Results for 'B. A. Leslie Armour'

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  1.  5
    The Faces of Reason: An Essay on Philosophy and Culture in English Canada1850-1950.Leslie Armour, B. A. Leslie Armour & Elizabeth Trott - 2006 - Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press.
    The Faces of Reason traces the history of philosophy in English Canada from 1850 to 1950, examining the major English-Canadian philosophers in detail adn setting them in the context of the main currents of Canadian thought. The book concludes with a brief survey of the period after 1950. What is distinctive in Canadian philosophy, say the authors, is the concept of reason and the uses to which it is put. Reason has interacted with experience in a new world and a (...)
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  2.  4
    Toward Control of Infectious Disease: Ethical Challenges for a Global Effort.Charles B. Smith, Leslie P. Francis & Jay A. Jacobson - 2008 - In Michael Boylan (ed.), International Public Health Policy & Ethics. Dordrecht. pp. 191--214.
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  3.  7
    Toward Control of Infectious Disease: Ethical Challenges for a Global Effort.Margaret P. Battin, Charles B. Smith, Leslie P. Francis & Jay A. Jacobson - 2023 - In Michael Boylan (ed.), International Public Health Policy and Ethics. Springer Verlag. pp. 207-231.
    In this view from 2007–2009, the ethical challenges facing a potential global effort to control infectious disease are explored; they provide sobering insight into the challenges of later decades. Despite the devastating pandemic of HIV/AIDS that erupted in the early 1980s, despite the failure to eradicate polio and the emergence of resistant forms of tuberculosis that came into focus in the 1990s, and despite newly emerging diseases like Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in 2003 and the fearsome prospect of human-to-human (...)
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  4.  11
    How Infectious Diseases Got Left Out – and What This Omission Might Have Meant for Bioethics.Leslie P. Francis, Margaret P. Battin, Jay A. Jacobson, Charles B. Smith & Jeffrey Botkin - 2005 - Bioethics 19 (4):307-322.
    ABSTRACT In this article, we first document the virtually complete absence of infectious disease examples and concerns at the time bioethics emerged as a field. We then argue that this oversight was not benign by considering two central issues in the field, informed consent and distributive justice, and showing how they might have been framed differently had infectiousness been at the forefront of concern. The solution to this omission might be to apply standard approaches in liberal bioethics, such as autonomy (...)
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  5.  10
    Unconfounding time and number discrimination in a Mechner counting schedule.Donald M. Wilkie, Janet B. Webster & Leslie G. Leader - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (6):390-392.
  6.  26
    Institutional Efforts to Promote Advance Care Planning in Nursing Homes: Challenges and Opportunities.Elizabeth H. Bradley, Barbara B. Blechner, Leslie C. Walker & Terrie T. Wetle - 1997 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 25 (2-3):150-158.
    During the past two decades, several reports have documented substantial support from clinicians, policy-makers, and the general public for the use of advance directives, yet studies continue to find that only a minority of individuals have completed these legal documents. Advance directives are written instructions, such as living wills or durable powers of attorney for health care, which describe an individual's medical treatment wishes in the event that individual becomes incapacitated in the future. The completion and use of advance directives (...)
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  7.  12
    How infectious diseases got left out – and what this omission might have meant for bioethics.Leslie P. Francis, Margaret P. Battin, Jay A. Jacobson, Charles B. Smith & And Jeffrey Botkin - 2005 - Bioethics 19 (4):307–322.
    ABSTRACT In this article, we first document the virtually complete absence of infectious disease examples and concerns at the time bioethics emerged as a field. We then argue that this oversight was not benign by considering two central issues in the field, informed consent and distributive justice, and showing how they might have been framed differently had infectiousness been at the forefront of concern. The solution to this omission might be to apply standard approaches in liberal bioethics, such as autonomy (...)
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  8.  13
    On “Making God Go Away”—A Reply to Professor Maxwell.Leslie Armour - 1998 - Dialogue 37 (2):291-298.
    RésuméCeci est une réponse à l'étude critique de Vance Maxwell, «Making God Go Away», consacrée au livre de Leslie Armour, Being and IdeaLa discussion porte sur la question suivante : est-ilpossible qu'il y ait une signification transcendante à nos vies sans un Dieu tyrannique? Le livre traitait, de manière centrale, du fait que les réponses affirmatives à cette question exigent une unification du savoir. Maxwell suggère que le livre est un commentaire de Spinoza et de Hegel—malgré son soustitre (...)
