Results for 'Browne Lewis'

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  1.  8
    Blesséd Spinoza.Lewis Browne - 1932 - New York,: Macmillan.
    This is a new release of the original 1932 edition.
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  2. Blessed Spinoza.Lewis Browne - 1933 - Philosophical Review 42:543.
     
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  3.  17
    Organising images of futures-past: remembering the Apollo moon landings.Lewis Goodings, Steven D. Brown & Martin Parker - 2013 - International Journal of Management Concepts and Philosophy 7 (3/4):263.
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  4.  8
    Conference Reviews.Sharon Lewis & Jenny Browne - 1998 - Nursing Inquiry 5 (2):119-119.
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  5.  12
    Specific attentional effects reflected in the cardiac orienting response.James W. Brown, Philip A. Morse, Lewis A. Leavitt & Frances K. Graham - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 7 (1):1-4.
  6.  9
    Disaster Relief: Restricting and Regulating Public Health Interventions.Browne Lewis - 2015 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (s2):45-48.
    The information contained in this teaching module and the accompanying PowerPoint slides is appropriate for use in a survey public health law course or seminar. The purpose of this lesson is two-fold. The first objective is to provide law students with an overview of the authority public health agencies have to set and enforce policies necessary to keep the population healthy. The second objective is to inform law students about the legal constraints courts have placed upon the actions of those (...)
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  7. Reinterpreting the Empathy-Altruism Relationship: When One Into One Equals Oneness.Robert B. Cialdini, Stephanie L. Brown, Brian P. Lewis, Carol Luce & Steven L. Neuberg - 1997 - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 73 (3):481-494.
    Important features of the self-concept can be located outside of the individual and inside close or related others. The authors use this insight to reinterpret data previously said to support the empathy-altruism model of helping, which asserts that empathic concern for another results in selflessness and true altruism. That is, they argue that the conditions that lead to empathic concern also lead to a greater sense of self-other overlap, raising the possibility that helping under these conditions is not selfless but (...)
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  8.  39
    A-V Instruction: Materials and Methods.J. V. Muir, James W. Brown, Richard B. Lewis & Fred F. Harcleroad - 1965 - British Journal of Educational Studies 14 (1):141.
  9.  50
    African-American males prefer a larger female body silhouette than do whites.Ellen F. Rosen, Adolph Brown, Jennifer Braden, Herman W. Dorsett, Dawna N. Franklin, Ronald A. Garlington, Valerie E. Kent, Tonya T. Lewis & Linda C. Petty - 1993 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 31 (6):599-601.
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  10.  14
    Intersectionality, Work, and Well-Being: The Effects of Gender and Disability.Mairead Eastin Moloney & Robyn Lewis Brown - 2019 - Gender and Society 33 (1):94-122.
    Intersectionality emphasizes numerous points of difference through which those who occupy multiple disadvantaged statuses are penalized. Applying this consideration to the workplace, we explore ways in which status-based and structural aspects of work undermine women and people with physical disabilities and diminish psychological well-being. We conceptually integrate research on the workplace disadvantages experienced by women and people with disabilities. Drawing on a longitudinal analysis of community survey data that includes a diverse sample of people with and without physical disabilities, we (...)
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  11.  29
    Cross-age effects on forensic face construction.Cristina Fodarella, Charity Brown, Amy Lewis & Charlie D. Frowd - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:150026.
    The own-age bias (OAB) refers to recognition memory being more accurate for people of our own-age than other-age groups (e.g., Wright and Stroud, 2002). This paper investigated whether the OAB effect is present during construction of human faces (also known as facial composites, often for forensic/police use). In doing so, it adds to our understanding of factors influencing both facial memory across the life span as well as performance of facial composites. Participant-witnesses were grouped into younger(19-35) and older(51-80) adults, and (...)
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  12.  54
    "This Past Was Waiting for Me When I Came": The Contextualization of Black Women's HistoryLiving in, Living Out: African American Domestics in Washington, D.C., 1910-1940The Memphis Diary of Ida B. Wells: An Intimate Portrait of the Activist as a Young WomanBlack Women in America: An Historical EncyclopediaHine Sight: Black Women and the Re-Construction of American HistoryWe Specialize in the Wholly Impossible: A Reader in Black Women's HistoryRighteous Discontent: The Women's Movement in the Black Baptist Church, 1880-1920. [REVIEW]Francille Rusan Wilson, Elizabeth Clark-Lewis, Miriam DeCosta-Willis, Darlene Clark Hine, Elsa Barkley Brown, Rosalyn Terborg-Penn, Wilma King, Linda Reed & Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham - 1996 - Feminist Studies 22 (2):345.
