Results for 'A. A. Clerk'

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  1.  32
    Nonlocality and the Rotating Wave Approximation.A. A. Clerk & J. E. Sipe - 1998 - Foundations of Physics 28 (4):639-651.
    The effect of the rotating-wave approximation (RWA) on the coupling between an atom and the electromagnetic field is studied in the dipole approximation. It is demonstrated that use of the RWA results in an explicitly nonlocal interaction.
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  2.  40
    The use of placebo in a trial of rectal artesunate as initial treatment for severe malaria patients en route to referral clinics: ethical issues.A. Kitua, P. Folb, M. Warsame, F. Binka, A. Faiz, I. Ribeiro, T. Peto, J. Gyapong, E. B. Yunus, R. Rahman, F. Baiden, C. Clerk, Z. Mrango, C. Makasi, O. Kimbute, A. Hossain, R. Samad & M. Gomes - 2010 - Journal of Medical Ethics 36 (2):116-120.
    Placebo-controlled trials are controversial when individuals might be denied existing beneficial medical interventions. In the case of malaria, most patients die in rural villages without healthcare facilities. An artesunate suppository that can be given by minimally skilled persons might be of value when patients suddenly become too ill for oral treatment but are several hours from a facility that can give injectable treatment for severe disease. In such situations, by default, no treatment is (or can be) given until the patient (...)
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  3.  18
    Plato's Gorgias: a critical guide.J. Clerk Shaw (ed.) - 2024 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    This Critical Guide offers detailed analysis of all parts of Plato's Gorgias, together with diverse perspectives on its advocacy of a philosophical, just life as against a life of rhetoric and injustice.
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  4. ""Moral Standards for Research in Developing Countries from" Reasonable Availability" to" Fair Benefits".Maged El Setouhy, Tsiri Agbenyega, Francis Anto, Christine Alexandra Clerk, Kwadwo A. Koram, Michael English, Rashid Juma, Catherine Molyneux, Norbert Peshu & Newton Kumwenda - forthcoming - Hastings Center Report.
     
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  5.  36
    Moral Standards for Research in Developing Countries from "Reasonable Availability" to "Fair Benefits".Maged El Setouhy, Tsiri Agbenyega, Francis Anto, Christine Alexandra Clerk, Kwadwo A. Koram, Michael English, Rashid Juma, Catherine Molyneux, Norbert Peshu, Newton Kumwenda, Joseph Mfutso-Bengu, Malcolm Molyneux, Terrie Taylor, Doumbia Aissata Diarra, Saibou Maiga, Mamadou Sylla, Dione Youssouf, Catherine Olufunke Falade, Segun Gbadegesin, Reidar Lie, Ferdinand Mugusi, David Ngassapa, Julius Ecuru, Ambrose Talisuna, Ezekiel Emanuel, Christine Grady, Elizabeth Higgs, Christopher Plowe, Jeremy Sugarman & David Wendler - 2004 - Hastings Center Report 34 (3):17.
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  6. Socrates and Coherent Desire (Gorgias 466a-468e).Eric Brown & Clerk Shaw - 2024 - In J. Clerk Shaw (ed.), Plato's Gorgias: a critical guide. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. pp. 68-86.
    Polus admires orators for the tyrannical power they have. However, Socrates argues that orators and tyrants lack power worth having: the ability to satisfy one's wishes or wants (boulēseis). He distinguishes wanting from thinking best, and grants that orators and tyrants do what they think best while denying that they do what they want. His account is often thought to involve two conflicting requirements: wants must be attributable to the wanter from their own perspective (to count as their desires), but (...)
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  7.  11
    A pedagogical framework for facilitating parents’ learning in nurse–parent partnership.Nick Hopwood, Teena Clerke & Anne Nguyen - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (2):e12220.
    Nursing work increasingly demands forms of expertise that complement specialist knowledge. In child and family nursing, this need arises when nurses work in partnership with parents of young children at risk. Partnership means working with parents in respectful, negotiated and empowering ways. Existing partnership literature emphasises communicative and relational skills, but this paper focuses on nurses’ capacities to facilitate parents’ learning. Referring to data from home visiting, day‐stay and specialist toddler clinic services in Sydney, a pedagogical framework is presented. Analysis (...)
