Results for 'Bernard Lens'

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  1.  1
    An entire body of philosophy, according to the principles of the famous Renate des Cartes, in three books.Antoine Le Grand, Richard Blome, Johannes Kip, Michael van der Gucht & Bernard Lens - 1694 - New York,: Johnson Reprint. Edited by Richard Blome.
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  2. Conceptualizing and Contextualizing “Executive Wisdom” as a Framework for Business Leadership: A Grounded Theory Approach.Ali Intezari, Bernard McKenna & Mohammad Hossein Rahmati - forthcoming - Business and Society.
    This study contextualizes business leaders’ perspectives on business-society interaction through the theoretical lens of wisdom. Morally effective interaction between business and society relies on shared perceptions of expected values grounded in leaders’ virtuous behavior. Through empirical fieldwork across industries in a developing society, the article documents how local business leaders perceive wise leadership in dealing with socially complex problems. Using grounded theory, we inductively developed a model of wisdom, executive wisdom, that identifies 14 characteristics of wisdom, located in three (...)
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  3. From politics to democracy? Bernard Williams’ Basic Legitimation Demand in a radical realist lens.Janosch Prinz & Andy Scerri - forthcoming - Constellations:1-37.
  4.  54
    Bernard Suits on capacities: games, perfectionism, and Utopia.Christopher C. Yorke - 2018 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 45 (2):177-188.
    ABSTRACTAn essential and yet often neglected motivation of Bernard Suits’ elevation of gameplay to the ideal of human existence is his account of capacities along perfectionist lines and the function of games in eliciting them. In his work Suits treats the expression of these capacities as implicitly good and the purest expression of the human telos. Although it is a possible interpretation to take Suits’ utopian vision to mean that gameplay in his future utopia must consist of the logically (...)
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  5. The Intersection of Bernard Lonergan’s Critical Realism, the Common Good, and Artificial Intelligence in Modern Religious Practices.Steven Umbrello - 2023 - Religions 14 (12):1536.
    Artificial intelligence (AI) profoundly influences a number of societal structures today, including religious dynamics. Using Bernard Lonergan’s critical realism as a lens, this article investigates the intersections of AI and religious traditions in their shared pursuit of the common good. Beginning with Lonergan’s principle that humans construct their understanding through cognitive processes, we examine how AI-mediated realities align with or challenge traditional religious tenets. By delving into specific cases, we spotlight AI’s role in reshaping religious symbols, rituals, and (...)
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  6.  67
    Bernard Mandeville and the 'economy' of the Dutch.Alexander Bick - 2008 - Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 1 (1):87-106.
    Studies of Bernard Mandeville by economists and historians ofeconomic thought have focused overwhelmingly on the problem ofsituating his work within the development of the theory of laissez-faireand evaluating his influence on major figures in the ScottishEnlightenment, especially Adam Smith. This paper explores Mandeville’seconomic thought through the lens of a very different transition:England’s rapid growth following the Glorious Revolution and itsgradual eclipse of Dutch economic hegemony. By situating Mandevillewithin an Anglo-Dutch context and carefully examining his commentson the Dutch in (...)
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  7. An Analysis of Remark B of Bernard Mandeville’s "Fable of the Bees": regarding Knaves.Bruno Costa Simões - 2024 - Revista de Filosofia Moderna E Contemporânea 10 (3):181-210.
    Bernard Mandeville's poem "The Grumbling Hive: or, Knaves turn'd Honest" explores the subtle interplay between morality and business practices, particularly through the lens of the term "knave". This article examines Mandeville's use of "knave" in juxtaposition with the value of honesty portrayed in the poem's title. In contrast to the spiritual transformation depicted in the poem, in which all the bees in the hive become honest through divine intervention, Mandeville suggests a different kind of change in moral practice, (...)
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  8.  10
    Sharing the space of the creature: Intersubjectivity as a lens toward mutual human–wildlife dignity.Donna J. Perry - 2024 - Nursing Inquiry 31 (1):e12587.
    Human–wildlife coexistence is critical for sustainable and healthy ecosystems as well as to prevent human and wildlife suffering. In this paper, an intersubjective approach to human–wildlife interactions is proposed as a lens toward human decentering and emergent mutual evolution. The thesis is developed through a secondary data analysis of a research study on wildlife care and philosophical analysis using the work of Bernard Lonergan and Edmund Husserl. The study was conducted using the theory of transcendent pluralism, which is (...)
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  9.  11
    La fatica mistica di Michele Federico Sciacca. Un travaglio che procede da lontano.Valentina Amorosino - 2020 - Doctor Virtualis 15:171-194.
