Results for 'Brian Komyathy'

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  1.  30
    ‘I can’t outrun a bear, but I can outrun you:’ sport contests, nature challenge activities and outdoor recreation.Brian Komyathy - 2023 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 18 (2):244-258.
    The old adage has two people out hiking who run into a bear. One starts running while the other asks ‘why are you running? You can’t outrun a bear’. To which the other responds, ‘I don’t have to outrun the bear. I only have to outrun you’. Hiking/trekking is not typically a competitive endeavor characterized by contests but, like many endeavors/pursuits/activities, competition can be injected into it; thereby sportifying it. Swimming is a sport (under certain conditions). At the same time, (...)
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  2. Defeating Fake News: On Journalism, Knowledge, and Democracy.Brian Ball - 2021 - Moral Philosophy and Politics 8 (1):5-26.
    The central thesis of this paper is that fake news and related phenomena serve as defeaters for knowledge transmission via journalistic channels. This explains how they pose a threat to democracy; and it points the way to determining how to address this threat. Democracy is both intrinsically and instrumentally good provided the electorate has knowledge (however partial and distributed) of the common good and the means of achieving it. Since journalism provides such knowledge, those who value democracy have a reason (...)
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  3.  96
    Finding the Epistocrats.Brian Kogelmann - 2023 - Episteme 20 (2):497-512.
    Concerned about widespread incompetence among voters in democratic societies, epistocrats propose quasi-democratic electoral systems that amplify the voices of competent voters while silencing (or perhaps just subduing) the voices of those deemed incompetent. In order to amplify the voices of the competent we first need to know what counts as political competence, and then we need a way of identifying those who possess the relevant characteristics. After developing an account of what it means to be politically competent, I argue that (...)
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  4.  69
    (1 other version)An introduction to the philosophy of religion.Brian Davies - 1993 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    A deep and precise introduction to the philosophy of religion that is also remarkably clear and insightful. The author has a conversation with the student and uses concrete examples to explain often abstract concepts and issues.
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  5. Behaviourism and the Limits of Scientific Method.Brian D. Mackenzie - 1979 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 30 (1):85-86.
     
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  6.  80
    Enhancing Gender.Hazem Zohny, Brian D. Earp & Julian Savulescu - 2022 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 19 (2):225-237.
    Transgender healthcare faces a dilemma. On the one hand, access to certain medical interventions, including hormone treatments or surgeries, where desired, may be beneficial or even vital for some gender dysphoric trans people. But on the other hand, access to medical interventions typically requires a diagnosis, which, in turn, seems to imply the existence of a pathological state—something that many transgender people reject as a false and stigmatizing characterization of their experience or identity. In this paper we argue that developments (...)
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  7.  58
    Secrecy and transparency in political philosophy.Brian Kogelmann - 2021 - Philosophy Compass 16 (4):e12733.
    Political institutions can be transparent or secret. If they are transparent, then we have access to information about how agents act within them. If they are secret, then we do not have access to this information. The presence and extent of transparency has tremendous impact on how political institutions function. The purpose of this article is to offer a brief overview of what political philosophers have thus far had to say about transparency as it pertains to political institutions. In doing (...)
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  8. An Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion.Brian Davies - 1983 - Religious Studies 19 (1):103-104.
     
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  9. Pain and representation.Brian Cutter - 2017 - In Jennifer Corns, The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Pain. New York: Routledge. pp. 290-39.
    This chapter focuses specifically on the case of pain. Despite traditional opposition to the representational thesis, the latter has won widespread assent. The most important early proponents of the representational thesis were David Armstrong and George Pitcher, both of whom held that pain is a form of perception. Following Armstrong and Pitcher, intentionalists have traditionally held that the experience of pain has a content with roughly the following form: there is a disturbance with such-and-such features at location L. Since the (...)
     
