Results for 'Alan Sutton'

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  1.  24
    Superteachers: From Policy Towards Practice.Alan Sutton, Angela Wortley, Jenny Harrison & Christine Wise - 2000 - British Journal of Educational Studies 48 (4):413 - 428.
    This article is concerned with the origins and evolution of the Advanced Skills Teacher (AST) initiative from its announcement in 1995 to the end of 1999. It examines the Government rationale and the contributions of the Department for Education and Employment (DfEE), the Teacher Training Agency (TTA) and the School Teachers' Review Body (STRB).
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  2.  9
    Superteachrs: From Policy Towards Practice.Alan Sutton, Angela Wortley, Jenny Harrison & Christine Wise - 2000 - British Journal of Educational Studies 48 (4):413-428.
    This article is concerned with the origins and evolution of the Advanced Skills Teacher initiative from its announcement in 1995 to the end of 1999. It examines the Government rationale and the contributions of the Department for Education and Employment, the Teacher Training Agency and the School Teachers' Review Body.
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  3. John AF Thomson, ed., Towns and Townspeople in the Fifteenth Century. Gloucester, Eng., and Wolfeboro Falls, NH: Alan Sutton, 1988. Pp. xiii, 192; 1 black-and-white plate. $28. [REVIEW]Mavis Mate - 1991 - Speculum 66 (2):486-487.
     
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  4.  20
    R. B. Dobson, ed., The Church, Politics and Patronage in the Fifteenth Century. Gloucester, Eng.: Alan Sutton; New York: St. Martin's Press, 1984. Pp. 245. $25.Tony Pollard, ed., Property and Politics: Essays in Later Medieval English History. Gloucester, Eng.: Alan Sutton; New York: St. Martin's Press, 1984. Pp. 204; table, 2 maps. $25. [REVIEW]F. L. Cheyette - 1986 - Speculum 61 (2):497-497.
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  5. Raymond Grant, The Royal Forests of England. Wolfeboro Falls, NH: Alan Sutton, 1991. Pp. xii, 246; 8 black-and-white plates. $45. [REVIEW]Charles R. Young - 1993 - Speculum 68 (3):789-791.
     
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  6. Unpublished Gaskell correspondence.Alan Shelston & John Chapple - 2006 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 88 (1):153-163.
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  7.  60
    Systems of logic based on ordinals..Alan Turing - 1939 - London,: Printed by C.F. Hodgson & son.
  8.  25
    Pragmatism, realism and the economist/economy divide.Alan Shipman - 2003 - Foundations of Science 8 (1):23-50.
    A centipede can walk until it thinks about howit does so. Thereafter it stumbles, over thesheer impossibility of the information andcoordination required. Life in the economy islittle different. Those engaged in productionand exchange discover, pragmatically, ways tomake them work. Those observing the processsee, realistically, the immense improbabilitythat it should do so. That most economies workin practice, but must pass such toughteleological tests to succeed in theory,highlights a difference between players' andspectators' outlook which may help to explainwhy the game has repeatedly (...)
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  9.  28
    Republic of Equals: Predistribution and Property-Owning Democracy.Alan Thomas - 2016 - New York, US: Oxford University Press USA.
    The first book length study of property-owning democracy, Republic of Equals argues that a society in which capital is universally accessible to all citizens is uniquely placed to meet the demands of justice. Arguing from a basis in liberal-republican principles, this expanded conception of the economic structure of society contextualizes the market to make its transactions fair. The author shows that a property-owning democracy structures economic incentives such that the domination of one agent by another in the market is structurally (...)
  10. Masturbation and the Continuum of Sexual Activities.Alan Soble - 2022 - In Raja Halwani, Jacob M. Held, Natasha McKeever & Alan G. Soble (eds.), The Philosophy of Sex: Contemporary Readings, 8th edition. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 69-93.
    Some philosophical accounts imply that masturbation is inferior sexual activity. Against this, Soble argues that masturbation is central. Relying on the physical-anatomical indistinguishability of sexual act-types, he derives a Zeno-style paradox about sexual activity: either all sexual activity (even ordinary coitus) is masturbatory or none of it is (not even solitary masturbation). Soble argues for the first horn of the dilemma, thus ensuring that solitary masturbation is a member of the continuum of sexual activities. Going beyond anatomy, Soble also argues (...)
     
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  11.  13
    Renaissance Truths: Humanism, Scholasticism and the Search for the Perfect Language.Alan R. Perreiah - 2014 - Routledge.
    For humanists the perfect language was a revived Classical Latin. For scholastics it was a practical logic adapted to the needs of education. Though they have long been portrayed as arch rivals, Alan Perreiah here argues that humanists and scholastics were working in complementary ways toward some of the same goals: most significantly, the early modern search for the perfect language. The study advances research on language pedagogy in the Renaissance by clarifying the connections between truth and translation.
