Results for 'Adrián Chávez'

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  1.  2
    Células miradas con amor: poemas de Robin Myers.Adrián Chávez - 2022 - Estudios filosofía historia letras 20 (142):125.
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  2.  1
    En memoria de Javier Raya.Adrián Chávez - 2022 - Estudios filosofía historia letras 20 (143):125.
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  3.  56
    Behaving as Expected: Public Information and Fairness Norms.Cristina Bicchieri & Alex Chavez - unknown
    What is considered to be fair depends on context-dependent expectations. Using a modified version of the Ultimatum Game, we demonstrate that both fair behavior and perceptions of fairness depend upon beliefs about what one ought to do in a situation—that is, upon normative expectations. We manipulate such expectations by creating informational asymmetries about the offer choices available to the Proposer, and find that behavior varies accordingly. Proposers and Responders show a remarkable degree of agreement in their beliefs about which choices (...)
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  4. What is Interpretability?Adrian Erasmus, Tyler D. P. Brunet & Eyal Fisher - 2021 - Philosophy and Technology 34:833–862.
    We argue that artificial networks are explainable and offer a novel theory of interpretability. Two sets of conceptual questions are prominent in theoretical engagements with artificial neural networks, especially in the context of medical artificial intelligence: Are networks explainable, and if so, what does it mean to explain the output of a network? And what does it mean for a network to be interpretable? We argue that accounts of “explanation” tailored specifically to neural networks have ineffectively reinvented the wheel. In (...)
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  5.  99
    Predictive processing and the representation wars: a victory for the eliminativist.Adrian Downey - 2018 - Synthese 195 (12):5115-5139.
    In this paper I argue that, by combining eliminativist and fictionalist approaches toward the sub-personal representational posits of predictive processing, we arrive at an empirically robust and yet metaphysically innocuous cognitive scientific framework. I begin the paper by providing a non-representational account of the five key posits of predictive processing. Then, I motivate a fictionalist approach toward the remaining indispensable representational posits of predictive processing, and explain how representation can play an epistemologically indispensable role within predictive processing explanations without thereby (...)
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  6.  32
    Scientific Knowledge and the Deep Past: History Matters.Adrian Currie - 2019 - Cambridge University Press.
    Historical sciences like paleontology and archaeology have uncovered unimagined, remarkable and mysterious worlds in the deep past. How should we understand the success of these sciences? What is the relationship between knowledge and history? In Scientific Knowledge and the Deep Past: History Matters, Adrian Currie examines recent paleontological work on the great changes that occurred during the Cretaceous period - the emergence of flowering plants, the splitting of the mega-continent Gondwana, and the eventual fall of the dinosaurs - to analyse (...)
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  7. How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Political Normativity.Adrian Kreutz & Enzo Rossi - forthcoming - Political Studies Review.
    Do salient normative claims about politics require moral premises? Political moralists think they do, political realists think they do not. We defend the viability of realism in a two-pronged way. First, we show that a number of recent attacks on realism, as well as realist responses to those attacks, unduly conflate distinctively political normativity and non-moral political normativity. Second, we argue that Alex Worsnip and Jonathan Leader-Maynard’s recent attack on realist arguments for a distinctively political normativity depends on assuming moralism (...)
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  8.  25
    On Being a Realist about Migration.Adrian Kreutz - 2023 - Res Publica 29 (1):129-140.
    Does political realism have anything to contribute to the debates about migration in normative political theory? Anything well-established ‘moralist’ theories do not already acknowledge, that is? Addressing Jaggar’s (_Aristotelian Soc Suppl_ Vol. XCIV, pp. 87–113, 2020) and Finlayson’s (_Aristotelian Soc Suppl_ Vol. XCIV, pp. 115–139, 2020) critical intercessions into contemporary discourse about migration I argue that a political realist approach to the theory of migration faces what I call the ‘surplus challenge’: realists supposedly have no normative surplus over (liberal) cosmopolitan (...)
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  9. Perfil de valores en estudiantes de licenciatura de la universidad de Los llanos.Patricia Chávez Ávila - 2011 - Revista Aletheia 3 (2).
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  10. A Moderate Defence of the Use of Thought Experiments in Applied Ethics.Adrian Walsh - 2011 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 14 (4):467-481.