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  10.  94
    Pragmatic Encroachment in Epistemology.Brian Kim & Matthew McGrath (eds.) - 2018 - New York: Routledge.
    According to philosophical lore, epistemological orthodoxy is a purist epistemology in which epistemic concepts such as belief, evidence, and knowledge are characterized to be pure and free from practical concerns. In recent years, the debate has focused narrowly on the concept of knowledge and a number of challenges have been posed against the orthodox, purist view of knowledge. While the debate about knowledge is still a lively one, the pragmatic exploration in epistemology has just begun. This collection takes on the (...)
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  11.  33
    Indivisible sets and well‐founded orientations of the Rado graph.Nathanael L. Ackerman & Will Brian - 2019 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 65 (1):46-56.
    Every set can been thought of as a directed graph whose edge relation is ∈. We show that many natural examples of directed graphs of this kind are indivisible: for every infinite κ, for every indecomposable λ, and every countable model of set theory. All of the countable digraphs we consider are orientations of the countable random graph. In this way we find indivisible well‐founded orientations of the random graph that are distinct up to isomorphism, and ℵ1 that are distinct (...)
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  12. When Public Reason Fails Us: Convergence Discourse as Blood Oath.Brian Kogelmann & Stephen G. W. Stich - 2016 - American Political Science Review 110:717-730.
     
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  13.  37
    The Intersection of Semiotics and Phenomenology: Peirce and Heidegger in Dialogue.Brian Kemple - 2019 - De Gruyter.
    Many contemporary explanations of conscious human experience, relying either upon neuroscience or appealing to a spiritual soul, fail to provide a complete and coherent theory. These explanations, the author argues, fall short because the underlying explanatory constituent for all experience are not entities, such as the brain or a spiritual soul, but rather relation and the unique way in which human beings form relations. This alternative frontier is developed through examining the phenomenological method of Martin Heidegger and the semiotic theory (...)
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  14. Collective Virtue Epistemology and the Value of Identity Diversity.Brian Kim - 2022 - Social Epistemology 36 (4):486-501.
    Discussions of diversity tend to paint a mixed picture of the practical and epistemic value of diversity. While there are expansive and detailed accounts of the value of cognitive diversity, explorations of identity diversity typically focus on its value as a source or cause of cognitive diversity. The resulting picture on which identity diversity only possesses a derivative practical and epistemic value is unsatisfactory and fails to account for some of its central epistemic benefits. In response, I propose that collective (...)
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  15.  73
    Social Epistemology, scientific practice and the elusive social.Brian S. Baigrie - 1994 - Argumentation 8 (2):125-144.
    Social Epistemology, as formulated by Steve Fuller, is based on the suggestion that rational knowledge policy must be held accountable to ‘brute facts’ about the nature of our human cognitive pursuits, whatever these may be. One difficulty for Fuller concerns the conception of the social which underwrites social epistemology. I argue that social epistemology conflates the social with human psychological properties that are available for public scrutiny and, accordingly, that social epistemology is best viewed as a brand of psychologism. Though (...)
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  16.  34
    What Is Semantic Content?Brian Ball - 2010 - In Erich Rast & Luiz Carlos Baptista, Meaning and Context. Peter Lang. pp. 2--187.
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  17.  80
    Do neighbors make good fences?: Political theory and the territorial imperative.Brian Barry - 1981 - Political Theory 9 (3):293-301.
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  18.  53
    Do negative mood states impact moral reasoning?Brian Barger & W. Pitt Derryberry - 2013 - Journal of Moral Education 42 (4):443-459.
    This paper presents three studies exploring the relationship between emotional responses to classic cognitive developmental moral dilemmas and moral reasoning indices as measured by the Defining Issues Test (DIT). Each study indicated that certain moral dilemmas elicit varying levels of anger and sadness as compared to a neutral baseline. In each study, decreased moral reasoning was observed in those instances where reports in both sadness and anger were high following a dilemma. This did not occur, however, in those instances where (...)
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  19.  14
    More fully human: Principals as Freirian liberators.Brian Beabout - 2008 - Journal of Thought 43 (1&2):21-39.
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  20.  77
    Against Moderate Morality: The Demands of Justice in an Unjust World.Brian Berkey - 2012 - Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley
    Extremism about Demands is the view that morality is significantly more demanding than prevailing common-sense morality acknowledges. This view is not widely held, despite the powerful advocacy on its behalf by philosophers such as Peter Singer, Shelly Kagan, Peter Unger, and G.A. Cohen. Most philosophers have remained attracted to some version of Moderation about Demands, which holds that the behavior of typical well-off people is permissible, including the ways that such people tend to employ their economic and other resources. It (...)
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  21.  23
    Thomas Aquinas’s Summa theologiae : A Guide and Commentary.Brian Davies - 2014 - London, England: Oxford University Press.
    Following a scholarly account of Thomas Aquinas's life, Davies explores his purposes in writing the Summa Theologiae and works systematically through each of its three Parts. He also relates their contents and Aquinas's teachings to those of other works and other thinkers both theological and philosophical. The concluding chapter considers the impact Aquinas's best-known work has exerted since its first appearance, and why it is still studied today. Intended for students and general readers interested in medieval philosophy and theology, Davies's (...)
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  22.  28
    Reconceiving Argument Schemes as Descriptive and Practically Normative.Brian N. Larson & David Seth Morrison - 2023 - Argumentation 37 (4):601-622.
    We propose a revised definition of “argument scheme” that focuses on describing argumentative performances and normative assessments that occur within an argumentative context, the social context in which the scheme arises. Our premise-and-conclusion structure identifies the typical instantiation of an argument in the argumentative context, and our critical framework describes a set of normative assessments available to participants in the context, what we call _practically normative_ assessments. We distinguish this practical normativity from the _rationally or universally normative_ assessment that might (...)
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  23.  23
    Lies, Damned Lies, and Bioethicists.Brian M. Cummings & John J. Paris - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (5):24-26.
    The opening sentence of Christopher Meyers’ Target Article is “Lying to one’s patient is wrong”. The author continues, “This truism is one that bioethicists have heartedly endorsed fo...
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  24. The Cambridge Companion to Anselm.Brian Davies & Brian Leftow - 2006 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 59 (2):117-120.
     