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  12.  6
    Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order.Alan Sica - 1988 - University of California Press.
    Despite immediate appearances, this book is not primarily a hermeneutical exercise in which the superiority of one interpretation of canonical texts is championed against others. Its origin lies elsewhere, near the overlap of history, psychoanalysis, aesthetics, and social theory of the usual kind. Weber, Pareto, Freud, W. I. Thomas, Max Scheler, Karl Mannheim, and many others of similar stature long ago wondered and wrote much about the interplay between societal rationalization and individual rationality, between collective furor and private psychopathology—in short, (...)
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  13. The Language of Imagination.Alan R. White - 1990 - Cambridge: Blackwell.
  14.  14
    Memoria, género y activismo. Resistencia a la dictadura y lucha por el aborto legal.Elizabeth Jelin & Barbara Sutton - 2021 - Aletheia: Anuario de Filosofía 11 (22):e099.
    El 26 de marzo de 2021 se realizó el panel virtual “Memoria, género y activismo. Resistencia a la dictadura y lucha por el aborto legal”. El evento fue organizado por Emilio Crenzel y Daniele Salerno en el marco del proyecto MEMORIGHTS - Memoria Cultural en el Activismo LGBT, con sede en la Universidad de Utrecht y en la Universidad de Buenos Aires, desarrollado dentro del programa Marie Sklodowska-Curie de la Unión Europea. El panel contó también con la colaboración del proyecto (...)
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  15.  23
    Relationships, Authority, and Reasons: A Second-Personal Account of Corporate Moral Agency.Alan D. Morrison, Rita Mota & William J. Wilhelm - 2022 - Business Ethics Quarterly 32 (2):322-347.
    We present asecond-personalaccount of corporate moral agency. This approach is in contrast to thefirst-personalapproach adopted in much of the existing literature, which concentrates on the corporation’s ability to identify moral reasons for itself. Our account treats relationships and communications as the fundamental building blocks of moral agency. The second-personal account rests on a framework developed by Darwall. Its central requirement is that corporations be capable of recognizing the authority relations that they have with other moral agents. We discuss the relevance (...)
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  16. Sexual Gifts and Sexual Duties.Alan Soble - 2022 - In Raja Halwani, Jacob M. Held, Natasha McKeever & Alan G. Soble (eds.), The Philosophy of Sex: Contemporary Readings, 8th edition. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 539-556.
    Relying on a sexual encounter that he had once while in graduate school, Soble explores in this essay two important and under-explored ideas in sexual ethics. The first is whether there are sexual duties to others (including, even especially, to strangers), and what the source of such duties might be. He provides good reasons, rooted in both religious and secular thought, for believing that such duties exist. The second is whether there are supererogatory sexual actions—sexual actions that go beyond the (...)
     
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  17. Memory.Kourken Michaelian & John Sutton - 2017 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Remembering is one of the most characteristic and most puzzling of human activities. Personal memory, in particular - the ability mentally to travel back into the past, as leading psychologist Endel Tulving puts it - often has intense emotional or moral significance: it is perhaps the most striking manifestation of the peculiar way human beings are embedded in time, and of our limited but genuine freedom from our present environment and our immediate needs. Memory has been significant in the history (...)
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  18.  2
    Attending to the literary: the distinctiveness of literature.Alan Singer - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Attending to the Literary: The Distinctiveness of Literature is a foray into current debates about the nature of the literary. What is literary? Is literarity a thing? Are there still aesthetic standards of taste? Is the category of literary aesthetics an obstacle to understanding the uses of literature? What does it mean to count the reading of literature as an experience in its own right? What would be the deficits to human experience without literature? Attending to the Literary addresses all (...)
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  19. Perceptual-recognitional abilities and perceptual knowledge.Alan Millar - 2008 - In Adrian Haddock & Fiona Macpherson (eds.), Disjunctivism: perception, action, knowledge. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 330--47.
    A conception of recognitional abilities and perceptual-discriminative abilities is deployed to make sense of how perceptual experiences enable us to make cognitive contact with objects and facts. It is argued that accepting the emerging view does not commit us to thinking that perceptual experiences are essentially relational, as they are conceived to be in disjunctivist theories. The discussion explores some implications for the theory of knowledge in general and, in particular, for the issue of how we can shed light on (...)
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  20.  5
    Beyond Immanence: The Theological Vision of Kierkegaard and Barth.Andrew Torrance & Alan J. Torrance - 2023 - Grand Rapids: Eerdmans.
    Critical insights into Kierkegaard's influence on Barth's theology. Karl Barth was often critical of Søren Kierkegaard's ideas as he understood them. But close reading of the two corpora reveals that Barth owes a lot to the melancholy Dane. Both conceive of God as infinitely qualitatively different from humans, and both emphasize the shocking nearness of God in the incarnation. As public intellectuals, they used this theological vision to protect Christocentric faith from political manipulation and compromise. For Kierkegaard, this meant criticizing (...)