    Thought experiments have played a pivotal role in many debates within ethics—and in particular within applied ethics—over the past 30 years. Nonetheless, despite their having become a commonly used philosophical tool, there is something odd about the extensive reliance upon thought experiments in areas of philosophy, such as applied ethics, that are so obviously oriented towards practical life. Herein I provide a moderate defence of their use in applied philosophy against those three objections. I do not defend all possible uses (...)
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  11.  84
    Split-brain syndrome and extended perceptual consciousness.Adrian Downey - 2018 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 17 (4):787-811.
    In this paper I argue that split-brain syndrome is best understood within an extended mind framework and, therefore, that its very existence provides support for an externalist account of conscious perception. I begin by outlining the experimental aberration model of split-brain syndrome and explain both: why this model provides the best account of split-brain syndrome; and, why it is commonly rejected. Then, I summarise Susan Hurley’s argument that split-brain subjects could unify their conscious perceptual field by using external factors to (...)
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  12.  29
    La Justicia Procedimental Imperfecta de John Rawls, en la Conciencia Jurídica Material de Alf Ross.Gabriela González Gómez & María De Lourdes González Chávez - 2005 - Cinta de Moebio 23.
    The unfinished imperfect procedural justice raised by John Rawls can be projected towards the theory of the jurisdictional function of Alf Ross, if we took in consideration the judge as an institution and citizen when he applies the law in the population that judges. The theory of the justice of the..
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  13.  27
    Moral and Political Foundations: From Political Psychology to Political Realism.Adrian Kreutz - 2023 - Moral Philosophy and Politics 10 (1):139-159.
    The political psychologists Hatemi, Crabtree and Smith accuse orthodox moral foundations theory of predicting what is already intrinsic to the theory, namely that moral beliefs influence political decision-making. The authors argue that, first, political psychology must start from a position which treats political and moral beliefs as equals so as to avoid self-justificatory theorising, and second, that such an analysis provides stronger evidence for political attitudes predicting moral attitudes than vice versa. I take this empirical result as a starting point (...)
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  14.  72
    Whatever It Is We Owe to Animals, It's Not to Eat Them.Adrian Kreutz - 2022 - Journal of Animal Ethics 12 (2):123-127.
    In an article published in the Journal of the American Philosophical Association, Nick Zangwill (2021) argues that “eating meat is morally good” (p. 295). It is “our duty” to eat animals, he says, “when it is part of a practice that has benefited animals” (Zangwill, 2021, p. 295). Since certain animals can be said to exist in some sense only because of meat-eating practices, and those practices benefit animals if they have good lives, argues Zangwill, that's why we owe it (...)
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  15.  10
    The Bias Dynamics Model: Correcting for Meta-biases in Therapeutic Prediction.Adrian Erasmus - forthcoming - Philosophy of Science:1-13.
    Inferences from clinical research results to estimates of therapeutic effectiveness suffer due to various biases. I argue that predictions of medical effectiveness are prone to failure because current medical research overlooks the impacts of a particularly detrimental set of biases: meta-biases. Meta-biases are linked to higher-level characteristics of medical research and their effects are only observed when comparing sets of studies that share certain meta-level properties. I offer a model for correcting research results based on meta-research evidence, the bias dynamics (...)
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  16.  18
    The “Spirit” of New Atheism and Religious Activism in the Post-9/11 God Debate.Adrian Rosenfeldt - forthcoming - Human Studies:1-20.
    In this article I examine the contemporary discourses and debates that surround the sociology of spirituality, with especial attention to the term “spirituality”. To counter the widespread belief that this term lacks clarity and utility, I suggest reconsidering Max Weber’s use of the term “spirit,” as it refers to a recognisable ethic that results in specific behaviour, while still retaining its religious and spiritual connotations. Through focusing on two influential English figures in the post 9/11 God debate in the West, (...)
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  17.  17
    Gestalt Mechanisms and Believing Beliefs: Sartre's Analysis of the Phenomenon of Bad Faith.Adrian Mirvish - 1987 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 18 (3):245-262.
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  18. Kant's Two Solutions to the Free Rider Problem.Adrian M. S. Piper - 2012 - Kant Yearbook 4 (1).