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  25.  12
    The Ethics of Employment Screening for Psychopathy.Brian K. Steverson - 2020 - Lexington Books.
    This book argues that, despite recent calls to arms to seek out and remove "corporate psychopaths" from the business world, efforts to eliminate the corporate psychopath presence would be illegal as well as unethical.
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  26.  60
    Causation and Injustice: Locating the injustice of racial and ethnic health disparities.Brian Hutler - 2022 - Bioethics 36 (3):260-266.
    Bioethics, Volume 36, Issue 3, Page 260-266, March 2022.
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  27.  31
    Museums as Mentor Texts: Preservice Teachers Analyze Informational Text Structures and Features Present in a Historical Museum.Brian Kissel, Erin Miller, Erik Byker, Amy Good & Paul Fitchett - 2019 - Journal of Social Studies Research 43 (4):343-360.
    The purpose of this study was to examine how elementary preservice teachers ( n = 35) experienced museums as potential sites for K-5 students to read museums using two lenses: to learn the history of the place in which they live and examine how museum authors craft texts to tell those stories. Along with exploring historical content, preservice teachers studied the museum as an informational text. Through this experience, preservice teachers discovered: 1) the five informational text structures museum authors used (...)
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  28. Self or no-self? Converging perspectives from neuropsychology and mysticism.Brian L. Lancaster - 1993 - Zygon 28 (4):507-526.
  29.  12
    Taking God Seriously: Two Different Voices.Brian Davies & Michael Ruse - 2020 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Michael Ruse.
    Is debate on issues related to faith and reason still possible when dialogue between believers and non-believers has collapsed? Taking God Seriously not only proves that it is possible, but also demonstrates that such dialogue produces fruitful results. Here, Brian Davies, a Dominican priest and leading scholar of Thomas Aquinas, and Michael Ruse, a philosopher of science and well-known non-believer, offer an extended discussion on the nature and plausibility of belief in God and Christianity. They explore key topics in (...)
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  30.  34
    The Uncanny Wonder of Being Edible to Ticks.Brian Hisao Onishi - 2020 - Environmental Philosophy 17 (2):199-219.
    In this paper I argue that an encounter with a tick can produce both fear and wonder. I make a distinction between the legitimate danger of tick borne-diseases and the non-danger of our entanglement with the nature revealed by the tick’s bite in order to highlight the goodness of the tick and the possibilities for post-human existences beyond narratives of conquest and control. Ultimately, I argue that wonder is a helpful mechanism for thinking through the goodness of the tick by (...)
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  31. Colossians Remixed: Subverting the Empire.Brian J. Walsh & Sylvia C. Keesmaat - 2004
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  32. Down the Labyrinthine Ways.Brian Cutter - 2019 - In Brian Besong & Jonathan Fuqua, Faith and Reason: Philosophers Explain Their Turn to Catholicism. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. pp. 79-96.
     