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  21.  5
    Cartesian Innateness.Alan Nelson - 2007 - In Janet Broughton & John Carriero (eds.), A Companion to Descartes. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 319–333.
    This chapter contains section titled: Acknowledgments References and Further Reading.
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  22.  50
    Unity of the intellectual virtues.Alan T. Wilson - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4):9835-9854.
    The idea that moral virtues form some sort of “unity” has received considerable attention from virtue theorists. In this paper, I argue that the possibility of unity among intellectual virtues has been wrongly overlooked. My approach has two main components. First, I work to distinguish the variety of different views that are available under the description of a unity thesis. I suggest that these views can be categorised depending on whether they are versions of standard unity or of strong unity. (...)
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  23.  29
    In Defense of Tigers and Wolves: A Critique of McMahan, Nussbaum, and Johannsen on the Elimination of Predators from the Wild.Alan Vincelette - 2022 - Ethics and the Environment 27 (1):17-38.
    Abstract:McMahan, Nussbaum, and Johannsen have recently suggested that humans should seek to eliminate predators from the wild or avoid reintroducing them if this can be done without great harm to an ecosystem. This is because predators cause a great deal of pain to those sentient animals which are their prey. This paper will first challenge the pragmatic aspects of such a position on the global level, arguing that it would be extremely difficult if not impossible to remove predators from the (...)
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  24.  59
    Belief polarization is not always irrational.Alan Jern, Kai-min K. Chang & Charles Kemp - 2014 - Psychological Review 121 (2):206-224.
  25. Sextus Empiricus and Pyrrhonean scepticism.Alan Bailey - 2002 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Alan Bailey offers a clear and vigorous exposition and defence of the philosophy of Sextus Empiricus, one of the most influential of ancient thinkers, the father of philosophical scepticism. The subsequent sceptical tradition in philosophy has not done justice to Sextus: his views stand up today as remarkably insightful, offering a fruitful way to approach issues of knowledge, understanding, belief, and rationality. Bailey's refreshing presentation of Sextus to a modern philosophical readership rescues scepticism from the sceptics.
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  26.  43
    The Concept of Expression.Alan Tormey - 1974 - Philosophical Review 83 (2):247-252.
  27. Pornography: Marxism, Feminism, and the Future of Sexuality.Alan Soble - 1989 - Studies in Soviet Thought 37 (1):37-38.
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  28.  32
    Sequential theories and infinite distributivity in the lattice of chapters.Alan S. Stern - 1989 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 54 (1):190-206.
    We introduce a notion of complexity for interpretations, which is used to prove some new results about interpretations of sequential theories. In particular, we give a new, elementary proof of Pudlák's theorem that sequential theories are connected. We also demonstrate a counterexample to the infinitary distributive law $a \vee \bigwedge_{i \in I} b_i = \bigwedge_{i \in I} (a \vee b_i)$ in the lattice of chapters, in which the chapters a and b i are compact. (Counterexamples in which a is not (...)
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  29. Embodied remembering.Kellie Williamson & John Sutton - 2014 - In Lawrence A. Shapiro (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Embodied Cognition. New York: Routledge. pp. 315--325.
    Experiences of embodied remembering are familiar and diverse. We settle bodily into familiar chairs or find our way easily round familiar rooms. We inhabit our own kitchens or cars or workspaces effectively and comfortably, and feel disrupted when our habitual and accustomed objects or technologies change or break or are not available. Hearing a particular song can viscerally bring back either one conversation long ago, or just the urge to dance. Some people explicitly use their bodies to record, store, or (...)
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  30.  10
    The Rationalist Impulse.Alan Nelson - 2005 - In Alan Jean Nelson (ed.), A Companion to Rationalism. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 1–11.
    This chapter contains sections titled: I II III IV V.
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  31.  24
    Prolegomena to the Study of Love.Alan Soble - 2023 - Philosophies 8 (3):44.
    Consider this propositional function which includes the dyadic predicate “loves”: “X does not love Y unless Y loves X” (or “if Y does not love X”). This function may be treated in four ways. (1) If universally quantified, it states a (purported) conceptual truth about “love” or the nature or essence of love. Love is necessarily reciprocal. (2) If universally quantified, it may alternatively be a nomological generalization stating an empirical or factual truth about human nature, i.e., about a pattern (...)
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  32. Christology: A Guide for the Perplexed.Alan Spence - 2008
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  33.  6
    Toleration, Diversity, and Global Justice.Alan Gilbert - 2003 - Political Theory 31 (3):471-474.
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  34.  43
    Vice-based accounts of moral evil.Alan T. Wilson - 2023 - Philosophical Studies 180 (9):2825-2845.
