Results for 'Bruce A. Buchan'

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  1.  25
    Situated consciousness or consciousness of situation? Autonomy and antagonism in Jean-Paul Sartre'sBeing and Nothingness.Bruce A. Buchan - 1996 - History of European Ideas 22 (3):193-215.
    A key issue of contention between political philosophers has been the quest to resolve the tension between self-determination and the recognition of the intersubjective nature of self-development. This paper will argue that although the early work of Jean-Paul Sartre was characterised by the attempt to avoid defining self-determination as un-situated, in trying to situate self-determination Sartre paradoxically endorsed a radical notion of separation. This paradox manifested itself most clearly in his profoundly problematic account of intersubjectivity. Rather than denying the importance (...)
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  2.  7
    Western Political Thought in Dialogue with Asia.Antony Black, Brett Bowden, Bruce Buchan, Joseph Chan, Fred Dallmayr, Nelly Lahoud, Cary J. Nederman, Philip Nel, Makarand Parajape, Anthony Parel, Vicki A. Spencer, Alistair Swale & Peter Zarrow (eds.) - 2008 - Lexington Books.
    Western Political Thought in Dialogue with Asia is a unique collection of essays that examines the exchange of political ideas between Western Europe and Asia from the Middle Ages to the early twentieth century. The contributors to the volume call for globalizing the scope of research and teaching in the history of political thought.
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  3.  47
    The empire of political thought: civilization, savagery and perceptions of Indigenous government.Bruce Buchan - 2005 - History of the Human Sciences 18 (2):1-22.
    This paper examines the relationship between understandings of Indigenous government and the development of early-modern European, and especially British, political thought. It will be argued that a range of British political thinkers represented Indigenous peoples as being in want of effective government and regular conduct due to the absence of sufficiently developed property relations among them. In particular, British political thinkers framed the ‘deficiencies’ of Indigenous people by ideas of civilization in which key assumptions connected ‘property’, ‘government’, and ‘society’ as (...)
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  4.  17
    Knowing savagery: Australia and the anatomy of race.Bruce Buchan & Linda Andersson Burnett - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (4):115-134.
    When Australia was circumnavigated by Europeans in 1801–02, French and British natural historians were unsure how to describe the Indigenous peoples who inhabited the land they charted and catalogued. Ideas of race and of savagery were freely deployed by both British and French, but a discursive shift was underway. While the concept of savagery had long been understood to apply to categories of human populations deemed to be in want of more historically advanced ‘civilisation’, the application of this term in (...)
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  5.  13
    Edinburgh’s Enlightenment abroad: navigating humanity as a physician, merchant, natural historian and settler-colonist.Bruce Buchan & Annemarie McLaren - 2021 - Intellectual History Review 31 (4):627-649.
    In 1822, Alexander Berry (1781–1873), a recent free settler in the early colony of New South Wales (N.S.W.), read a paper on the geology of the coast of N.S.W. to the newly formed Philosophical Soc...
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  6.  8
    Sight Unseen: Our Neoliberal Vision of Insecurity.Bruce Buchan - 2018 - Cultural Studeis Review 24 (2):130-149.
    Is security seen? Is security seen in images of peace and safety, or is it perceived in the troubled images of the horrors of violence and suffering? Vision has played a crucial role in shaping the modern Western preoccupation with, and prioritisation of security. Historically, security has been visually represented in a variety of ways, typically involving the depiction of its absence. In Medieval and Early Modern Europe especially, security and insecurity were presented as coterminous insofar as each represented separate (...)
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  7.  14
    Knowing savagery: Humanity in the circuits of colonial knowledge.Bruce Buchan & Linda Andersson Burnett - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (4):3-7.
    How was ‘savagery’ constituted as a field of colonial knowledge? As Europe’s empires expanded, their reach was marked not only by the colonisation of new territories but by the colonisation of knowledge. Path-breaking scholarship since the 1990s has shown how European knowledge of colonised territories and peoples developed from diverse travel writings, missionary texts, and exploration narratives from the 16th century onwards (Abulafia, 2008; Armitage, 2000; De Campos Françozo, 2017; Pratt, 1992). Of prime importance in this work has been the (...)
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  8.  21
    Cosmopolitanism: A Philosophy for Global Ethics.Bruce Buchan - 2011 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 89 (1):186-187.
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  9.  8
    Dying for security.Bruce Buchan - 2011 - Cultural Studies Review 17 (1):188-210.
    If political statements and media coverage are any guide, it seems Australians today are dying for security. At no other moment in our history has the spectre of war and terrorism so haunted popular, political and scholarly perceptions of Australia’s colonial past and of its geopolitical future. And yet, debates over colonial war or genocide and contemporary terrorism have been conducted in more or less complete isolation. In this article I argue that our contemporary obsession with ‘security’ is premised on (...)