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  13.  41
    The history of qualia and C.I. Lewis’ role in it.Jacob Browning - 2023 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 32 (1):173-193.
    In current histories, C.I. Lewis is credited for bringing the strict concept of qualia – concerned solely with sensory states – into contemporary philosophy. It is this strict notion which is then credited with bringing in worries about inverted spectra, philosophical zombies, and the idea that we can individuate the senses introspectively. In this paper, I argue that this is a mistaken reading of Lewis and the history of qualia. I argue that the strict notion of qualia stems (...)
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  14. International Handbook of Philosophy of Education.Ann Chinnery, Nuraan Davids, Naomi Hodgson, Kai Horsthemke, Viktor Johansson, Dirk Willem Postma, Claudia W. Ruitenberg, Paul Smeyers, Christiane Thompson, Joris Vlieghe, Hanan Alexander, Joop Berding, Charles Bingham, Michael Bonnett, David Bridges, Malte Brinkmann, Brian A. Brown, Carsten Bünger, Nicholas C. Burbules, Rita Casale, M. Victoria Costa, Brian Coyne, Renato Huarte Cuéllar, Stefaan E. Cuypers, Johan Dahlbeck, Suzanne de Castell, Doret de Ruyter, Samantha Deane, Sarah J. DesRoches, Eduardo Duarte, Denise Egéa, Penny Enslin, Oren Ergas, Lynn Fendler, Sheron Fraser-Burgess, Norm Friesen, Amanda Fulford, Heather Greenhalgh-Spencer, Stefan Herbrechter, Chris Higgins, Pádraig Hogan, Katariina Holma, Liz Jackson, Ronald B. Jacobson, Jennifer Jenson, Kerstin Jergus, Clarence W. Joldersma, Mark E. Jonas, Zdenko Kodelja, Wendy Kohli, Anna Kouppanou, Heikki A. Kovalainen, Lesley Le Grange, David Lewin, Tyson E. Lewis, Gerard Lum, Niclas Månsson, Christopher Martin & Jan Masschelein (eds.) - 2018 - Springer Verlag.
    This handbook presents a comprehensive introduction to the core areas of philosophy of education combined with an up-to-date selection of the central themes. It includes 95 newly commissioned articles that focus on and advance key arguments; each essay incorporates essential background material serving to clarify the history and logic of the relevant topic, examining the status quo of the discipline with respect to the topic, and discussing the possible futures of the field. The book provides a state-of-the-art overview of philosophy (...)
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  15.  17
    C. I. Lewis's esthetics.Stuart M. Brown - 1950 - Journal of Philosophy 47 (6):141-150.
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  16.  35
    C.I. Lewis: Pragmatist or Reductionist?Jacob Browning - 2022 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 30 (2):109-126.
    Despite its substantial influence, there is surprisingly little agreement about how to read C.I. Lewis’s Mind and the World Order. Lewis has historically been read as a reductionist attempting to g...
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  17.  76
    What motivates women to take part in clinical and basic science endometriosis research?Sanjay K. Agarwal, Sylvia Estrada, Warren G. Foster, L. Lewis Wall, Doug Brown, Elaine S. Revis & Suzanne Rodriguez - 2007 - Bioethics 21 (5):263–269.
    ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to identify factors motivating women to take part in endometriosis research and to determine if these factors differ for women participating in clinical versus basic science studies. METHODS: A consecutive series of 24 women volunteering for participation in endometriosis‐related research were asked to indicate, in their own words, why they chose to volunteer. In addition, the women were asked to rate, on a scale of 0 to 10, sixteen potentially motivating factors. The (...)
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  18. What does decision theory have to do with wanting?Milo Phillips-Brown - 2021 - Mind 130 (518):413-437.
    Decision theory and folk psychology both purport to represent the same phenomena: our belief-like and desire- and preference-like states. They also purport to do the same work with these representations: explain and predict our actions. But they do so with different sets of concepts. There's much at stake in whether one of these two sets of concepts can be accounted for with the other. Without such an account, we'd have two competing representations and systems of prediction and explanation, a dubious (...)