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  8.  81
    Plato's Anti-Hedonism and the "Protagoras".J. Clerk Shaw - 2015 - Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
    This book takes on two main tasks. The first is to argue that anti-hedonism lies at the center of Plato's critical project in both ethics and politics. Plato sees pleasure and pain as our sole sources of empirical evidence about good and bad. But as sources of evidence they are highly fallible; contrast effects with pain intensify certain pleasures, including most pleasures related to the body and social standing. This leads us to believe that the causes of such pleasures (e.g. (...)
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  9. Socrates and the True Political Craft.J. Clerk Shaw - 2011 - Classical Philology 106:187-207.
    This paper argues that Socrates does not claim to be a political expert at Gorgias 521d6-8, as many scholars say. Still, Socrates does claim a special grasp of true politics. His special grasp (i) results from divine dispensation; (ii) is coherent true belief about politics; and (iii) also is Socratic wisdom about his own epistemic shortcomings. This condition falls short of expertise in two ways: Socrates sometimes lacks fully determinate answers to political questions, and he does not grasp the first (...)
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  10. Poetry and Hedonic Error in Plato’s Republic.J. Clerk Shaw - 2016 - Phronesis 61 (4):373-396.
    This paper reads Republic 583b-608b as a single, continuous line of argument. First, Socrates distinguishes real from apparent pleasure and argues that justice is more pleasant than injustice. Next, he describes how pleasures nourish the soul. This line of argument continues into the second discussion of poetry: tragic pleasures are mixed pleasures in the soul that seem greater than they are; indulging them nourishes appetite and corrupts the soul. The paper argues that Plato has a novel account of the ‘paradox (...)
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  11. Education and World Citizenship: an Essay towards a Science of Education. By J. S. Mackenzie. [REVIEW]James Clerk Maxwell Garnett - 1921 - International Journal of Ethics 32:445.
     
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  12.  71
    K. Lampe, The Birth of Hedonism: the Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. [REVIEW]J. Clerk Shaw - 2016 - The Classical Review 66 (1):70-72.
  13. N. Reshotko, Socratic virtue: Making the best of the neither-good-nor-bad. [REVIEW]J. Clerk Shaw - 2008 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 47 (1):pp. 132-133.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Socratic Virtue: Making the Best of the Neither-Good-Nor-BadJ. Clerk ShawNaomi Reshotko. Socratic Virtue: Making the Best of the Neither-Good-Nor-Bad. Cambridge-New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Pp. xiv + 204. Cloth, $68.00.In this engaging and provocative book, Naomi Reshotko advances a naturalistic interpretation of Socratic philosophy, i.e., of those views expressed by Plato’s Socrates that best comport with Aristotle’s descriptions of Socrates. She contrasts her reading with those (...)
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  14.  9
    Clerks and Craftsmen in China and the West: Lectures and Addresses on the History of Science and Technology. [REVIEW]A. G. Molland - 1971 - British Journal for the History of Science 5 (4):413-414.
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  15.  22
    China Clerks and Craftsmen in China and the West: Lectures and Addresses on the History of Science and Technology. By Joseph Needham, based largely on collaborative work with Wang Ling, Lu Gwei-Djen and Ho Ping-Yü. London: Cambridge University Press. 1970. Pp. xix + 470. 40 plates. £7.50. [REVIEW]A. G. Molland - 1971 - British Journal for the History of Science 5 (4):413-414.
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  16.  16
    The James Clerk Maxwell Young Writers PrizeNurturing tomorrow's researchers in Physics and Materials Science.E. A. Davis, A. L. Greer, P. Riseborough & K. M. Knowles - 2009 - Philosophical Magazine 89 (13):1091-1093.
  17.  12
    The James Clerk Maxwell Young Writer's PrizeNurturing tomorrow's researchers in Physics and Materials Science.E. A. Davis - 2010 - Philosophical Magazine 90 (12):1543-1546.