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  10.  9
    Listening for Noise in Political Thought.Bruce Buchan - 2012 - Cultural Studies Review 18 (3).
    The acoustic dimension of political philosophy has rarely attracted serious attention, in part because scholars have tended to assume that political theories, ideas, and concepts, exist as abstract entities that are often noiselessly communicated in written texts. And yet, the noisy communication of political ideas whether in the form of Socratic dialogues, Churchillian orations, or in the hushed tones of focus group conversations treasured by deliberative democrats today, has a rich political history and a continuing relevance. This paper will focus (...)
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  11.  45
    Liberalism and fear of violence.Bruce Buchan - 2001 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 4 (3):27-48.
    Liberal political thought is underwritten by an enduring fear of civil and state violence. It is assumed within liberal thought that self?interest characterises relations between individuals in civil society, resulting in violence. In absolutist doctrines, such as Hobbes?, the pacification of private persons depended on the Sovereign's command of a monopoly of violence. Liberals, by contrast, sought to claim that the state itself must be pacified, its capacity for cruelty (e.g., torture) removed, its capacity for violence (e.g., war) reduced and (...)
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  12.  15
    Pandours, Partisans, and Petite Guerre: The Two Dimensions of Enlightenment Discourse on War.Bruce Buchan - 2013 - Intellectual History Review 23 (3):329-347.
    During the Enlightenment period a certain notion of war came to prominence in European thought. This notion, which I here refer to as ?civilized war?, centred on the idea that European war-making in the eighteenth century was characterised by humanity and honour. This image of European war-making was sustained by a variety of intellectuals and even some military practitioners who reflected not only on the practice of war in Europe in this period, but on the practice of war among supposedly (...)
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  13.  30
    Enlightened histories: civilization, war and the Scottish enlightenment.Bruce Buchan - 2005 - The European Legacy 10 (2):177-192.
    The concept of civil society continues to generate considerable interest, while the concept of civilization attracts comparatively little attention. This has led to a tendency to oversimplify the relationship between civil societies and militarily powerful sovereign states. Civil societies, it is often argued, are those societies that have emerged from a successful process of domestic pacification and effective control of state power. In this paper, it will be argued that some prominent Scottish Enlightenment thinkers developed theories of civilization grounded in (...)
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  14.  10
    Rooted cosmopolitanism.A. Ackerman Bruce - 1994 - In Peter Singer (ed.), Ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 104--3.
  15. [Book review] we the people. [REVIEW]Bruce A. Ackerman - 1994 - In Peter Singer (ed.), Ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 104--3.
     
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  16.  95
    What is neutral about neutrality?Bruce A. Ackerman - 1982 - Ethics 93 (2):372-390.
  17. Comment on Fried on Getting What we Don't Deserve: BRUCE A. ACKERMAN.Bruce A. Ackerman - 1983 - Social Philosophy and Policy 1 (1):60-70.
    I hope to persuade Charles Fried to think again about his developing views on distributive justice. Since I live at a certain remove from Cambridge, the best I can offer is a hypothetical dialogue with an imaginary person whose views seem, to me at least, of a Friedian inspiration. My central question deals with the way Fried establishes his rights to things he candidly concedes he does not deserve. To present my problems, I shall begin with a simpler case than (...)
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  18.  9
    Reconstructing American Law.Bruce A. Ackerman - 1984
  19.  18
    A foveal discriminability difference for one vs. four letters.Bruce A. Ambler, Raymond Keel & Elaine Phelps - 1978 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 11 (5):317-320.
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  20.  69
    The Ethics of Total Confinement: A Critique of Madness, Citizenship, and Social Justice.Bruce A. Arrigo, Heather Y. Bersot & Brian G. Sellers - 2011 - Oxford University Press. Edited by Heather Y. Bersot & Brian G. Sellers.
    In three parts, this volume in the AP-LS series explores the phenomena of captivity and risk management, guided and informed by the theory, method, and policy of psychological jurisprudence. The authors present a controversial thesis that demonstrates how the forces of captivity and risk management are sustained by several interdependent "conditions of control." These conditions impose barriers to justice and set limits on citizenship for one and all. Situated at the nexus of political/social theory, mental health law and jurisprudential ethics, (...)
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  21.  21
    Pre-crime, Post-criminology, and the Captivity of Ultramodern Desire.Bruce A. Arrigo, Brian Sellers & Jo Sostakas - 2020 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 33 (2):497-514.