    L’obiettivo che questo lavoro si propone è quello di rintracciare nella prosa appassionante e appassionata di Michele Federico Sciacca tracce che rimandano alla speculazione filosofica di Bernardo di Chiaravalle. Divisi nel tempo, ma compartecipi di un modo comune di intendere la categoria mistica, i due filosofi appaiono uniti nella condivisione di una stessa sensibilità. È una filiazione che accoglie più interrogativi che certezze, primo tra tutti, il perché Sciacca non citi mai direttamente Bernardo, cosa che invece ripetutamente fa con Agostino, (...)
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  10.  46
    Williams, Pragmatism, and the Law.Cheryl Misak - 2020 - Res Publica 27 (2):155-170.
    This paper views Bernard Williams through the lens of the pragmatist tradition. The central insight of pragmatism is that philosophy must start with human practice, in contrast to high theory or metaphysics. Williams was one of the twentieth century’s most able proponents of this insight, especially when considering the topics of ethics and the law. Williams never saw himself as a pragmatist, because he took Richard Rorty’s radical relativism to be the exemplar of the position. But I shall (...)
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  11.  44
    Thought and Reference.Bernard W. Kobes - 1991 - Philosophical Review 100 (3):469.
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  12. Morality: a new justification of the Moral rules.Bernard Gert - 1988 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Bernard Gert.
    This volume is a revised, enlarged, and broadened version of Gert's classic 1970 book, The Moral Rules. Advocating an approach he terms "morality as impartial rationality," Gert here presents a full discussion of his moral theory, adding a wealth of new illuminating detail to his analysis of the concepts--rationality/irrationality, good/evil, and impartiality--by which he defines morality. He constructs a "moral system" that includes rules prohibiting the kinds of actions that cause evil, procedures for determining when violation of the rules is (...)
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  13.  96
    Psychosis and autism as diametrical disorders of the social brain.Bernard Crespi & Christopher Badcock - 2008 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (3):241-261.
    Autistic-spectrum conditions and psychotic-spectrum conditions (mainly schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depression) represent two major suites of disorders of human cognition, affect, and behavior that involve altered development and function of the social brain. We describe evidence that a large set of phenotypic traits exhibit diametrically opposite phenotypes in autistic-spectrum versus psychotic-spectrum conditions, with a focus on schizophrenia. This suite of traits is inter-correlated, in that autism involves a general pattern of constrained overgrowth, whereas schizophrenia involves undergrowth. These disorders also (...)
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  14.  40
    The Reification of Value: Robust Realism and Alienation.Rob Compaijen & Michiel Meijer - 2021 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 29 (3):275-294.
    This paper explores the relation between metaethical reflection and value experience, and does so by focusing on robust realism. Robust realism is typically criticized for its ontological and epistemological commitments. In this paper, however, we hope to shed new critical light on the plausibility of the theory by using two concepts – ‘reification’ and ‘alienation’ – that have their origin in critical social theory. We use the concept of ‘reification’ as an interpretative lens to look at robust realism and (...)
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  15.  92
    Semiotics and legal theory.Bernard S. Jackson - 1985 - Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
    Later reprinted by Deborah Charles Publications (and not available from Amazon), this book expounds and comments on the application of Greimasian semiotics to a legal text, as found in the article by Greimas and Landowski in Greimas, Sémiotique et Sciences Sociales (1976), compares this with the semiotic presuppositions of Hart, Dworkin, MacCormick and Kelsen, and offers my own analysis of the implications of such semiotic analysis for legal theory, including some more recent radical non-positivist accounts.
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  16. Insight. A Study of human understanding.Bernard J. F. Lonergan - 1958 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 63 (4):499-500.
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  17.  17
    Hobbes.Bernard Gert - 2010 - Polity.
    Thomas Hobbes was the first great English political philosopher. His work excited intense controversy among his contemporaries and continues to do so in our own time. In this masterly introduction to his work, Bernard Gert provides the first account of Hobbes’s political and moral philosophy that makes it clear why he is regarded as one of the best philosophers of all time in both of these fields. In a succinct and engaging analysis the book illustrates that the commonly accepted (...)
  18.  42
    44. Reasons and Persons.Bernard Williams - 2014 - In Essays and Reviews: 1959-2002. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 218-224.
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  19. Paternalistic behavior.Bernard Gert & Charles M. Culver - 1976 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 6 (1):45-57.
  20.  24
    The moral rules.Bernard Gert - 1970 - New York,: Harper & Row.
  21.  21
    Ethical Theory: The Problems of Normative and Critical Ethics.Bernard Peach & Richard B. Brandt - 1961 - Philosophical Review 70 (2):283.
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  22.  57
    Making sense in jurisprudence.Bernard S. Jackson - 1996 - Liverpool: Deborah Charles Publications.