    In this paper, I highlight three objections to vice-based accounts of moral evil: (1) the worry that vice-based accounts of evil are explanatorily inadequate; (2) the worry that even extreme vice is not sufficient for evil; and (3) the worry that not all vices are inversions of virtue (and so vice-based accounts will struggle to explain the “mirror thesis”). I argue that it is possible to respond to these objections by developing a vice-based account of evil that draws on insights (...)
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  35. Narrating the history of reason itself: Friedman, Kuhn, and a constitutive a priori for the twenty-first century.Alan W. Richardson - 2002 - Perspectives on Science 10 (3):253-274.
    : This essay explores some themes in use of a relativized Kantian a priori in the work of Thomas Kuhn and Michael Friedman. It teases out some shared and some divergent beliefs and attitudes in these two philosophers by comparing their characteristic questions and problems to the questions and problems that seem most appropriately to attend to an adequate understanding of games and their histories. It argues for a way forward within a relativized Kantian framework that is suggested but not (...)
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  36.  19
    The Evolving Structure of Newton's Theory of White Light and Color.Alan Shapiro - 1980 - Isis 71:211-235.
  37.  92
    Truth Through Proof: A Formalist Foundation for Mathematics.Alan Weir - 2010 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
    Truth Through Proof defends an anti-platonist philosophy of mathematics derived from game formalism. Alan Weir aims to develop a more satisfactory successor to game formalism utilising a widely accepted, broadly neo-Fregean framework, in which the proposition expressed by an utterance is a function of both sense and background circumstance.
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  38.  15
    Philosophy and Personal Relations: An Anglo-French Study.Alan Montefiore (ed.) - 1973 - Montreal,: McGill-Queen's University Press.
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  39. Two questions about surrogacy and exploitation.Alan Wertheimer - 1992 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 21 (3):211-239.
  40.  8
    Medical Technology and Critical Decisions: an Interdisciplinary Course in Technological Literacy.Alan Shuchat, James H. Grant & Theodore W. Ducas - 1987 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 7 (1-2):71-77.
    This paper describes a new course in Medical Technology and Critical Decisions, part of the Technology Studies Program at Wellesley College, established with the support of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation's New Liberal Arts Program. The course uses the dramatic new options in medicine presented by technology to individuals and society as a vehicle for promoting general technological literacy in liberal arts students. The course motivates the study of the scientific principles on which the technology rests and the mathematical principles (...)
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  41. Guest Editorial - Homerton College Aesthetic Education Conference 1982.Alan Simpson - 1984 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 18 (1):5.
     
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  42.  45
    Sex, Love, and Friendship: Studies of the Society for the Philosophy of Sex and Love, 1977-1992.Alan Soble (ed.) - 1997 - Brill | Rodopi.
    This collection joins together sixty essays on the philosophy of love and sex. Each was presented at a meeting of The Society for the Philosophy of Sex and Love held between 1977 and 1992 and later revised for this edition. Topics addressed include ethical and political issues (AIDS, abortion, homosexual rights, and pornography), conceptual matters (the nature, essence, or definition of love, friendship, sexual desire, and perversion); the study of classical and historical figures (Plato, Aristotle, Spinoza, Kant, and Kierkegaard); and (...)
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  43.  10
    It's a battlefield out there, culturally speaking.Alan Sokal - manuscript
    oes anything exist outside culture? Is there anything that we do that is free of the distortions of our tastes and customs? That isn't irrevocably shaped by the languages we speak or our material interests? Is there anything out there that we can assume to be noncultural or transcultural or even universal?
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  44.  19
    The Structure and Function of Aristophanic Lyric.Alan H. Sommerstein - 1985 - The Classical Review 35 (01):14-.
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  45.  7
    The Revolutionary Theories of Louis Auguste Blanqui.Alan B. Spitzer - 1957 - Columbia University Press.
    Looks at the life and historical role of Louis Auguste Blanqui. Studies his philosophy, economic theories, and socialism.
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  46.  11
    Word association tests of associative memory and implicit processes: Theoretical and assessment issues.Alan W. Stacy, Susan L. Ames & J. Grenard - 2006 - In Reinout W. Wiers & Alan W. Stacy (eds.), Handbook of Implicit Cognition and Addiction. Sage Publications. pp. 75--90.
  47.  10
    The Reconstruction of Proto-Malayo-Javanic.Alan M. Stevens & Bernd Nothofer - 1977 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 97 (3):359.
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  48. The First Epistle General of Peter.Alan M. Stibbs - 1959
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  49.  22
    China and Japan at War, 1937-1945: The Politics of Collaboration.Alan Stone & John Hunter Boyle - 1975 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 95 (1):124.
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  50.  4
    Jonathan Chaplin, Faith in Democracy: Framing a Politics of Deep Diversity.Alan Storkey - 2022 - Philosophia Reformata 87 (2):234-238.
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