  18.  12
    The James Clerk Maxwell Young Writers Prize 2010.E. A. Davis - 2011 - Philosophical Magazine 91 (18):2303-2306.
  19.  11
    The James Clerk Maxwell Young Writers Prize 2011 Nurturing tomorrow's researchers in Physics and Materials Science.E. A. Davis - 2012 - Philosophical Magazine 92 (22):2713-2715.
  20.  11
    The James Clerk Maxwell Young Writers Prize 2012: Nurturing tomorrow’s researchers in Physics and Materials Science.E. A. Davis - 2013 - Philosophical Magazine 93 (23):3081-3083.
  21.  7
    The James Clerk Maxwell Young Writers Prize 2013.E. A. Davis - 2014 - Philosophical Magazine 94 (17):1873-1875.
  22. J. Clerk Maxwell Garnett, Education and World Citizenship: An Essay towards a Science of Education. [REVIEW]Foster Watson - 1921 - Hibbert Journal 20:592.
     
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  23.  57
    Objectivity in Historical Writing.A. MacC Armstrong - 1979 - The Monist 62 (4):429-445.
    1. A recent writer, who would have it that Biblical history is not so much an impartial or purely factual account of events as a series of edifying proclamations, protests that the objective writing of history is never feasible, since the historian who testifies to some event invariably reflects his own particular standpoint; the further away he is from the event, and the more personally interested he and his generation are in the issue, the more subjective his account is apt (...)
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  24.  17
    Clerk Maxwell's corrections to the page proofs of “A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field”.Paul F. Cranefield - 1954 - Annals of Science 10 (4):359-362.
  25.  74
    The Supplementary Clerk: Social Epistemology as a Vocation.Thomas Basbøll - 2012 - Social Epistemology 26 (3-4):435-451.
    The production and circulation of scholarly texts have long been at the center of the theoretical concerns of social epistemologists. In this essay, Foucault?s notion of an ?archive,? a set of practices that operates between the corpus and the language to produce ?statements,? is used to identify a site for a practicing (as distinct from theorizing) social epistemologist. By supporting the efforts of researchers to publish their work, and hence participate in the conversations that define their area of expertise, social (...)
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  26.  78
    The Clerk's Tale and the grammar of assent.Linda Georgianna - 1995 - Speculum 70 (4):793-821.
    The Clerk's Tale is the most elusive and least reassuring of Chaucer's religious tales. Though bad things happen to good people in the other religious narratives in the Canterbury collection, repeated assurances in those tales confirm that the world is governed by a powerful God intent on rewarding his faithful followers. By comparison, the Clerk and his tale are disturbingly silent on the subject of God's plan until the very end, leading many readers to categorize the tale as (...)
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  27.  11
    James Clerk Maxwell: A Biography. Ivan Tolstoy.Crosbie Smith - 1982 - Isis 73 (3):480-480.
  28.  8
    Political philosophy as therapy: Marcuse reconsidered.Gertrude A. Steuernagel - 1979 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
    A Christmas Carol: Scrooge in Bethlehem is an adaptation of Charles Dickens’ 19th-centruy English story, A Christmas Carol. In this merry adaptation Scrooge is the Bethlehem Innkeeper who refuses shelter to Mary and Joseph on that first Christmas night. His front desk clerk, Bob Cratchit, comes to their aid while Scrooge sleeps alone in his dark room in the inn. When God sends an angel with the Light of Salvation to Scrooge, the wretched man is forced to search his (...)
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  29. James Clerk Maxwell: A Biography by Ivan Tolstoy. [REVIEW]Crosbie Smith - 1982 - Isis 73:480-480.
     
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  30.  10
    The Pervigilivm Veneris_ and the Tiberiani _Amnis in Quatrains.J. A. Fort - 1920 - Classical Quarterly 14 (3-4):173-.
