Results for 'Alan Dunning'

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  1.  40
    Electric flesh - the electromagnetic medium.Alan Dunning & Paul Woodrow - 2005 - Technoetic Arts 3 (3):155-168.
    This paper discusses the work of the Einstein's Brain Project and its representations of a dynamic world through the production of technologically sustained realities and recursive cognitive systems examining bio-electrical fields. These augmented realities combine the languages of art, science and technology, and the new structures of hypermorphism - the ever morphing, ever changing object, and the parallaxic remix - the ever moving contextual eye -to reveal the invisible elements of biological existence and the dynamics of living systems.
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  2.  4
    The Physics of Duns Scotus: The Scientific Context of a Theological Vision by Richard Cross. [REVIEW]Alan Perreiah - 2000 - Isis 91:346-347.
  3.  26
    How applicable is Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics?D. Sands & J. Dunning-Davies - 2011 - Apeiron: Studies in Infinite Nature 18 (1):10.
  4.  14
    A History of Political Theories: Ancient and Mediaeval.Wm A. Hammond & William Archibald Dunning - 1903 - Philosophical Review 12 (2):199.
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  5. Making Globalization Good: The Moral Challenges of Global Capitalism.John H. Dunning (ed.) - 2004 - Oxford University Press.
    How can we develop a global economic architecture which is efficient, morally acceptable, geographically inclusive, and sustainable over time? If global capitalism -- arguably the most efficient wealth-creating system known to man -- is to be both economically viable and socially acceptable, each of its four constituent institutions must be both technically competent and buttressed by a strong moral ethos. Leading thinkers in international business and ethics identify the pressing moral issues which global capitalism must answer.
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  6. Black Holes, other Exotic stars and Conventional Wisdom.S. Bloomer & J. Dunning-Davies - 2005 - Apeiron 12 (3):291.
  7.  80
    Pretense and representation: The origins of "theory of mind.".Alan M. Leslie - 1987 - Psychological Review 94 (4):412-426.
  8.  41
    Reason, Bias, and Inquiry: The Crossroads of Epistemology and Psychology.Nathan Ballantyne & David Dunning (eds.) - 2022 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Philosophers and psychologists routinely explore questions surrounding reasoning, inquiry, and bias, though typically in disciplinary isolation. What is the source of our intellectual errors? When can we trust information others tell us? This volume brings together researchers from across the two disciplines to present ideas and insights for addressing the challenges of knowing well in a complicated world in four parts: how to best describe the conceptual and empirical terrain of reason and bias; how reasoning and bias influence basic perception (...)
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  9.  46
    Domain specificity in conceptual development: Neuropsychological evidence from autism.Alan M. Leslie & Laila Thaiss - 1992 - Cognition 43 (3):225-251.
  10. Agricultural Subsidies: A Moral Dilemma for Business, Government, and Consumers.Becca Crossen, Brittany Culver, Heather Dunning, Kelsey Lee & Sean Roach - forthcoming - Philosophy.
     
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  11. Coercion.Alan Wertheimer - 1990 - Princeton University Press.
    These paperback editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback editions.
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  12.  5
    Civilisation and Informalisation: Connecting Long-Term Social and Psychic Processes.Cas Wouters & Michael Dunning (eds.) - 2019 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    Over the last century and a half, manners and formalities in the West have become less status-ridden, stiff and rigid. Debates around Norbert Elias' theory of civilising processes gave rise to questions of a change in direction of these patterns. The concept of informalisation, which describes these transformations, was first used to analyse the tumultuous changes of the 1960s and 1970s. This increasing informality, leniency and flexibility, comes hand-in-hand with a growing demand on individuals to self-regulate their emotions. This book (...)
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  13.  84
    Understanding People: Normativity and Rationalizing Explanation.Alan Millar - 2004 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Alan Millar examines our understanding of why people think and act as they do. His key theme is that normative considerations form an indispensable part of the explanatory framework which we use to understand each other. Millar offers illuminating discussions of reasons for belief and reasons for action, the explanation of beliefs and actions in terms of the subject's reasons, the idea that simulation has a key role in understanding people, and the limits of explanation in terms of propositional (...)
  14.  12
    Knowing by Perceiving.Alan Millar - 2019 - Oxford University Press.
    Alan Miller offers a focused account of perceptual knowledge, the knowledge that we gain by means of seeing, hearing, feeling, smelling, and tasting. He explains perceptual knowledge in terms of general recognitional abilities, then situates that account within a broader perspective on epistemology and philosophical method more generally.
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  15.  23
    Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy.Alan Gewirth - 1988 - Noûs 22 (1):143-146.
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  16.  24
    Prospects for a cognitive neuropsychology of autism: Hobson's choice.Alan M. Leslie & Uta Frith - 1990 - Psychological Review 97 (1):122-131.
  17. Coercion.Alan Wertheimer - 1989 - Ethics 99 (3):642-644.
     