    This article further elaborates on the “pre-crime society” thesis as developed and examined by Arrigo and Sellers. Specifically, the article focuses on the ultramodern era of digital inter-connectivity and argues that productive psychic desire is held clinically captive. Ultra-modernity is populated by cyber-forms of human relating and of economic exchange that nurture hyper-securitization. We discuss how the maintenance of hyper-securitization supports a pre-crime society, and how hyper-securitization’s object of desire consists of sign-optics. We argue that the co-constitutive forces of this (...)
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  22.  6
    Information reduction, internal transformations, and task difficulty.Bruce A. Ambler, Sebastiano A. Fisicaro & Robert W. Proctor - 1977 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 10 (6):463-466.
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  23.  42
    A cautionary note on the use of the Analysis of Covariance in classification designs with and without within-subject factors.Bruce A. Schneider, Meital Avivi-Reich & Mindaugas Mozuraitis - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  24. Rethinking the language of law, justice, and community: Postmodern feminist jurisprudence.Bruce A. Arrigo - 1995 - In David Stanley Caudill & Steven Jay Gold (eds.), Radical Philosophy of Law: Contemporary Challenges to Mainstream Legal Theory and Practice. Humanities Press. pp. 88--107.
     
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  25.  2
    Macaronic Poetry in the Carmina Burana.Bruce A. Beatie - 1967 - Vivarium 5 (1):16-24.
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  26.  21
    The Benefit of a Punitive God: The Story od Ananias and Sapphira.A. Jerry Bruce & Marsha J. Harman - 2017 - Philosophy Study 7 (1).
    In this narrative, we explore the story of Ananias and Sapphira from the book of Acts in the Christian scriptures. We examine the story in the light of a recent book by Dominic Johnson, God Is Watching You, and other related research. The idea of a punitive God and/or the belief in a punitive God may have significant effects on group functioning. The troubling story of Ananias and Sapphira may be seen as a central cog in the cooperative coming together (...)
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  27. Preparing for the future of artificial intelligence.J. P. Holdren, A. Bruce, E. Felten, T. Lyons & M. Garris - 2016 - Springer.
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  28.  23
    How Age and Linguistic Competence Affect Memory for Heard Information.Bruce A. Schneider, Meital Avivi-Reich, Caterina Leung & Antje Heinrich - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  29.  11
    Some Philosophical Principles for Social Work Research in advance.Bruce A. Thyer - forthcoming - International Journal of Applied Philosophy.
    As the applied field of social work attempts to become more of a sciencebased profession, it is relying more on the findings from empirical research studies. Within social work there is little discussion of the philosophy of science underlying conventional research inquiry. This paper introduces some major philosophical principles that undergird scientific investigations of the causes of societal and psychosocial problems and of the effectiveness of structured programs, policies and practices to ameliorate social ills. Among the principles introduced are the (...)
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  30.  53
    A solution to the tag-assignment problem for neural networks.Gary W. Strong & Bruce A. Whitehead - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (3):381-397.
    Purely parallel neural networks can model object recognition in brief displays – the same conditions under which illusory conjunctions have been demonstrated empirically. Correcting errors of illusory conjunction is the “tag-assignment” problem for a purely parallel processor: the problem of assigning a spatial tag to nonspatial features, feature combinations, and objects. This problem must be solved to model human object recognition over a longer time scale. Our model simulates both the parallel processes that may underlie illusory conjunctions and the serial (...)
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  31. Po? Pow? What! A Class Project to Study Linguistic Variation in English.Bruce A. Sofinski - 2008 - Inquiry (ERIC) 13 (1):65-73.
     
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  32.  6
    The dictionary of everyday theology and culture.Bruce A. Demarest & Keith J. Matthews (eds.) - 2010 - Colorado Springs, CO: NavPress.
    This resource puts theological concepts into everyday situations, showing the meaning of the terms and the importance of living out these doctrines in daily life.
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  33.  22
    Human Longevity: Nature vs. Nurture—Fact or Fiction.Bruce A. Carnes, S. Jay Olshansky, Leonid Gavrilov, Natalia Gavrilova & Douglas Grahn - 1998 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 42 (3):422-441.
  34.  20
    Age-Related Differences in Early Cortical Representations of Target Speech Masked by Either Steady-State Noise or Competing Speech.Bruce A. Schneider, Cristina Rabaglia, Meital Avivi-Reich, Dena Krieger, Stephen R. Arnott & Claude Alain - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Word in noise identification is facilitated by acoustic differences between target and competing sounds and temporal separation between the onset of the masker and that of the target. Younger and older adults are able to take advantage of onset delay when the masker is dissimilar to the target word, but only younger adults are able to do so when the masker is similar. We examined the neural underpinning of this age difference using cortical evoked responses to words masked by either (...)