    This book reviews the classical schools of jurisprudence with particular reference to their linguistic presuppositions, and summarises an alternative account based on Paris school semiotics. Detailed ToC available from linked web page. NOT available from Amazon.
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  23.  64
    Rhetoric and Public Reasoning.Bernard Yack - 2006 - Political Theory 34 (4):417-438.
    This essay asks why Aristotle, certainly no friend to unlimited democracy, seems so much more comfortable with unconstrained rhetoric in political deliberation than current defenders of deliberative democracy. It answers this question by reconstructing and defending a distinctly Aristotelian understanding of political deliberation, one that can be pieced together out of a series of separate arguments made in the Rhetoric, the Politics, and the Nicomachean Ethics.
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  24.  10
    Imagination in human social cognition, autism, and psychotic-affective conditions.Bernard Crespi, Emma Leach, Natalie Dinsdale, Mikael Mokkonen & Peter Hurd - 2016 - Cognition 150 (C):181-199.
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  25. Ethics and the Fabric of the World.Bernard Williams - 1998 - In James Rachels (ed.), Ethical theory. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  26.  27
    The Matter-Gravity Entanglement Hypothesis.Bernard S. Kay - 2018 - Foundations of Physics 48 (5):542-557.
    I outline some of my work and results on my matter-gravity entanglement hypothesis, according to which the entropy of a closed quantum gravitational system is equal to the system’s matter-gravity entanglement entropy. The main arguments presented are: that this hypothesis is capable of resolving what I call the second-law puzzle, i.e. the puzzle as to how the entropy increase of a closed system can be reconciled with the asssumption of unitary time-evolution; that the black hole information loss puzzle may be (...)
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  27. Ethics.Bernard Williams - 1995 - In A. C. Grayling (ed.), Philosophy: a guide through the subject. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  28.  34
    Formal Similarities between Cybernetic Definition of Life and Cybernetic Model of Self-Consciousness: Universal Definition/Model of Individual.Bernard Korzeniewski - 2013 - Open Journal of Philosophy 3 (2):314-328.
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  29.  41
    Moral Luck and the Talent Problem.S. P. Morris - 2015 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 9 (4):363-374.
    My objective in this project is to explore the concept of moral luck as it relates to sports. I am especially interested in constitutive luck. As a foundation I draw from both Bernard Williams and Thomas Nagel’s classic handling of moral luck, generally. Within the philosophy of sport are similar explorations of this nexus by Robert Simon and David Carr that also factor into the present work. My intent is to put a new lens in front of a (...)
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  30. The justification of paternalism.Bernard Gert & Charles M. Culver - 1979 - Ethics 89 (2):199-210.
  31. Plato.Bernard Williams - 1997 - New York: Routledge.
     
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  32.  36
    Williams, Nietzsche, and Pessimism.Mark P. Jenkins - 2012 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 43 (2):316-325.
    This article extends recent efforts to investigate Nietzsche through the lens of Bernard Williams and Williams through the lens of Nietzsche by focusing on their respective conceptions of, and attitudes toward, pessimism. Specifically, the article investigates whether Williams should be regarded as endorsing or manifesting tragic or Dionysian forms of pessimism, which Nietzsche valorizes under the term “pessimism of strength,” or whether he is better associated with the Schopenhauerian or romantic pessimism, or even the Socratic optimism, that (...)
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  33.  24
    What is Fiction For?: Literary Humanism Restored.Bernard Harrison - 2014 - Indiana University Press.
    How can literature, which consists of nothing more than the description of imaginary events and situations, offer any insight into the workings of "human reality" or "the human condition"? Can mere words illuminate something that we call "reality"? Bernard Harrison answers these questions in this profoundly original work that seeks to re-enfranchise reality in the realms of art and discourse. In an ambitious account of the relationship between literature and cognition, he seeks to show how literary fiction, by deploying (...)
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  34.  49
    Political Disobedience.Bernard E. Harcourt - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 39 (1):33-55.
    Occupy Wall Street is best understood, I would suggest, as a new form of political as opposed to civil disobedience that fundamentally rejects the political and ideological landscape that has dominated our collective imagination in this country since before the cold war. Civil disobedience accepts the legitimacy of the political structure and of our political institutions but resists the moral authority of the resulting laws. It is “civil” in its disobedience—civil in the etymological sense of taking place within a shared (...)
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  35.  47
    The Logical Form of Descriptions.Bernard Linsky - 1992 - Dialogue 31 (4):677-.
    This critical notice of Stephen Neale's "Descriptions", (MIT Press, 1990) summarizes the content of the book and presents several objections to its arguments, as well as praising Neale for showing just how close the linguistic notion of L F is to the analytic philosopher's notion of "logical form". It is claimed that Neale's use of generalized quantifiers to represent definite descriptions from Russell's account by which descriptions are "incomplete symbols". I also argue that his assessment of the Quine/Smullyan exchange about (...)