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  19.  12
    On Professor Lewis' Distinction Between Ethics and Valuation.Robert W. Browning - 1949 - Ethics 59 (2, Part 1):95-111.
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  20. Elizabeth Barrett Browning: A poet's quest for ultimate reality.Linda M. Lewis - 2005 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 28 (1):4-20.
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  21.  19
    On professor Lewis' distinction between ethics and valuation.Robert W. Browning - 1948 - Ethics 59 (2):95-111.
  22.  15
    Religion, Reason and the Self: Essays in Honour of Hywel D. Lewis Edited by Stewart R. Sutherland and T. A. Roberts University of Wales Press, 1989, xiv + 173 pp., £20. [REVIEW]Stuart Brown - 1990 - Philosophy 65 (253):379-.
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  23.  9
    Remembering George Lamming (1927–2022), with Thoughts on In the Castle of My Skin.Lewis R. Gordon - 2023 - Philosophy and Global Affairs 3 (1):46-59.
    The first part of this memoriam essay focuses on the author’s relationship with the famed Bajan intellectual George Lamming during his years at Brown University. The second part explores Lamming’s most famous work, In the Castle of My Skin (1953), which offers important tropes in Black existential thought that are synchronous with Frantz Fanon’s Peau noir, masques blancs (1952), but with a more detailed exploration of the concept of political complicity through Lamming’s portrait of the phenomenon of slime and its (...)
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  24. Hywel D. Lewis, Freedom and Alienation Reviewed by.Alister Browne - 1986 - Philosophy in Review 6 (5):231-233.
     
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  25.  37
    On the Plurality of Worlds David Lewis Oxford: Blackwell, 1986. Pp. 276. $58.00, $27.00 paper.James Robert Brown - 1987 - Dialogue 26 (2):399-.
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  26.  28
    Ruling engines and diffraction gratings before Rowland: the work of Lewis Rutherfurd and William Rogers.C. N. Brown - 2018 - Annals of Science 75 (4):330-360.
    ABSTRACTDiffraction gratings are famously associated with Henry Rowland of Johns Hopkins University but there were precursors. Although gratings were first made and used in Europe, reliable machines for ruling gratings were developed in the USA, and two men, Lewis Rutherfurd and William Rogers, tackled the problem before Rowland. Rutherfurd, a wealthy independent astronomer, designed and built the first screw-operated engine for ruling diffraction gratings, the fore-runner of almost all subsequent ruling engines. With it he and his assistant D. C. (...)
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  27.  7
    Red Rising and Philosophy.Courtland Lewis & Kevin McCain (eds.) - 2016 - Chicago: Open Court.
    Red Rising and Philosophy has gathered together a crew of the wisest Helldivers philosophy can offer. Could humanity's love of physical enhancements cause its extinction? Do people doom humanity by trying to all be the same? Can a person love someone, while at the same time wanting that person destroyed? Is equality always the best principle on which to organize society? What is evil, and how does it exist in contemporary life? Does one remain the same person, even after changing (...)
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  28. SUTHERLAND, STEWART R. and T. A. ROBERTS Religion, Reason and the Self: Essays in Honour of Hywel D. Lewis[REVIEW]Stuart Brown - 1990 - Philosophy 65:379.
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  29. Francis Wormald, Francis Wormald: Collected Writings, 2: Studies in English and Continental Art of the Later Middle Ages. Ed. JJG Alexander, TJ Brown, and Joan Gibbs. London: Harvey Miller, 1988. Pp. 242; color frontispiece, 141 black-and-white plates.£ 38. [REVIEW]Suzanne Lewis - 1991 - Speculum 66 (1):248-251.
     
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  30. "I Wish I Had Never Existed".Curtis Brown - manuscript
    Both David Lewis and Roderick Chisholm have proposed that beliefs are best understood, not as relations between people and the propositions they believe, but as relations between people and the properties they "directly attribute" to themselves or "self-ascribe." If this account is correct for belief, it seems that it ought to be possible to extend it to other "propositional attitudes" such as considering and wishing. But the most straightforward way of extending the account to such other attitudes faces difficulties, (...)
     
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  31. How Bohm’s Theory Solves the Measurement Problem.Peter J. Lewis - 2007 - Philosophy of Science 74 (5):749-760.