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  9. Pandemic planning and distributive justice in health care.Leslie P. Francis, Margaret P. Battin, Jay A. Jacobson & Charles B. Smith - 2008 - In Michael D. A. Freeman (ed.), Law and bioethics / edited by Michael Freeman. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  10.  4
    Infinite Minds, Determinism & Evil : A Study of John Leslie's Infinite Minds, A Philosophical Cosmology.Leslie Armour - 2002 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 58 (3):597-603.
  11.  17
    Analetheism: a Pyrrhic victory.B. Armour-Garb & G. Priest - 2005 - Analysis 65 (2):167-173.
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  12. A conversation on J. Wentzel van huyssteen's gifford lectures.Leslie A. Muray, Kevin Sharpe Leslie van Gelder, Wesley J. Wildman, Nancy R. Howell, Karl E. Peters, Walter B. Gulick & J. van Huyssteen - 2007 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 28 (3):299-432.
  13.  33
    Deflationism and the Meaningless Strategy.B. Armour-Garb - 2001 - Analysis 61 (4):280-289.
    In this paper, I consider the question of whether or not the deflationist about truth can respond to the Liar and allied paradoxes by taking sentences such as the following: (1) (1) is false (2) (2) is not true (3) (3) is true to be meaningless. Let's call this strategy for dealing with the Liar and Liar-like phenomena the Meaningless Strategy. This strategy is intuitively satisfying: it captures many people's initial response to the paradoxes; and it is theoretically important: if (...)
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  14.  12
    On “Making God Go Away”—A Reply to Professor Maxwell.Leslie Armour - 1998 - Dialogue 37 (2):291-.
    RÉSUMÉ: Ceci est une réponse à l’étude critique de Vance Maxwell, «Making God Go Away», consacrée au livre de Leslie Armour, Being and Idea. La discussion porte sur la question suivante: est-il possible qu’il y ait une signification transcendante à nos vies sans un Dieu tyrannique? Le livre traitait, de manière centrale, du fait que les réponses affirmatives à cette question exigent une unification du savoir. Maxwell suggère que le livre est un commentaire de Spinoza et de Hegel (...)
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  15.  36
    Thoughts on the Idea of a World Humanities.Leslie Armour - 2012 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 39 (4):549-570.
    The humanities create communities of meaning and the means to unify knowledge. Poets and novelists offer new insights into our shared mind. History provides our continuity. Philosophy struggles to unite our scientific knowledge with our understanding of values. Each discipline creates its own perspective and they often turn inward, creating new divisions. Yet a global view of the humanities is our hope of finding the means to live together in peace. But the argument in this article suggests that a philosophical (...)
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  16.  1
    The Idea of a Perennial Philosophy.Leslie Armour - 1994 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 10:57-78.
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  17.  1
    The World as a Work of Art.Leslie Armour - 2001 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 17:3-29.
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  18.  10
    Institutional Efforts to Promote Advance Care Planning in Nursing Homes: Challenges and Opportunities.Elizabeth H. Bradley, Barbara B. Blechner, Leslie C. Walker & Terrie T. Wetle - 1997 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 25 (2-3):150-159.
    During the past two decades, several reports have documented substantial support from clinicians, policy-makers, and the general public for the use of advance directives, yet studies continue to find that only a minority of individuals have completed these legal documents. Advance directives are written instructions, such as living wills or durable powers of attorney for health care, which describe an individual's medical treatment wishes in the event that individual becomes incapacitated in the future. The completion and use of advance directives (...)
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  19.  1
    The Ideals of Knowledge and the Idea of a University.Leslie Armour - 2000 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 16:3-23.
  20.  10
    The Duty to Obey the Law: Selected Philosophical Readings.Leslie Green, Kent Greenawalt, Nancy J. Hirschmann, George Klosko, Mark C. Murphy, John Rawls, Joseph Raz, Rolf Sartorius, A. John Simmons, M. B. E. Smith, Philip Soper, Jeremy Waldron, Richard A. Wasserstrom & Robert Paul Wolff (eds.) - 1998 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    The question 'Why should I obey the law?' introduces a contemporary puzzle that is as old as philosophy itself. The puzzle is especially troublesome if we think of cases in which breaking the law is not otherwise wrongful, and in which the chances of getting caught are negligible. Philosophers from Socrates to H.L.A. Hart have struggled to give reasoned support to the idea that we do have a general moral duty to obey the law but, more recently, the greater number (...)
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  21.  5
    "Infini Rien": Pascal's Wager and the Human Paradox.Leslie Armour - 1993 - Carbondale: Southern Illinois University.