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  33.  42
    Slave Self-Activity and the Bourgeois Revolution in the United States: Jubilee and the Boundaries of Black Freedom.Brian Kelly - 2019 - Historical Materialism 27 (3):31-76.
    For more than a generation, historical interpretations of emancipation in the United States have acknowledged that the slaves played a central role in driving that process forward. This is a critically important advance, and one worth defending. But it is also a perspective whose influence seems increasingly precarious. This article explores the complex relationship between the slaves’ ‘revolution from below’ and the bourgeois revolution directed from above, in part through an appraisal of W.E.B. Du Bois’s argument about the ‘slaves’ general (...)
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  34.  47
    Kant, Rawls, and the Possibility of Autonomy.Brian Kogelmann - 2019 - Social Theory and Practice 45 (4):613-635.
    One feature of John Rawls’s well-ordered society in both A Theory of Justice and Political Liberalism is that citizens in the well-ordered society, when adhering to the principles of justice governing that society, realize their full autonomy. This notion of full autonomy is explicitly Kantian. This constancy, I shall argue, raises problems. Though the model of the well-ordered society presented in TJ is arguably consistent with Kant’s notion of autonomy, the model of the well-ordered society presented in PL is not. (...)
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  35.  57
    Euthyphro, socrates, and professor pangloss.Brian Vroman - 2011 - Think 10 (27):95-104.
    In his article ???A New Euthyphro??? , pp. 65???83, Glenn Peoples constructs a new version of the famous Euthyphro dialogue, in which Euthyphro, rather than Socrates, prevails.
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  36. Sam Harris, The Moral Landscape, and some unanswered questions.Brian Vroman - 2013 - Think 12 (33):105-115.
    ExtractIn this dialogue, two college students, Katie and Dennis, discuss some of the positions taken by Sam Harris in his recent work The Moral Landscape. They discover that, first, theories of ethics based on human well-being are nothing new; they also question whether Harris has truly closed the door on moral subjectivism. Next, while remaining sympathetic to Harris, they question how much he has really accomplished by equating human well-being with specific brain states, and wonder if blissful brain states based (...)
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  37.  15
    A Christian Perspective on Mentoring.Brian E. Wakeman - 2012 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 29 (4):277-292.
    This paper explores the terms ‘mentor’ and ‘mentoring’ in a broad general sense of an ‘experienced and trusted advisor’, and then in more specific professional settings. The author quotes a wide range of sources and references, and then turns his attention to what might be understood by ‘Christian mentoring’, firstly by drawing on Paul’s writings to illustrate possible qualities and virtues for the mentoring process. Then, following the example of writers from range of disciplines, he outlines a transformational and reformational (...)
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  38.  38
    Review Essay: The Spaces of Capitalism.Brian Walker - 2009 - Political Theory 37 (6):823-837.
  39. Memory Park in Buenos Aires.Brian Davis - 2008 - Topos 65:33.
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  40.  9
    What God Is not.Brian Davies - 1992 - In The Thought of Thomas Aquinas. New York: Clarendon Press.
    The view of Thomas Aquinas that we can only know what God is not, rather than what he is, is discussed. The first part of the chapter outlines Aquinas’ basic position on this matter in relation to his theological background and the range of human knowledge. It then goes on to discuss the doctrine of divine simplicity, first giving the reasoning behind this, and then giving the details of Aquinas’ view on the matter. This is that God is pure form (...)
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  41. Jus post bellum, fractured sovereignty, and the limits of post-war rehabilitation.Brian Orend - 2018 - In Daniel R. Brunstetter & Jean-Vincent Holeindre, The ethics of war and peace revisited: moral challenges in an era of contested and fragmented sovereignty. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.
     