    I examine recent arguments based on functionalism that claim to show that Bohm's theory fails to solve the measurement problem, or if it does so, it is only because it reduces to a form of the many-worlds theory. While these arguments reveal some interesting features of Bohm's theory, I contend that they do not undermine the distinctive Bohmian solution to the measurement problem. ‡I would like to thank Harvey Brown, Martin Thomson-Jones, and David Wallace for helpful discussions. †To contact the (...)
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  32.  46
    British moralists.Lewis Amherst Selby-Bigge - 1897 - New York,: Dover Publications.
    v. 1. Essays on ethics by the Earl of Shaftesbury, Frances Hutcheson ; Samuel Butler ; Adam Smith ; Jeremy Bentham - v. 2. Essays by Samuel Clarke ; John Balguy ; Richard Price ; John Brown ; John Clarke ; Ralph Cudworth ; John Gay ; Thomas Hobbes ; Henry Home Kames ; John Locke ; John Mandeville ; William Paley ; William Wollaston.
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  33. Hywel D. Lewis, Freedom and Alienation. [REVIEW]Alister Browne - 1986 - Philosophy in Review 6:231-233.
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  34.  3
    On the Plurality of WorldsDavid Lewis Oxford: Blackwell, 1986. Pp. 276. $58.00, $27.00 paper. [REVIEW]James Robert Brown - 1987 - Dialogue 26 (2):399-401.
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  35.  43
    Aloni, Antonio. Da Pilo a Sigeo: Poemi cantori e scrivani al tempo dei Tiranni. Alessandria: Universitas (edizioni dell'orso), 2006. 145 pp. Paper,€ 16. Arieti, James A., and Roger M. Barrus, trans. Plato: Gorgias. Focus Philosophical Library. Newburyport: Focus Publishing, 2007. x+ 236 pp. Paper, $12.95. Barney, stephen A., WJ Lewis, JA Beach, and oliver Berghof, trans. The Ety. [REVIEW]Robert deMaria Jr & Robert D. Brown - 2007 - American Journal of Philology 128:293-299.
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  36. Natural Objects.Joshua D. K. Brown - 2016 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 2 (2):254-271.
    This paper introduces a framework for thinking about ontological questions—in particular, the Special Composition Question—and shows how the framework might help support something like an account of restricted composition. The framework takes the form of an account of natural objects, in analogy with David Lewis’s account of natural properties. Objects, like properties, come in various metaphysical grades, from the fundamental, fully objective, perfectly natural objects to the nomologically otiose, maximally gerrymandered, perfectly non-natural objects. The perfectly natural objects, I argue, (...)
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  37.  30
    The delayed birth of social experiments.Robert Brown - 1997 - History of the Human Sciences 10 (2):1-21.
    In the 19th century it was widely believed that scientific experiments on social issues were not, and never would be, feasible. Not only was social behaviour unpredictable in principle, but subjecting people to experimentation would be immoral. Although Comte, J. S. Mill, C. G. Lewis, and Herbert Spencer all argued to this conclusion, they also believed that natural innovations in society provided an adequate sub stitute for planned experiments. The question to be examined here is how such beliefs came (...)
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  38.  8
    The ruling engines and diffraction gratings of Henry Augustus Rowland.C. N. Brown - 2022 - Annals of Science 79 (1):81-130.
    ABSTRACT During a visit to Europe in the autumn of 1882, Henry Augustus Rowland, Professor of Physics at Johns Hopkins University, displayed diffraction gratings produced on a ruling engine he had designed and built, which were bigger and much higher quality than any previously made. Some were of a novel type, ruled on concave surfaces, which he used in a simple but equally novel spectroscope that he had devised, to reveal spectral lines in great detail, and by means of photography (...)
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  39.  73
    In Pursuit of C.S. Lewis: Adventures in Collecting His Works, by Edwin W. Brown, M.D., with Dan Hamilton. [REVIEW]William M. Klimon - 2010 - The Chesterton Review 36 (1/2):174-177.
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  40. A solution to the problem of moral luck.Brynmor Browne - 1992 - Philosophical Quarterly 42 (168):345-356.
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  41. Do dolphins know their own minds?Derek Browne - 2004 - Biology and Philosophy 19 (4):633-53.