    Kant identifies what are in fact Free Riders as the most noxious species of polemicists. Kant thinks polemic reduces the stature and authority of reason to a method of squabbling that destabilizes social equilibrium and portends disintegration into the Hobessian state of nature. In the first Critique, Kant proposes two textually related solutions to the Free Rider problem.
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  19.  14
    Martí y los conocimientos médicos.Sonia Socarrás Sánchez & Graciela López-Chávez Martínez - 2006 - Humanidades Médicas 6 (3):0-0.
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  20.  8
    Una puerta abierta a la profesionalidad pedagógica.Sonia Socarrás Sánchez & Graciela López-Chávez Martínez - 2006 - Humanidades Médicas 6 (1):0-0.
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  21.  14
    Human enhancement drugs and Armed Forces: an overview of some key ethical considerations of creating ‘Super-Soldiers’.Adrian Walsh & Katinka Van de Ven - 2022 - Monash Bioethics Review 41 (1):22-36.
    There is a long history and growing evidence base that the use of drugs, such as anabolic-androgenic steroids, to enhance human performance is common amongst armed forces, including in Australia. We should not be surprised that this might have occurred for it has long been predicted by observers. It is a commonplace of many recent discussion of the future of warfare and future military technology to proclaim the imminent arrival of Super Soldiers, whose capacities are modified via drugs, digital technology (...)
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  22. Where to Start?: Robert Pippin, Slavoj Žižek, and the True Beginning(s) of Hegel’s System.Adrian Johnston - 2014 - Crisis and Critique 3:370-419.
  23.  70
    Actuality and world-indexed sentences.Adrian Miroiu - 1999 - Studia Logica 63 (3):311-330.
    Some logical properties of modal languages in which actuality is expressible are investigated. It is argued that, if a sentence like 'Actually, Quine is a distinguished philosopher' is understood as a special case of world-indexed sentences (the index being the actual world), then actuality can be expressed only under strong modal assumptions. Some rival rigid and indexical approaches to actuality are discussed.
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  24.  52
    It Just Doesn’t Feel Right: OCD and the ‘Scaling Up’ Problem.Adrian Downey - 2020 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 19 (4):705-727.
    The ‘scaling up’ objection says non-representational ecological-enactive accounts will be unable to explain ‘representation hungry’ cognition. Obsessive-compulsive disorder presents a paradigmatic instance of this objection, marked as it is by ‘representation hungry’ obsessive thoughts and compulsive behavior organized around them. In this paper I provide an ecological-enactive account of OCD, thereby demonstrating non-representational frameworks can ‘scale up’ to explain ‘representation hungry’ cognition. First, I outline a non-representational account of mind— a predictive processing operationalization of Sean Kelly’s theory of perception. This (...)
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  25.  9
    Derecho natural y iusnaturalismos: VIII Jornadas Internacionales de Derecho Natural y III de Filosofía del Derecho.José Chávez-Fernández Postigo & Rafael Rubén Santa María D'Angelo (eds.) - 2014 - Lima: Palestra Editores.
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  26.  13
    Does certified organic farming reduce greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural production? Comment on the McGee study.Adrian Muller, Eduardo Aguilera, Colin Skinner & Andreas Gattinger - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (4):943-947.
    A recent study by McGee from the University of Oregon has led to discussions in international media and on the web. This study addresses an interesting question and applies advanced statistics for its analysis. However, we identify several methodological flaws that invalidate the results. First, McGee tests a hypothesis that does not correspond to his main question and which does not allow McGee to derive the conclusions that are drawn in his paper and reported in the media coverage. Second, the (...)
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  27.  14
    Freud contra Sartre: Repression or Self-Deception?Adrian Mirvish - 1990 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 21 (3):216-233.
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  28. Pyrrhonism and the mādhyamaka.Adrian Kuzminski - 2007 - Philosophy East and West 57 (4):482-511.
    : The question of possible Indian influence on Pyrrhonist skepticism was raised long ago by Diogenes Laertius in his biography of Pyrrho. Diogenes tells us that Pyrrho adopted his "most noble philosophy" as a result of his contacts with Indian sages when he accompanied Alexander the Great on his expedition in the fourth century B.C.E. Most modern Western scholars have downplayed Diogenes’ claim as unsubstantiated, but the striking parallels to be found in subsequent ancient Pyrrhonist and Mādhyamaka texts suggest its (...)