    As is well known, this poem, which stood in the Anthologia Latina, is preserved in two MSS. only, the Salmasian and the Pithoean , Nos. 10318 and 8071 in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris; ‘the handwriting dates’ the former ‘as written at the end of the seventh or the beginning of the eighth century; the other…is about two hundred years later in date. Modern scholars regard both MSS. as traceable to a common archetype, probably of the sixth century’ . At (...)
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  31.  3
    Principum Neapolitanorum Coniurationis Anni MDCCI Historia.Giorgio A. Pinton (ed.) - 2013 - Amsterdam: Brill Rodopi.
    In September of 1701, events transpired in Naples that, through frequent retellings, became popularly known as “the conspiracy of the Prince of Macchia.” Rapidly gaining fame, this apparently anonymous narrative was soon incorporated by different historians in their history of the transition years between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. But who was the initial bard or narrator, the town clerk or citizen who first gave testimony of this event by creating a Latin text of the story of the Prince (...)
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  32.  19
    Clerk Maxwell and Modern Science. Six commemorative lectures by SirEdward V. Appleton, E. G. Bowen, C. A. Coulson, R. E. Peierls, SirJohn Randall, and R. A. Smith. Edited by C. Domb. Pp. x + 118, frontis., 5 plates and numerous text figures. University of London, The Athlone Press. 1963. Price 25s. net. [REVIEW]D. Chilton - 1964 - British Journal for the History of Science 2 (1):76-76.
  33.  45
    By design: James Clerk Maxwell and the evangelical unification of science.Matthew Stanley - 2012 - British Journal for the History of Science 45 (1):57-73.
    James Clerk Maxwell's electromagnetic theory famously unified many of the Victorian laws of physics. This essay argues that Maxwell saw a deep theological significance in the unification of physical laws. He postulated a variation on the design argument that focused on the unity of phenomena rather than Paley's emphasis on complexity. This argument of Maxwell's is shown to be connected to his particular evangelical religious views. His evangelical perspective provided encouragement for him to pursue a unified physics that supplemented (...)
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  34.  23
    La publication duTreatise on electricity and magnetism de James Clerk Maxwell.Franck Achard - 1998 - Revue de Synthèse 119 (4):511-544.
    Cet article vise à éclairer le contexte universitaire et éditorial qui favorisa la publication du Treatise on electricity and magnetism de James Clerk Maxwell afin de mieux cerner la nature de cette entreprise scientifique. Le projet fut formé en 1867 à l'occasion d'une réforme introduisant l'étude de l'électricité et du magnétisme dans l'enseignement délivré à Cambridge et s'inscrivait dans un mouvement plus vaste qui développait l'enseignement de ces disciplines dans les universités britanniques. L'étude des relations entre le projet de (...)
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  35.  16
    The Lives of Those Who Would Be Immortal [review of David Leavitt, The Indian Clerk: a Novel ].Richard Henry Schmitt - 2007 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 27 (2):272-279.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:March 13, 2008 (7:35 pm) G:\WPData\TYPE2702\russell 27,2 054.wpd 272 Reviews 1 See Brian J.yL. Berry and Donald C. Dahmen, “Paul Wheatley, 1921–1999”, Annals of the Association of American Geographers 91 (2001): 734–47. THE LIVES OF THOSE WHO WOULD BE IMMORTAL Richard Henry Schmitt U. of Chicago Chicago, il 60637, usa [email protected] David Leavitt. The Indian Clerk: a Novel. London: Bloomsbury, 2008; New York: Bloomsbury, 2007. Pp. 485. isbn (...)
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  36.  42
    Evidence and Method: Scientific Strategies of Isaac Newton and James Clerk Maxwell.Peter Achinstein - 2013 - New York, US: Oup Usa.
    In this book, Peter Achinstein proposes and defends several objective concepts of evidence. He then explores the question of whether a scientific method, such as that represented in the four "Rules for the Study of Natural Philosophy" that Isaac Newton invoked in proving his law of gravity, can be employed in demonstrating how the proposed definitions of evidence are to be applied to real scientific cases.