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  18.  11
    Sustaining attention in affective contexts during adolescence: age-related differences and association with elevated symptoms of depression and anxiety.D. L. Dunning, J. Parker, K. Griffiths, M. Bennett, A. Archer-Boyd, A. Bevan, S. Ahmed, C. Griffin, L. Foulkes, J. Leung, A. Sakhardande, T. Manly, W. Kuyken, J. M. G. Williams, S. -J. Blakemore & T. Dalgleish - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    Sustained attention, a key cognitive skill that improves during childhood and adolescence, tends to be worse in some emotional and behavioural disorders. Sustained attention is typically studied in non-affective task contexts; here, we used a novel task to index performance in affective versus neutral contexts across adolescence (N = 465; ages 11–18). We asked whether: (i) performance would be worse in negative versus neutral task contexts; (ii) performance would improve with age; (iii) affective interference would be greater in younger adolescents; (...)
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  19.  29
    Get thee to a laboratory.David Dunning - 2011 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 34 (1):18-19.
    von Hippel & Trivers's central assertion that people self-deceive to better deceive others carries so many implications that it must be taken to the laboratory to be tested, rather than promoted by more indirect argument. Although plausible, many psychological findings oppose it. There is also an evolutionary alternative: People better deceive not through self-deception, but rather by not caring about the truth.
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  20. John Dewey and the High Tide of American Liberalism.Alan Ryan - 1995 - W.W. Norton.
    "When John Dewey died in 1952, he was memorialized as America's most famous philosopher, revered by liberal educators and deplored by conservatives, but universally acknowledged as his country's intellectual voice. Many things conspired to give Dewey an extraordinary intellectual eminence: He was immensely long-lived and immensely prolific; he died in his ninety-third year, and his intellectual productivity hardly slackened until his eighties." "Professor Alan Ryan offers new insights into Dewey's many achievements, his character, and the era in which his (...)
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  21. Arguments For—Or Against—Probabilism?Alan Hájek - 2009 - In Franz Huber & Christoph Schmidt-Petri (eds.), Degrees of belief. London: Springer. pp. 229--251.
    Four important arguments for probabilism—the Dutch Book, representation theorem, calibration, and gradational accuracy arguments—have a strikingly similar structure. Each begins with a mathematical theorem, a conditional with an existentially quantified consequent, of the general form: if your credences are not probabilities, then there is a way in which your rationality is impugned. Each argument concludes that rationality requires your credences to be probabilities. I contend that each argument is invalid as formulated. In each case there is a mirror-image theorem and (...)
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  22.  10
    Context, as well as inputs, shape decisions, but are people aware of it?Erik G. Helzer & David Dunning - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (1):30-31.
  23.  39
    Soccer Crowd Disorder and the Press: Processes of Amplification and De-amplification in Historical Perspective.Patrick Murphy, Eric Dunning & John Williams - 1988 - Theory, Culture and Society 5 (4):645-673.
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  24.  36
    Misbelief and the neglect of environmental context.David Dunning - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (6):517-518.
    Focusing on the individual's internal cognitive architecture, McKay & Dennett (M&D) provide an incomplete analysis because they neglect the crucial role played by the external environment in producing misbeliefs and determining whether those misbeliefs are adaptive. In some environments, positive illusions are not adaptive. Further, misbeliefs often arise because the environment commonly fails to provide crucial information needed to form accurate judgments.
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  25.  42
    Neo-Fregeanism: An Embarrassment of Riches.Alan Weir - 2003 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 44 (1):13-48.
    Neo-Fregeans argue that substantial mathematics can be derived from a priori abstraction principles, Hume's Principle connecting numerical identities with one:one correspondences being a prominent example. The embarrassment of riches objection is that there is a plurality of consistent but pairwise inconsistent abstraction principles, thus not all consistent abstractions can be true. This paper considers and criticizes various further criteria on acceptable abstractions proposed by Wright settling on another one—stability—as the best bet for neo-Fregeans. However, an analogue of the embarrassment of (...)
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  26.  6
    Language for God in Patristic Tradition: Wrestling with Biblical Anthropomorphism.Benjamin H. Dunning - 2015 - Augustinian Studies 46 (2):298-302.
  27.  96
    Free Speech.Alan Haworth - 1998 - Routledge.
    Free Speech is a philosophical treatment of a topic which is of immense importance to all of us. Writing with great clarity, wit, and genuine concern, Alan Haworth situates the main arguments for free speech by tracing their relationship to contemporary debates in politics and political philosophy, and their historical roots to earlier controversies over religious toleration. Free Speech will appeal to anyone with an interest in philosophy, politics and current affairs.
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  28.  14
    Post-modernism And The Construct Of The Divisible Self.William V. Dunning - 1993 - British Journal of Aesthetics 33 (2):132-141.
  29.  40
    The relation of self to social perception.David Dunning - 2003 - In Mark R. Leary & June Price Tangney (eds.), Handbook of Self and Identity. Guilford Press. pp. 421--441.
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  30. Occasions for an Empirical History of Philosophy of Science: American Philosophers of Science at Work in the 1950s and 1960s.Alan Richardson - 2012 - Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 2 (1):1-20.
    The text- and argument-focused histories of philosophy that we have are mainly interested in teasing out the details of the positions taken on philosophical issues by individual philosophers. But this is a long way from having a historical explanation of the larger-scale trajectory of philosophical development. An empirical history of philosophy, however, examines the institutionalized places and venues for philosophical work that provide a rich, shared structure for the promotion of particular sorts of work. Mid-twentieth-century philosophers of science such as (...)
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  31.  11
    Self-reflection in the arts and sciences.Alan Blum - 1984 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press. Edited by Peter McHugh.
  32.  27
    Anti-Libertarianism: Markets, Philosophy, and Myth.Alan Haworth - 1994 - Routledge.
    Free marketeers claim that theirs is the only economic mechanism which respects and furthers human freedom. Socialism, they say, has been thoroughly discredited. Most libertarians treat the state in anything other than its minimal, 'nightwatchman' form as a repressive embodiment of evil. Some reject the state altogether. But is the 'free market idea' a rationally defensible belief? Or do its proponents fail to examine the philosophical roots of their so-called freedom? Anti-libertarianism takes a sceptical look at the conceptual tenets of (...)
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  33. Force and inertia in the seventeenth century: Descartes and Newton.Alan Gabbey - 1980 - In Stephen Gaukroger (ed.), Descartes: philosophy, mathematics and physics. Totowa, N.J.: Barnes & Noble. pp. 230--320.
     