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  29.  22
    Australian Law Students' Perceptions of Their Values: Interim Results in the First Year-2001-of a Three-Year Empirical Assessment.Adrian Evans & Josephine Palermo - 2002 - Legal Ethics 5 (1):103.
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  30.  3
    Applied Political Philosophy at the Rubicon: Will Kymlica's Multicultural Citizenship.Adrian Favell - 1998 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 1 (2):255-278.
    Will Kymlicka's Multicultural Citizenship represents an extraordinary attempt to put applied political philosophy to work in the empirical context of contemporary political debates about immigration and ethnic minorities in western society. This paper explores the methodological and interpretative difficulties of combining normative and empirical goals, in a critical discussion of the examples Kymlicka makes of multicultural issues in France, Britain and the US. It goes on to argue that these weaknesses lie in the Rawlsian influence in Kymlicka's work, and that (...)
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  31.  8
    Ricoeur as Another: The Ethics of Subjectivity, eds. Richard A. Cohen and James L. Marsh.Adrian P. Mills - 2005 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 36 (1):110-110.
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  32.  18
    Critical brain characteristics to consider in developing dream and memory theories.Adrian R. Morrison & Larry D. Sanford - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (6):977-978.
    Dreaming in sleep must depend on the activity of the brain as does cognition and memory in wakefulness. Yet our understanding of the physiological subtleties of state differences may still be too primitive to guide theories adequately in these areas. One can state nonetheless unequivocally that the brain in REM is poorly equipped to practice for eventualities of wakefulness through dreaming, or for consolidating into memory the complex experiences of that state. [Hobson et al., Nielsen, Solms, Vertes & Eastman, Revonsuo].
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  33.  3
    Influence of Organized vs Non Organized Physical Activity on School Adaptation Behavior.Adrian A. Mosoi, Jürgen Beckmann, Arash Mirifar, Guillaume Martinent & Lorand Balint - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    It is now well-established that physical activity has positive effects on both physical and mental health. However, the influence of organized physical activity on school adaptive behavior of adolescents with disabilities and/or behavioral disorders remains unclear. School behavior adaptation involves the ability to learn, conform to school norms and manage school activities without major behavior conflicts. A cross-sectional study was conducted to test the differences between organized physical activity and non-organized physical activity in an after school program. Eighty Romanian adolescents (...)
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  34.  11
    Structure, Function and Purpose an Inquiry Into the Concepts and Methods of Biology From the Viewpoint of Time.Adrian C. Moulyn - 1957 - Liberal Arts Press.
  35.  32
    The functions of point and line in time measuring operations.Adrian C. Moulyn - 1952 - Philosophy of Science 19 (2):141-155.
    Measuring time is expressing temporal relationships between objects in terms of spatial relationships with the aid of geometric points, straight lines and clocks. The concepts, point and line, are abstracted from the concrete substratum of sensory experience. This process of abstraction is integrated with the psychological processes which go on within an observer who is reading a clock. The analysis of clock-reading from a psychological point of view points up the necessity to differentiate between two modalities of time: objective time, (...)
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  36.  55
    The Right to Bodily Integrity.Adrian M. Viens (ed.) - 2014 - Lund Humphries Publishers.
    The right to bodily integrity is a controversial issue within moral, political and legal discourse. This first collection of scholarly research articles provides a comprehensive overview of the debates around the ethical and legal aspects of the right to bodily integrity and its implications in theory and practice. The selected essays examine topics such as pregnancy and reproduction, altering children's bodies, transplantation, controversial modifications and surgeries, and experimentation and dead bodies.
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  37.  20
    Spinoza, Our Mutual Friend: Deleuze and Guattari on Living a Philosophical Life.Adrian Switzer - 2021 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 16 (2):190-213.
    The essay draws together a number of disparate elements from Deleuze and Deleuze and Guattari’s various engagements with Spinoza. Specifically, the essay connects the notion of expressionism, which Deleuze develops in the early work Expressionism in Philosophy: Spinoza, to the notion of living a philosophical life from Spinoza: Practical Philosophy, to the ideas of friendship and conceptual personae in Deleuze and Guattari’s What is Philosophy? To think philosophically, which following Spinoza Deleuze treats as a matter of thinking immanently and essentially, (...)