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  37.  36
    In Praise of Slacking: Richard Linklater’s Slacker and Kevin Smith’s Clerks as Hallmarks of 1990s American Independent Cinema Counterculture.Katarzyna Małecka - 2015 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 5 (1):190-205.
    Some people live to work, others work to live, while still others prefer to live lives of leisure. Since the Puritans, American culture and literature have been dominated by individuals who have valued hard work. However, shortly after its founding, America managed to produce the leisurely Rip Van Winkle, who, over time, has been followed by kindred spirits such as, for instance, Walt Whitman, Henry David Thoreau, Twain’s Huck Finn, Melville’s Bartleby, Jack Kerouac, Diane di Prima, the Hippies, and Christopher (...)
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  38.  9
    The Writing Tools Used by Clerks of Abbasid State.Selahattin Polatoğlu - 2022 - Fırat Üniversitesi İlahiyat Fakültesi Dergisi 27 (1):119-130.
    In addition to being a means of communication between people, writing is the only way of recording government affairs. Writing has an important place in the preservation of knowledge and its transmission to future generations. Writing is an activity that occurs through processing meaningful words on a certain surface with a pointed object. As understood from the archaeological data, the first examples of writing were created by engraving on a clay tablet with a pointed object. Throughout history, people have discovered (...)
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  39.  31
    Review of J. Clerk Shaw, Plato’s Anti-hedonism and the Protagoras, Cambridge, 2015. [REVIEW]Vanessa de Harven - 2015 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 11.
    In his exciting new book, Plato’s Anti-hedonism and the Protagoras, J. Clerk Shaw paints a masterful portrait of the Athenian majority, or “the many,” as portrayed by Plato not just in the Protagoras (as the title advertises), but throughout the Platonic corpus. Shaw offers an incisive diagnosis of popular “double-think,” which balances the incoherent complex of commitments to hedonism (the view the pleasure is the good), to the possibility of akrasia (weakness of will) and to the belief that injustice (...)
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  40.  16
    Of the principle of moral estimation: A discourse between David Hume, Robert clerk, and Adam Smith: An unpublished ms by Adam Ferguson.Ernest Campbell Mossner - 1960 - Journal of the History of Ideas 21 (April-June):222-232.
  41.  15
    Griselda’s Afterlife, or the Relationship between Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale, Chaucer’s The Clerk’s Tale and the Tale of Magic.Andrzej Wicher - 2021 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 11:334-352.
    Some influence of Chaucer’s The Clerk’s Tale, also known as the story of the patient Griselda, on Shakespeare, and particularly on The Winter’s Tale, has long been recognized. It seems, however, that the matter deserves further attention because the echoes of The Clerk’s Tale seem scattered among a number of Shakespeare’s plays, especially the later ones. The experimental nature of this phenomenon consists in the fact that Griselda-like characters do not strike the reader, especially perhaps the Renaissance reader, (...)
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  42.  15
    The Confined Atom: James Clerk Maxwell on the Fundamental Particles and the Limits of Scientific Knowledge.Charis Charalampous - 2021 - Perspectives on Science 29 (2):189-214.
    This paper distinguishes in Maxwell’s thought between “atomic molecules” and “ultimate atoms,” and arrives at a set of properties that characterize each type of atom. It concludes that Maxwell is a mathematical atomist, an approach that entails the notion that although it is impossible to observe the ultimate atoms as free particles, we can nevertheless study them as mathematical observables, on the caveat that mathematical formalism remains tied to phenomenalism and to theoretical interpretations of such phenomena as, for example, mass (...)
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  43.  29
    The uses of analogy: James Clerk Maxwell's ‘On Faraday's lines of force’ and early Victorian analogical argument.Kevin Lambert - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Science 44 (1):61-88.
    Early Victorian analogical arguments were used to order the natural and the social world by maintaining a coherent collective experience across cultural oppositions such as the ideal and material, the sacred and profane, theory and fact. Maxwell's use of analogical argument in ‘On Faraday's lines of force’ was a contribution to that broad nineteenth-century discussion which overlapped theology and natural philosophy. I argue here that Maxwell understood his theoretical work as both a technical and a socially meaningful practice and that (...)