    The wager fragment in Blaise Pascal’s _Penseés _opens with the phrase "_infini rien_"—"infinite nothing"—which is meant to describe the human condition. Pascal was responding to what was, even in the seventeenth century, becoming a pressing human problem: we seem to be able to know much about the world but less about ourselves. The traditional European view of human beings as creatures made in the image of God and potentially capable of a mystical union with God was increasingly confounded by the (...)
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  22.  25
    ‘Orientation’ and religious discourse.Leslie Armour - 2013 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 74 (5):391-409.
    Religious discourse is in some way about the world, but its relation to other kinds of discourse – scientific historical, and moral – is a matter of dispute. Suggestions to avoid conflict with other kinds of discourse – the suggestion that religion invokes a distinct ‘language game’ and the suggestion that it should be taken as ‘basic’ for instance – have not, I argue, been successful. Essentially religion is involved in orienting us to the world and our goals, and orientation (...)
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  23.  2
    The Rational and the Real: An Essay in Metaphysics.Leslie Armour - 2021 - Hassell Street Press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be (...)
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  24.  8
    Short notices.A. C. F. Beales, R. F. Dearden, W. B. Inglis, R. R. Dale, Gordon R. Cross, John Hayes, S. Leslie Hunter, Robert J. Hoare, M. F. Cleugh, T. Desmond Morrow, Dorothy A. Wakeford, W. H. Burston, P. H. J. H. Gosden, Evelyn E. Cowie, Kartick C. Mukherjee, J. M. Wilson, H. C. Barnard & David Johnston - 1968 - British Journal of Educational Studies 16 (1):98-112.
  25.  7
    Philosophy After F.H. Bradley: A Collection of Essays.James Bradley & Leslie Armour - 1996 - Burns & Oates.
    Bradley's rich and complex version of Absolute Idealism plays a key role not only in Idealist philosophy, politics, and ethics, but also in the development of modern logic, analytical philosophy, and pragmatism, as well as in the thinking of such figures as R. G. Collingwood and A. N. Whitehead. Topics covered include: the history of Idealism in the twentieth century; Bradley's relation to figures such as Bernard Bosanquet, C. A. Campbell, Brand Blanshard, John Watson, John Dewey, and others; Bradley's influence (...)
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  26.  11
    Escartes and Eustachius a Sancto Paulo: Unravelling the mind‐body problem.Leslie Armour - 1993 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 1 (2):3 – 21.
  27.  5
    Michael Oakeshott-A Fish too Big or too Slippery?Leslie Armour - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 13 (4):779.
  28.  18
    Thinking With Whitehead, A Free and Wild Creation of Concepts.Leslie Armour - 2012 - Review of Metaphysics 65 (3):685-687.
  29.  7
    Canadian Philosophy: The Nature and History of a Discipline? A Reply to Mr. Mathien.Leslie Armour - 1986 - Dialogue 25 (1):67-.
    Mr. Mathien asks for evidence that there is Canadian philosophy in a special sense. He is not concerned with questions about whether people who were Canadians, or lived out much or most of their working lives in Canada, wrote philosophy which deserves to be taken seriously. Rather, he asks whether what has gone on in Canada by way of philosophy can be assembled in such a way as to make a coherent discipline.
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  30.  13
    F. H. Bradley, Duns Scotus, and the Idea of a Dialectic.Leslie Armour - 1995 - Bradley Studies 1 (1):6-29.
    I shall argue that Bradley needs a way of expressing logical tensions between apparently conflicting judgements, a way which will render them intelligible and non-contradictory. I shall also argue that the method he demands must, to meet his own standards, remain faithful to his belief that all philosophy — even logic — has to be anchored in experience. But it must also preserve certain basic logical notions about contradiction. The method cannot be either what is usually called the Hegelian dialectic (...)
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  31.  22
    Are there Characteristics of Infectious Diseases that Raise Special Ethical Issues? 1.Charles B. Smith, Margaret P. Battin, Jay A. Jacobson, Leslie P. Francis, Jeffrey R. Botkin, Emily P. Asplund, Gretchen J. Domek & Beverly Hawkins - 2004 - Developing World Bioethics 4 (1):1-16.
    This paper examines the characteristics of infectious diseases that raise special medical and social ethical issues, and explores ways of integrating both current bioethical and classical public health ethics concerns. Many of the ethical issues raised by infectious diseases are related to these diseases’ powerful ability to engender fear in individuals and panic in populations. We address the association of some infectious diseases with high morbidity and mortality rates, the sense that infectious diseases are caused by invasion or attack on (...)
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  32.  11
    Are there characteristics of infectious diseases that raise special ethical issues?Charles B. Smith, Margaret P. Battin, Jay A. Jacobson, Leslie P. Francis, Jeffrey R. Botkin, Emily P. Asplund, Gretchen J. Domek & Beverly Hawkins - 2004 - Developing World Bioethics 4 (1):1–16.