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  38.  48
    Commercial medicine and the ethics of the profit motive.Adrian J. Walsh - 2006 - Journal of Value Inquiry 40 (2-3):341-357.
  39. Adiós al sol inmaculado: sobre la astronomía telescópico-teórica en las "Cartas sobre las manchas solares", obra de Galileo Galilei.Adrián Ramírez - 2009 - Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad de Costa Rica 47 (122):189-194.
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  40.  42
    Herbert read.Adrian Stokes - 1964 - British Journal of Aesthetics 4 (3):195-197.
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  41.  12
    Reflections on the Nude.Adrian Stokes - 1969 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (1):103-104.
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  42.  20
    General practitioners' conflicts of interest, the paramountcy principle and safeguarding children: a psychodynamic contribution.Adrian Sutton - 2011 - Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (4):254-257.
    Next SectionWainwright and Gallagher propose that when child protection concerns emerge significant difficulties arise for General Practitioners because of conflicts between the individual interests of children and parents who are their patients and the Paramountcy Principle. From a psychodynamic perspective their analysis does not give sufficient weight to the nature of personal as opposed to interpersonal conflict of a conscious or unconscious nature. When issues of major import arise, ordinary parenting inevitably involves parents in putting their children's needs first if (...)
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  43.  88
    Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison , Objectivity (Cambridge, MA: Zone Books, 2007). ISBN: 1890951781.Adrian Switzer - 2009 - Foucault Studies:96-104.
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  44.  36
    Les événements de Mai as Theory and Practice.Adrian Switzer - 2009 - PhaenEx 4 (2):97-129.
    The paper reconsiders the events of May 1968 in light of the various attempts to explain and theorize the politics of the student revolution in France. Drawing on contemporary accounts of May '68 as well as historical reflections on the revolution, the paper constructs a historically and politically "horizontal" theory; the structure of the barricades is used as a model for such a political theory. In the Foucauldian and Deleuzian sense of an active form of theory, a "horizontal" approach effectively (...)
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  45.  16
    Constructive Mediated Interferences.Adrian Vizitiu - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 13:129-134.
    In the article we present, we draw the reader’s attention on the possibility that mediated inferences could become means of making categorical sentences representing new data in the chain of human knowledge. These new classes of objects, which are expressed by the intersection of two classes of given objects, should appear as conclusions in a deductive inference where the premises are true. The truth of certain such data becomes a criterion of existence for theobjects described by the data.
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  46.  21
    The indispensability of labelled groups to vulnerability in bioethics.Adrian Kwek - 2017 - Bioethics 31 (9):674-682.
    Regarding the determination of vulnerability, the bioethics community has univocally jettisoned “labelled groups”, groups whose membership confers a context-invariant “vulnerable” status to their members. While the usual reasons against the sole use of labelled groups to determine the vulnerability of individuals are sound, labelled groups as exemplars of vulnerability can play indispensable roles in bioethical reasoning. In this article, I argue against the wholesale jettisoning of labelled groups by showing how they can be useful.
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  47.  67
    Involving patients in decision making and communicating risk: a longitudinal evaluation of doctors' attitudes and confidence during a randomized trial.Adrian Edwards & Glyn Elwyn - 2004 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 10 (3):431-437.
  48.  21
    Judging the 'weight of evidence' in systematic reviews:introducing rigour into the qualitative overview stage by assessing Signal and Noise.Adrian Edwards, Glyn Elwyn Mrcgp, Kerry Hood & Stephen Rollnick - 2000 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 6 (2):177-184.
  49.  49
    A politics that is shared, bounded, and rooted? Rediscovering civic political culture in Western Europe.Adrian Favell - 1998 - Theory and Society 27 (2):209-236.
  50.  20
    Is bodybuilding a sport?Adrian Kind & Eric R. Helms - 2023 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 50 (2):281-299.
    Since its beginnings, modern bodybuilding has been accompanied by the background issue of whether it should be considered a sport. The problem, culminating in its provisional acceptance as a sport by the International Olympic Committee, was later retracted. The uncertainty of whether bodybuilding is a sport or not seems to linger. Addressing this issue, Aranyosi (2018) provided an account to determine the status of bodybuilding as a sport that arrives at the negative answer: bodybuilding is not a sport but rather (...)
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