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  44.  17
    Book Review:Education and World Citizenship: An Essay Towards a Science of Education. James Clerk Maxwell Garnett. [REVIEW]J. S. Mackenzie - 1922 - International Journal of Ethics 32 (4):445.
  45.  25
    Le personnage de Grisildis dans The Clerk's Tale de Chaucer : un discours sur l’effacement?Martine Yvernault - 2009 - Clio 30:137-152.
    Dès le prologue du Conte de l’Universitaire d’Oxford, l’Hôtelier impose les formes du conte qu’il attend de l’Universitaire, un « beau récit d’aventures ». Le thème de l’obéissance structure l’ensemble du conte. S’agit-il d’un plaidoyer en faveur de la soumission des femmes que la patience transformerait en saintes, en héroïnes dignes de figurer dans les récits hagiographiques? Que signifie l’effacement de Grisildis? Le narrateur cherche-t-il à peindre une Grisildis effacée ou plutôt à effacer ce type de femme admirable, certes, mais (...)
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  46. John Henry Newman: A Biography by Ian Ker, and: The Achievement of John Henry Newman by Ian Ker.Edward Jeremy Miller - 1991 - The Thomist 55 (2):337-342.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 387 and contributed an important and helpful study. This dissertation is a model of its kind. One hopes the author will continue his scholarly efforts. The Catholic University of America Washington, D.C. WILLIAM E. MAY John Henry Newman: A Biography. By IAN KER. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990. Pp. xii + 764. $24.95 (paper). The Achievement of John Henry Newman. By IAN KER. Notre Dame: University (...)
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  47.  14
    Plato’s Anti-Hedonism and the Protagoras by J. Clerk Shaw.Naomi Reshotko - 2016 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 54 (2):334-335.
    Shaw introduces an important and compelling line of argumentation concerning the relationship between pleasure and the good into the literature on Plato’s dialogues with ramifications beyond any commitment that Plato has Socrates make to hedonism at Protagoras 351b–357e. To appreciate Shaw’s argument, the term ‘hedonism’ must be understood to indicate that the good is identical to bodily pleasure—not to both sensate and modal pleasure understood as a dichotomy, and not to all pleasures of the soul and body understood as a (...)
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  48.  51
    A Comparative Study of Ethical Perceptions of Managers and Non-Managers.Noel Y. M. Siu & Kit-Chun Joanna Lam - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 88 (S1):167-183.
    This study provides a comparison of the ethical perceptions of managers and non-managers, including professionals, teachers, sales persons and clerks, as well as technical and plant workers. Data of working individuals were collected in Hong Kong in the form of questionnaires which contain vignettes of questionable ethical issues. Factor analysis was used to identify the major ethical dimensions which were then used as the basis of comparison. Regression analyses were used to study the effect of various variables on ethical perceptions (...)
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  49.  48
    Mathematical Representations in Science: A Cognitive–Historical Case History.Ryan D. Tweney - 2009 - Topics in Cognitive Science 1 (4):758-776.
    The important role of mathematical representations in scientific thinking has received little attention from cognitive scientists. This study argues that neglect of this issue is unwarranted, given existing cognitive theories and laws, together with promising results from the cognitive historical analysis of several important scientists. In particular, while the mathematical wizardry of James Clerk Maxwell differed dramatically from the experimental approaches favored by Michael Faraday, Maxwell himself recognized Faraday as “in reality a mathematician of a very high order,” and (...)
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  50.  11
    A Literary Genre Unknown Sufficiently in the Turkish Literature: Rūznāme and An Example.Alim Yildiz - 2016 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 20 (1):429-444.
    The word of rūznāme means diary in the Persian language. In the historical records it refers to special diaries written by the secret clerks of Ottoman sultans. Apart from that there are various different types of rūznāmes. In some rūznāmes were described repetitious behaviors that they are a suitable or an unsuitable for each day of the week or month. This article aims to investigate a manuscript named “The Book of Rūznāme” contains suitable and unsuitable behaviors for each day of (...)
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