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  36.  84
    Honesty and Curiosity in Nietzsche’s Free Spirits.Bernard Reginster - 2013 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 51 (3):441-463.
  37. What is a free spirit? Nietzsche on fanaticism.Bernard Reginster - 2003 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 85 (1):51-85.
  38. Aristotle on the good: A formal sketch.Bernard A. O. Williams - 1962 - Philosophical Quarterly 12 (49):289-296.
  39. The subject.Bernard J. F. Lonergan - 1968 - Milwaukee,: Marquette University Press.
  40.  29
    The Future of Conflicts of Interest: A Call for Professional Standards.Bernard Lo - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (3):441-451.
    Financial relationships between physicians and industry are widespread. Highly publicized financial relationships between physicians and industry raised disturbing questions about the trustworthiness of clinical research, practice guidelines, and clinical care decisions. Recent incidents spurred calls for stricter conflict of interest policies and led to new federal laws and NIH regulations. These stricter policies have evoked praise, concerns, and objections. Because these new federal requirements need to be interpreted and implemented, spirited discussions of conflicts of interest in medicine will continue.
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  41.  41
    On Writing Art History in Australia.Bernard Smith - 2005 - Thesis Eleven 82 (1):5-15.
    In this article, presented as the Second Annual Thesis Eleven Centre Lecture in 2003, Bernard Smith discusses the practice of writing art history in, and about, Australia and Europe. Smith defends periodization, and argues for the necessity of henceforth viewing what is typically called modernism as what he calls the formalesque. Further discussion includes problems of classification, the role of theory, and the place of Aboriginal art in white art history. The article thus surveys the condition of art history (...)
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  42.  10
    Introduction.Bernard Lightman - 2013 - Isis 104 (1):86-87.
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  43. DCP Series.Philip Stearns - 2011 - Continent 1 (2):92-93.
    continent. 1.2 (2011): 92-93. A collection of Images produced by intentionally corrupting the circuitry of a Kodak DC280 2 MP digitalcamera. By rewiring the electronics of a digital camera, glitched images are produced in a manner that parallels chemically processing unexposed film or photographic paper to produce photographic images without exposure to light. The DCP Series of Digital Images are direct visualizations of data generated by a digital camera as it takes a picture. Electronic processes associated with the normal operations (...)
     
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  44.  67
    Mental content and hot self-knowledge.Bernard W. Kobes - 2003 - In Martin Hahn & Björn T. Ramberg (eds.), Reflections and Replies: Essays on the Philosophy of Tyler Burge. MIT Press. pp. 71-99.
  45.  41
    Semantics and psychological prototypes.Bernard W. Kobes - 1989 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 70 (March):1-18.
  46.  13
    The Resurgence of Anti-Semitism: Jews, Israel, and Liberal Opinion.Bernard Harrison & Alvin H. Rosenfeld - 2006 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Written by a non-Jewish analytic philosopher, this book addresses the issue of whether, and to what extent, current opposition to Israel on the liberal-left embodies anti-Semitic stances. It argues that the dominant climate of liberal opinion disseminates, however inadvertently, a range of anti-Semitic assertions and motifs of the most traditional kind. It advocates a return to an unrestricted anti-racism which would allow liberals to defend Palestinian interests without demonizing Jews.
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  47.  34
    Textocracy, or, the cybernetic logic of French theory.Bernard Dionysius Geoghegan - 2020 - History of the Human Sciences 33 (1):52-79.
    This article situates the emergence of cybernetic concepts in postwar French thought within a longer history of struggles surrounding the technocratic reform of French universities, including Marcel Mauss’s failed efforts to establish a large-scale centre for social-scientific research with support from the Rockefeller Foundation, the intellectual and administrative endeavours of Claude Lévi-Strauss during the 1940s and 1950s, and the rise of communications research in connection with the Centre d’Études des Communications de Masse (CECMAS). Although semioticians and poststructuralists used cybernetic discourse (...)
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  48.  6
    Levi ben Gerson's Theory of Planetary Distances.Bernard R. Goldstein - 1986 - Centaurus 29 (4):272-313.
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  49.  17
    The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind.Bernard D. Davis, Carl Sagan & Julian Jaynes - 1978 - Hastings Center Report 8 (2):34.
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  50.  19
    Meaning and mental images.Bernard Harrison - 1963 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 63:237-250.
    Bernard Harrison; XIII—Meaning and Mental Images, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 63, Issue 1, 1 June 1963, Pages 237–250, https://doi.org/10.10.
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