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  42.  38
    Anselm on the Cost of Salvation.Brian Leftow - 1997 - Medieval Philosophy & Theology 6 (1):73-92.
    This paper examines Anselm’s reply to this argument in order to shed light on a number of issues in philosophical theology, including the metaphysics of the Incarnation, the relation between perfect being theology and the doctrines of the Incarnation and the Atonement, the senses in which the Christian God might be impassible, and the nature of God’s perfect rationality and wisdom. (edited).
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  43.  5
    Where Have Our Mission Structures Come From?Brian Stanley - 2003 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 20 (1):39-46.
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  44.  52
    Biogeography and evolutionary emotivism.Brian K. Steverson - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (1):33 – 48.
    Emotivism has enjoined a revival of sorts over the past few decades, primarily driven by a Darwinian interpretation of the Humean metaethic. Evolutionary ethics, the metaethical view that at the heart of our moral sense lies a set of moral sentiments whose existence 'pre-dates' in evolutionary terms our species' ability to engage in more explicit, cognitive moral deliberations and discourse, whether in the discovery of deontological rules or in the crafting of social contracts, figures prominently in Robert Solomon's work in (...)
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  45. Donald Scherer, ed., Upstream/Downstream: Issues in Environmental Ethics Reviewed by.Brian K. Steverson - 1994 - Philosophy in Review 14 (5):358-360.
     
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  46.  52
    Ecocentrism and ecological modeling.Brian K. Steverson - 1994 - Environmental Ethics 16 (1):71-88.
    Typical of ecocentric approaches such as the land ethic and the deep ecology movement is the use of concepts from ecological science to create an “ecoholistic” ontological foundation from which a strong environmental ethic is generated. Crucial to ecocentric theories is the assumption that ecological science has shown that humanity and nonhuman nature are essentially integrated into communal or communal-like arrangements. In this essay, I challenge the adequacy of that claim. I argue that for the most part the claim is (...)
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  47. Joseph Raz, The Practice of Value Reviewed by.Brian K. Steverson - 2007 - Philosophy in Review 27 (2):141-142.
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  48.  38
    Vulnerable Values Argument for the Professionalization of Business Management.Brian K. Steverson - 2012 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 31 (1):51-77.
    Market events of the past few years have resurrected long unheeded calls for the professionalization of the occupation of business manager, not in terms of increased technical proficiency, but in terms of a renewed vigor to shape the practice of management and the education of those who will fill its ranks along the lines of the “ideal of service” which characterizes socially established professions like law and medicine. In this paper I argue that the push to professionalize business management can (...)
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  49.  18
    The Demonic Turn: The Power of Religion to Inspire or Restrain Violence.Brian Stiltner - 2006 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 26 (2):228-232.
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  50.  17
    The Narrative Life: The Moral and Religious Thought of Frederick Douglass.Brian Stiltner - 2005 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 25 (2):207-209.
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