    This paper examines the characteristics of infectious diseases that raise special medical and social ethical issues, and explores ways of integrating both current bioethical and classical public health ethics concerns. Many of the ethical issues raised by infectious diseases are related to these diseases' powerful ability to engender fear in individuals and panic in populations. We address the association of some infectious diseases with high morbidity and mortality rates, the sense that infectious diseases are caused by invasion or attack on (...)
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  33. Avner Cohen and Marcelo Dascal, eds., The Institution of Philosophy, A Discipline in Crisis? Reviewed by.Leslie Armour - 1991 - Philosophy in Review 11 (3):163-165.
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  34.  1
    The conceptualization of the inner life: a philosophical exploration.Leslie Armour - 1980 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press. Edited by Edward T. Bartlett.
  35. The concept of civilization and the problem of a speculative philosophy of history.Leslie Armour - 2006 - In Alexander Lyon Macfie (ed.), The philosophy of history: talks given at the Institute of Historical Research, London, 2000-2006. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  36.  15
    Theology and geometry: essays on John Kennedy Toole's A confederacy of dunces.Leslie Marsh, Anthony G. Cirilla, Olga Colbert, Matt Dawson, Connie Eble, Christopher R. Harris, Jessica Hooten Wilson, H. Vernon Leighton & Kenneth B. McIntyre (eds.) - 2020 - Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books.
    This collection, the first of its kind, brings together specially commissioned academic essays to mark fifty years since the death of John Kennedy Toole.
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  37.  1
    Being and idea: developments of some themes in Spinoza and Hegel.Leslie Armour - 1992 - New York: G. Olms Verlag.
    In this very readable and challenging work, Armour's approach is three-sided: to examine Hegel's objections to elements of Spinoza's accounts of knowledge and reality, to analyze the problems in Hegel's own system, and to propose a system that resolves some of these questions. Throughout, Armour is clear and thorough in his analysis, and his proposed system should engender valuable discussion among scholars. It is a treat to see metaphysics still being practiced, in spite of recent claims by many (...)
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  38.  6
    Should rapid tests for hiv infection now be mandatory during pregnancy? Global differences in scarcity and a dilemma of technological advance.Charles B. Smith, Margaret P. Battin, Leslie P. Francis & Jay A. Jacobson - 2007 - Developing World Bioethics 7 (2):86–103.
    Since testing for HIV infection became possible in 1985, testing of pregnant women has been conducted primarily on a voluntary, ‘opt-in’ basis. Faden, Geller and Powers, Bayer, Wilfert, and McKenna, among others, have suggested that with the development of more reliable testing and more effective therapy to reduce maternal-fetal transmission, testing should become either routine with ‘opt-out’ provisions or mandatory. We ask, in the light of the new rapid tests for HIV, such as OraQuick, and the development of antiretroviral treatment (...)
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  39.  2
    God and Nature: Is the Divorce Final?Leslie Armour - 2007 - Maritain Studies/Etudes Maritainiennes 23:3 - 24.
    The thesis that enquiries into the nature and existence of God and enquiries into nature itself should be kept separate has gained new life from disputes about biology, but the development of physics and its relation to mathematics gives force to the idea that nature is more like a book to be read than it is like a collection of objects with no intrinsic meaning. The more one sees nature as a book to be read the more one sees it (...)
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  40.  1
    Gambling on God: Essays on Pascal's Wager (review).Leslie Armour - 1995 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 33 (4):688-689.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:688 JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 33:4 OCTOBER 1995 ters by Robert Payne and Gilbert Sheldon. (To my knowledge the only library in the United States that has The Theologian and Ecclesia.,tic is The Newbury Library in Chicago.) There are also letters in A Collection of Letters Illustrative of the Progress of Science, ed. J. Halliwell (London, 1840. Scholars in recent years have complained, usually justifiably, about the (...)
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  41.  4
    Moral and Economic Socialism; Bosanquet, The Economy, and “The Citizen Mind”.Leslie Armour - 2000 - Bradley Studies 6 (1):18-45.
    Bernard Bosanquet insisted that the truth of “moral socialism” — the doctrine that we all form part of a mutually dependent community and that we all have an obligation to put the common good ahead of our personal self-interest — follows necessarily from what we know about the nature of reality and from the logic of ethics. “Economic socialism”, the doctrine, in his view, that there ought to be a central bureaucracy on which all should depend for our continued well-being, (...)
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  42.  7
    Morality and The Three-fold Existence of God.Leslie Armour - 2012 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 17 (1):27-47.
