark T. Conard, ed. (2007) The Philosophy of Martin Scorsese.Linda Petříková - 2007 - Film-Philosophy 11 (3):231-237.
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  23.  17
    Mark T. Conard, ed.(2007) The Philosophy of Martin Scorsese.Linda PetÅ - 2007 - Film-Philosophy 11 (3).
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  24. William Irwin, Mark T. Conard and Aeon J. Skoble, eds, The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer.B. Watson - forthcoming - Radical Philosophy.
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  25.  5
    Hume's reception in early America.Mark G. Spencer (ed.) - 2017 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Hume's Reception in Early America: Expanded Edition brings together the original American responses to one of Britain's greatest men of letters, David Hume. Now available as a single volume paperback, this new edition includes updated further readings suggestions and dozens of additional primary sources gathered together in a completely new concluding section. From complete pamphlets and booklets, to poems, reviews, and letters, to extracts from newspapers, religious magazines and literary and political journals, this book's contents come from a wide variety (...)
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  26.  8
    How human is God?: seven questions about God and humanity in the Bible.Mark S. Smith - 2014 - Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press.
    Prologue, invitation to thinking about God In the Hebrew Bible? -- Part I, questions about God? -- Why does God in the Bible have a body? -- What do God's body parts in the Bible mean? -- Why is God angry in the Bible? -- Does God in the Bible have gender or sexuality? -- Part II, questions about God in the world? -- What can creation tell us about God? -- Who-or what-is the Satan? -- Why do people suffer (...)
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  27.  42
    Advancing Polylogical Analysis of Large-Scale Argumentation: Disagreement Management in the Fracking Controversy.Mark Aakhus & Marcin Lewiński - 2017 - Argumentation 31 (1):179-207.
    This paper offers a new way to make sense of disagreement expansion from a polylogical perspective by incorporating various places in addition to players and positions into the analysis. The concepts build on prior implicit ideas about disagreement space by suggesting how to more fully account for argumentative context, and its construction, in large-scale complex controversies. As a basis for our polylogical analysis, we use a New York Times news story reporting on an oil train explosion—a significant point in the (...)
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  28.  29
    Deliberation digitized: Designing disagreement space through communication-information services.Mark Aakhus - 2013 - Journal of Argumentation in Context 2 (1):101-126.
    A specific issue for argumentation theory is whether information and communication technologies play any role in governing argument — that is, as parties engage in practical activities across space and time via ICTs, does technology matter for the interplay of argumentative content and process in managing disagreement? The case made here is that technologies do matter because they are not merely conduits of communication but have a role in the pragmatics of communication and argumentation. In particular, ICTs should be recognized (...)
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  29. Self, no self?: perspectives from analytical, phenomenological, and Indian traditions.Mark Siderits, Evan Thompson & Dan Zahavi (eds.) - 2011 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    It is time to bring the rich resources of these traditions into the contemporary debate about the nature of self. This volume is the first of its kind.
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  30.  12
    Ecologies: Mark Dion, Peter Fend, Dan Peterman.Mark Dion, Peter Fend, Dan Peterman, Stephanie Smith & David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art - 2001 - University of Chicago David & Alfred.
    Since the 1960s, many artists have incorporated ecological concerns into their work, an endeavor that has required new strategies in art-making. To explore recent American manifestations of these interests, the David and Alfred Smart Museum commissioned new projects from artists Mark Dion, Peter Fend, and Dan Peterman, each focusing on interrelationships between particular organisms—human beings-and a specific group of sites—a museum building, a river landscape, and a university campus. The results, exhibited at the Smart Museum during the summer of (...)
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  31.  27
    The Communicative Work of Organizations in Shaping Argumentative Realities.Mark Aakhus - 2017 - Philosophy and Technology 30 (2):191-208.
    It is argued here that large-scale organization and networked computing enable new divisions of communicative work aimed at shaping the content, direction, and outcomes of societal conversations. The challenge for argumentation theory and practice lies in attending to these new divisions of communicative work in constituting contemporary argumentative realities. Goffman’s conceptualization of participation frameworks and production formats are applied to articulate the communicative work of organizations afforded by networked computing that invents and innovates argument in all of its senses—as product, (...)
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  32.  10
    The hidden spring: a journey to the source of consciousness.Mark Solms - 2021 - New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company.
    A revelatory new theory of consciousness that returns emotions to the center of mental life. For Mark Solms, one of the boldest thinkers in contemporary neuroscience, discovering how consciousness comes about has been a lifetime's quest. Scientists consider it the "hard problem" because it seems an impossible task to understand why we feel a subjective sense of self and how it arises in the brain. Venturing into the elementary physics of life, Solms has now arrived at an astonishing answer. (...)
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  33.  21
    Science court: A case study in designing discourse to manage policy controversy.Mark Aakhus - 1999 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 12 (2):20-37.
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  34. The nature of life: classical and contemporary perspectives from philosophy and science.Mark Bedau & Carol Cleland (eds.) - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Bringing together the latest scientific advances and some of the most enduring subtle philosophical puzzles and problems, this book collects original historical and contemporary sources to explore the wide range of issues surrounding the nature of life. Selections ranging from Aristotle and Descartes to Sagan and Dawkins are organised around four broad themes covering classical discussions of life, the origins and extent of natural life, contemporary artificial life creations and the definition and meaning of 'life' in its most general form. (...)
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  35.  93
    Disputed moral issues: a reader.Mark Timmons (ed.) - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press.
  36.  98
    Morality without foundations: a defense of ethical contextualism.Mark Timmons - 1999 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In this book Timmons defends a metaethical view that exploits certain contextualist themes in philosophy of language and epistemology. He advances what he calls assertoric non-descriptivism, a view that employs semantic contextualism in giving an account of moral discourse. This view, which like traditional non-descriptivist views stresses the practical, action-guiding function of moral thought and discourse, also allows that moral sentences, as typically used, make genuine assertions. Timmons then defends a contextualist moral epistemology thus completing his overall program of contextualism (...)
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  37. What does it take to "have" a reason?Mark Schroeder - 2011 - In Andrew Reisner & Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (eds.), Reasons for Belief. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 201--22.
    forthcoming in reisner and steglich-peterson, eds., Reasons for Belief If I believe, for no good reason, that P and I infer (correctly) from this that Q, I don’t think we want to say that I ‘have’ P as evidence for Q. Only things that I believe (or could believe) rationally, or perhaps, with justification, count as part of the evidence that I have. It seems to me that this is a good reason to include an epistemic acceptability constraint on evidence (...)
     