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  34.  74
    Entangled Empathy.Alan Wayne & Lori Gruen - 2018 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy 25:21-35.
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  35.  12
    From Mathematics to Philosophy.Alan Treherne - 1975 - Philosophical Quarterly 25 (99):176-178.
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  36.  4
    Acknowledgments.Stephen Northrup Dunning - 1985 - In Kierkegaard’s Dialectic of Inwardness: A Structural Analysis of the Theory of Stages. Princeton University Press.
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  37.  25
    A Figure of the Distributist Era.R. Dunning & E. Dunning - 1987 - The Chesterton Review 13 (3):423-423.
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  38.  81
    A history of political theories, ancient and mediaeval.William Archibald Dunning - 1902 - [New York,: Johnson Reprint.
    The Hellenic Peoples in General A history of political theories of the scope defined above must begin with the thought of that brilliant aggregation of ...
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  39. A Kierkegaardian reading of Jordan Peterson.Stephen M. Dunning - 2020 - In Ron Dart (ed.), Myth and meaning in Jordan Peterson: a Christian perspective. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press.
     
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  40. Chapter 3 Diabetes and End-of-Life Care: Ehtical Issues, Practices and Challenges.Trisha Dunning - 2013 - In Maria Rossi & Luiz Ortiz (eds.), End-of-life care: ethical issues, practices and challenges. New York: Nova Publishers.
     
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  41.  2
    Comments on Elias's `Scenes from the Life of a Knight'.Eric Dunning - 1987 - Theory, Culture and Society 4 (2-3):366-371.
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  42. Drugs in Sport: Some Neglected Issues.Eric Dunning & Ivan Waddington - 2003 - In Eric Dunning & Stephen Mennell (eds.), Norbert Elias. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE. pp. 4--227.
  43.  13
    FOUR. Approaches to the Religious Stage.Stephen Northrup Dunning - 1985 - In Kierkegaard’s Dialectic of Inwardness: A Structural Analysis of the Theory of Stages. Princeton University Press. pp. 105-140.
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  44.  5
    FIVE. Varieties of Religious Dialectic.Stephen Northrup Dunning - 1985 - In Kierkegaard’s Dialectic of Inwardness: A Structural Analysis of the Theory of Stages. Princeton University Press. pp. 141-180.
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  45.  8
    Global Moral Architecture.John H. Dunning - 2004 - In Making Globalization Good: The Moral Challenges of Global Capitalism. Oxford University Press. pp. 345.
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  46.  5
    Introduction.Stephen Northrup Dunning - 1985 - In Kierkegaard’s Dialectic of Inwardness: A Structural Analysis of the Theory of Stages. Princeton University Press. pp. 1-5.
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  47.  6
    Index.Stephen Northrup Dunning - 1985 - In Kierkegaard’s Dialectic of Inwardness: A Structural Analysis of the Theory of Stages. Princeton University Press. pp. 307-324.
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  48.  39
    Kierkegaard's.Stephen N. Dunning - 1980 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 55 (3):259-270.
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  49.  6
    Kierkegaard’s “Hegelian” response to Hamann.Stephan N. Dunning - 1988 - Neue Zeitschrift für Systematicsche Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 30 (1):315-326.
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  50.  9
    Love Is Not Enough.Stephen N. Dunning - 1995 - Faith and Philosophy 12 (1):22-39.
    In a pair of articles published in Faith and Philosophy, C. Stephen Evans argues that Kierkegaard’s pseudonym, Johannes Climacus, understands religious experience as the transforming power of an encounter with the love of God. However, in a book published under his own name, Kierkegaard gives a quite different picture of Christian experience. For Self-Examination makes clear that the reception of God’s love is a rebirth that can occur in the believer only insofar as he or she has died to the (...)
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