    Knowledge of one's own states of mind is one of the varieties of self-knowledge. Do any nonhuman animals have the capacity for this variety of self-knowledge? The question is open to empirical inquiry, which is most often conducted with primate subjects. Research with a bottlenose dolphin gives some evidence for the capacity in a nonprimate taxon. I describe the research and evaluate the metacognitive interpretation of the dolphin's behaviour. The research exhibits some of the difficulties attached to the task of (...)
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  42.  28
    The ethics of elective (non-therapeutic) ventilation.Alister Browne, Grant Gillet & Martin Tweeddale - 2000 - Bioethics 14 (1):42–57.
    Elective ventilation (EV) is ventilation applied, not in the interest of patients, but in order to secure transplantable organs. It carries with it a small risk that patients who would otherwise have died will survive in a persistent vegetative state. Is EV ever justifiable? We argue: (1) The only thing which can justify exposing patients to risk not taken for their benefit is their consent, and we cannot rely on implied consent or third party consent in the case of EV. (...)
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  43. Statements partly about observation.David Lewis - 1988 - Philosophical Papers 17 (1):1-31.
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  44.  41
    On the completeness of first degree weakly aggregative modal logics.Peter Apostoli - 1997 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 26 (2):169-180.
    This paper extends David Lewis' result that all first degree modal logics are complete to weakly aggregative modal logic by providing a filtration-theoretic version of the canonical model construction of Apostoli and Brown. The completeness and decidability of all first-degree weakly aggregative modal logics is obtained, with Lewis's result for Kripkean logics recovered in the case k = 1.
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  45.  26
    The Bounds of Cognition. [REVIEW]D. Browne - 2009 - Analysis 69 (2):385-386.
    Tools and technologies expand our capacities, including our cognitive capacities. Microscopes extend our perceptual capacities. Notebooks extend the natural limits of memory. These facts are important, for all that they are obvious. The extended cognition hypothesis wants more. Some external devices and processes are literal parts of cognitive processes themselves. When there is fast and reliable access to external data or processes, then the cognitive processes that occur uncontroversially inside the brain literally and controversially extend out into the world to (...)
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  46.  24
    Why should we team reason?Katharine Browne - 2018 - Economics and Philosophy 34 (2):185-198.
    :Team reasoning is thought to be descriptively and normatively superior to the classical individualistic theory of rational choice primarily because it can recommend coordination on Hi in the Hi-Lo game and cooperation in Prisoner's Dilemma-type situations. However, left unanswered is whether it is rational for individuals to become team members, leaving a gap between reasons for individuals and reasons for team members. In what follows, I take up Susan Hurley's attempt to show that it is rational for an individual to (...)
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  47.  14
    The Institute of Medicine on Non-Heart-Beating Organ Transplantation.Alister Browne - 2008 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 17 (1):75-86.
    The current main source of transplantable organs is from heart-beating donors. These are patients who have suffered a catastrophic brain injury, been ventilated, declared dead by neurological criteria, and had their vital functions maintained mechanically until the point of transplantation. But the demand for organs far outstrips the supply, and these patients are not the only potential donors. The idea behind non-heart-beating transplantation is to expand the donor pool by including in it patients who are in hopeless conditions but who (...)
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  48.  74
    Hope, critique, and utopia.Craig Browne - 2005 - Critical Horizons 6 (1):63-86.
    This paper assesses the extent to which the category of hope assists in preserving and redefining the vestiges of utopian thought in critical social theory. Hope has never had a systematic position among the categories of critical social theory, although it has sometimes acquired considerable prominence. It will be argued that the current philosophical and everyday interest in social hope can be traced to the limited capacity of liberal conceptions of freedom to articulate a vision of social transformation apposite to (...)
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  49.  46
    'Experience is a mixture of violence and justification': Luc Boltanski in conversation with Craig Browne.Craig Browne - 2014 - Thesis Eleven 124 (1):7-19.
    In this discussion with Craig Browne, Luc Boltanski comments on how his recent work reconsiders the questions of agency and the nature of social explanation. Boltanski reflects on the connections between his investigations of grammars of justifications and his later work with Eve Chiapello on the historical transition to a new spirit of capitalism. The significance of politics, conflict and critique to Boltanski’s sociology are highlighted. Bolanski explains why he regards May 1968 as a major disruption of the capitalist (...)
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  50.  31
    Darwin's Botanical Arithmetic and the "Principle of Divergence," 1854-1858.Janet Browne - 1980 - Journal of the History of Biology 13 (1):53 - 89.
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