    Arguments about the existence of a being who is infinite and perfect involve claims about a being who must appear in all the orders and dimensions of reality. Anything else implies finitude. Ideas about goodness seem inseparable from arguments about the existence of God and Kant's claim that such arguments ultimately belong to moral theology seems plausible. The claim that we can rely on the postulates of pure practical reason is stronger than many suppose. But one must show that a (...)
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  43.  7
    Newman, Arnold & the Problem of Particular Providence.Leslie Armour - 1988 - Religious Studies 24 (2):173 - 187.
    It has often been suggested – recently again by Michael Goulder in a debate with John Hick – that what traditionally was called the problem of ‘particular providence’, the problem of God's selective interference in the ongoing affairs of the world, is so acute as to render any form of rational theism impossible. In the same debate Hick argues for a ‘minimalist’ position which allows divine intervention only in the form of a general, radiated, goodness and benevolence on which human (...)
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  44.  2
    Progress and History in the Philosophy of Thomas Hill Green.Leslie Armour - 2003 - Bradley Studies 9 (1):4-25.
    Green believed that, underlying the structure of human experience, there is an immanent God, gradually realised in the world through the processes of history. He believed in progress, and he sometimes spoke of it as “moral progress.” Talk of the history of moral progress came easily to him. No less than Rané Rapin, the seventeenth century Jesuit who told us that we should read history in a way which showed us its capacity for moral enlightenment, Green believed in hope.
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  45.  5
    Russell, McTaggart, and “I”.Leslie Armour - 1979 - Idealistic Studies 9 (1):66-76.
    Of the half dozen crucial arguments around which McTaggart’s The Nature of Existence centers, one is borrowed from Russell. It seeks to show that we are directly acquainted with a spiritual particular which is the referent of the pronoun “I,” or, as McTaggart put it, “the self is known to itself by direct perception.”.
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  46.  3
    The Absolute, The Infinite and Ordinary Experience.Leslie Armour - 1999 - Bradley Studies 5 (1):62-86.
    Bernard Bosanquet was an idealist with a taste for the rich complexities of ordinary human life, an appreciation for logic and science, and a dedication to experience. He was also fond of Plato, but I think he was a Platonist of a special kind, close to the Cambridge Platonism which Locke mixed with his own empiricism and which figures in the thinking of Isaac Newton. Of the partisans of the Absolute, Bosanquet is certainly the easiest to defend against the anti-metaphysical (...)
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  47.  3
    The Idealist Philosophers' God.Leslie Armour - 2002 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 58 (3):443-455.
    This paper argues that there are still clues in the ideas of Ralph Cudworth that enable us to develop a philosophical concept of God capable of addressing many of the perplexities of our own time. The association of love with the ultimately real emerges in Cudworth as a viable philosophical idea. It is argued further that the only successful idealist philosophy of religion is one which makes goodness paramount, and that only its concrete manifestation as love can make the notion (...)
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  48.  1
    The Ontological Argument and the Concepts of Completeness and Selection.Leslie Armour - 1960 - Review of Metaphysics 14 (2):280 - 291.
    There are several forms of the Ontological Argument, but it is more or less fair to say that all hang on the contention that the notion of a perfect being entails the existence of that being, since existence is involved in perfection. My first interest is in the word "perfect." The word, I think, is usually vague but it seems to me that, in the context of the proof, it has a meaning which turns out to be much more pedestrian (...)
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  49.  1
    The rational and the real.Leslie Armour - 1962 - The Hague,: M. Nijhoff.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be (...)
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  50.  37
    Life, Death, and Meaning: Key Philosophical Readings on the Big Questions.David Benatar, Margaret A. Boden, Peter Caldwell, Fred Feldman, John Martin Fischer, Richard Hare, David Hume, W. D. Joske, Immanuel Kant, Frederick Kaufman, James Lenman, John Leslie, Steven Luper, Michaelis Michael, Thomas Nagel, Robert Nozick, Derek Parfit, George Pitcher, Stephen E. Rosenbaum, David Schmidtz, Arthur Schopenhauer, David B. Suits, Richard Taylor, Bruce N. Waller & Bernard Williams (eds.) - 2004 - Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Do our lives have meaning? Should we create more people? Is death bad? Should we commit suicide? Would it be better to be immortal? Should we be optimistic or pessimistic? Since Life, Death, and Meaning: Key Philosophical Readings on the Big Questions first appeared, David Benatar's distinctive anthology designed to introduce students to the key existential questions of philosophy has won a devoted following among users in a variety of upper-level and even introductory courses.
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