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  38. A decentered theory of governance.Mark Bevir - 2011 - In Jeremy S. Duncan (ed.), Perspectives on ethics. New York: Nova Science Publishers.
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  39. Control of education : issues and tensions in centralization and decentralization.Mark Bray - 2007 - In Robert F. Arnove & Carlos Alberto Torres (eds.), Comparative education: the dialectic of the global and the local. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
     
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  40. „The One and the Many and Kinds of Distinctness: The Possibility of Monism or Pantheism in the young Leibniz “.Mark Kulstad - 2005 - In Donald Rutherford & J. A. Cover (eds.), Leibniz: nature and freedom. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 20--43.
     
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  41. The One and the Many and Kinds of Distinctness.".Mark Kulstad - 2005 - In Donald Rutherford & J. A. Cover (eds.), Leibniz: nature and freedom. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 20--43.
     
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  42.  37
    Ubiquity: the science of history, or why the world is simpler than we think.Mark Buchanan - 2000 - London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
    Scientists have recently discovered a new law of nature. Its footprints are virtually everywhere - in the spread of forest fires, mass extinctions, traffic jams, earthquakes, stock-market fluctuations, the rise and fall of nations, and even trends in fashion, music and art. Wherever we look, the world is modelled on a simple template: like a steep pile of sand, it is poised on the brink of instability, with avalanches - in events, ideas or whatever - following a universal pattern of (...)
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  43.  18
    Science and the open society: the future of Karl Popper's philosophy.Mark Amadeus Notturno - 2000 - New York, N.Y.: Central European University Press.
    A Clearly argued and easy to read defense of Karl Popper's philosophy.
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  44. Character as Moral Fiction.Mark Alfano - 2013 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Everyone wants to be virtuous, but recent psychological investigations suggest that this may not be possible. Mark Alfano challenges this theory and asks, not whether character is empirically adequate, but what characters human beings could have and develop. Although psychology suggests that most people do not have robust character traits such as courage, honesty and open-mindedness, Alfano argues that we have reason to attribute these virtues to people because such attributions function as self-fulfilling prophecies - children become more studious (...)
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  45. Extending the situationist challenge to reliabilism about inference.Mark Alfano - 2014 - In Abrol Fairweather & Owen Flanagan (eds.), Virtue Epistemology Naturalized: Bridges between Virtue Epistemology and Philosophy of Science. Cham: Synthese Library. pp. 103-122.
  46.  9
    The politics of Exodus: Søren Kierkegaard's ethics of responsibility.Mark Dooley - 2001 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    In The Politics of Exodus, Mark Dooley offers a lively interpretation of Kierkegaard as a precursor of the ethical and political insights of Jacques Derrida. While many connections have been forged in recent years between these two quintessentially "Continental" figures, Dooley's book argues that these affiliations run much deeper than any previous commentators have suggested. Indeed, his most controversial claim is that Kierkegaard is anything but a proponent of asocial individualism, but is one whose writings bear witness to the (...)
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  47. Personal identity and Buddhist philosophy: empty persons.Mark Siderits - 2003 - Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
    This book initiates a conversation between the two traditions showing how concepts and tools drawn from one philosophical tradition can help solve problems ...
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  48.  31
    The psychologizing of modernity: art, architecture, and history.Mark Jarzombek - 2000 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In The Psychologizing of Modernity, Mark Jarzombek examines the impact of psychology on twentieth-century aesthetics. Analysing the interface between psychology, art history and avant-gardist practices, he also reflects on the longevity of the myth of aesthetic individuality as it infiltrated not only avant-garde art, but also history writing. The principal focus of this study is pre-World War II Germany, where theories of empathy and Entartung emerged; and post-war America, where artists, critics and historians gradually shifted from their reliance on (...)
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  49.  9
    Passionate deliberation: emotion, temperance, and the care ethic in clinical moral deliberation.Mark F. Carr - 2001 - Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    "Application of the possibilities for this renewal of temperance comes with an examination of how emotion will help moral deliberation in the clinical practice of medicine. Sir William Osler (1849-1919) and his doctrine of aequanimitas is greatly misunderstood to be the founder of emotional detachment in physician/patient relations. This book offers the most detailed look at aequanimitas in print and equates it with a normative view of temperance as a moral virtue." "For upper-level undergraduate and graduate-level students interested in ethics, (...)
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  50. Revisiting “The New 4CT Problem”.Mark McEvoy - 2024 - In Bharath Sriraman (ed.), Handbook of the History and Philosophy of Mathematical Practice. Cham: Springer. pp. 2459-2479.
    According to what one might label the traditional view of proof in mathematics, proofs have the following characteristics. They are knowable a priori, the knowledge they provide is certain, rather than merely probable, they are surveyable, and, because of these other features, a mathematical proof is convincing to one who understands it. Opponents of this view typically drew their motivation not from the study of mathematics, but rather from a more general antipathy to apriority in epistemology and necessity in metaphysics (...)
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