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  35.  16
    Mimetic Euphemism and Mythology: Group Therapy, Scapegoating, and the Displacement of Disquiet.Bruce A. Stevens & Scott Cowdell - 2017 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 24:37-56.
    Mimetic theory draws support from diverse disciplines in the humanities and social sciences. But arguably Girard would have even more influence if his theory had stronger life data, and one field well positioned to provide such input is psychology. Girard distinguished his thinking from Freud, while critiquing the psychoanalytic tradition more generally, in Book III of Things Hidden since the Foundation of the World1—a work taking the form of an extended dialogue with two psychiatrists. One of these, Jean-Michel Oughourlian, has (...)
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  36.  3
    Mindscape: exploring the reality of thought forms.Bruce A. Vance - 1990 - Wheaton, Ill., U.S.A.: Theosophical Pub. House.
    Explore and unlock the power of the mind!
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  37. Epistemology: a behavior analytic perspective.Bruce A. Thyer - 2009 - Humana. Mente 11:45-63.
     
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  38.  70
    On the necessity of an archetypal concept in morphology: With special reference to the concepts of “structure” and “homology”. [REVIEW]Bruce A. Young - 1993 - Biology and Philosophy 8 (2):225-248.
    Morphological elements, or structures, are sorted into four categories depending on their level of anatomical isolation and the presence or absence of intrinsically identifying characteristics. These four categories are used to highlight the difficulties with the concept of structure and our ability to identify or define structures. The analysis is extended to the concept of homology through a discussion of the methodological and philosophical problems of the current concept of homology. It is argued that homology is fundamentally a similarity based (...)
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  39.  39
    St. Augustine and being: A metaphysical essay.Bruce A. Garside - 1968 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 6 (1):79-80.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Book Reviews St. Auc~stine and Being: A Me$aphyM,cal Essay. By James F. Anderson. (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1965.Pp. viii [i] + 76. Guilders 9.90.) Contemporary students of medieval philosophy, especially those influenced by the writings of Gilson, usually view Augustine as primarily an essentialist in metaphysics, while Aquinas is viewed as some sort of existentialist. This is taken to mean that, whereas Augustine seems to identify being with essence (...)
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  40.  25
    Frames of reference interact and are task-dependent.Bruce A. Kay - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (4):765-765.
    The problem for the CNS in any particular movement task is to coordinate the various frames of reference appropriate to the task. Control variables are determined by this coordination. The coordination problem varies greatly from task to task, and so no single set of control variables is likely to account for a broad range of movement tasks.
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  41.  36
    Aquinas on being and essence: A translation and interpretation.Bruce A. Garside - 1969 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 7 (2):208-210.
  42.  12
    To Love the Strife.Bruce A. Johnson - 1994 - Renascence 46 (2):105-116.
  43.  27
    To Love the Strife.Bruce A. Johnson - 1994 - Renascence 46 (2):105-116.
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  44.  9
    To Love the Strife.Bruce A. Johnson - 1994 - Renascence 46 (2):105-116.
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  45. The philosophical legacy of behaviorism.Bruce A. Thyer (ed.) - 1999 - Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    The Philosophical Legacy of Behaviorism is the first book to describe the unique contributions of a behavioral perspective to the major issues of philosophy. Leading behavioral philosophers and psychologists have contributed chapters on: the origins of behaviorism as a philosophy of science; the basic principles of behaviorism; ontology; epistemology; values and ethics; free will, determinism and self-control; and language and verbal behavior. A concluding chapter provides an overview of some scholarly criticisms of behavioral philosophy. Far from espousing a `black box' (...)
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  46.  51
    Social Justice in the Liberal State.Donald H. Regan & Bruce A. Ackerman - 1983 - Philosophical Review 92 (4):604.
  47.  20
    On various methods of reporting variance.Bruce A. Thyer - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (2):222-223.
    Chow's defense of NHSTP is masterful. His dismissal of including effect sizes (ES) is misplaced, and his failure to discuss the additional practice of reporting proportions of variance explained (PVE) is an important omission. Reporting the results of inferential statistics will be greatly enhanced by including ES and PVE when results are first determined to be statistically significant.
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  48.  8
    Philosophy of education.Bruce A. Garside - 1966 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 4 (3):278-279.
  49.  26
    Glycoconjugate expression during embryogenesis and its biological significance.Bruce A. Fenderson, E. M. Eddy & Sen-Itiroh Hakomori - 1990 - Bioessays 12 (4):173-179.
    Many stage‐specific embryonic antigens (SSEAs) have been identified as glycoconjugates. These molecules may play diverse roles in the development of the embryo, including regulation of cell growth, recognition, and differentiation. The example of SSEA‐1 is described in detail. This molecule appears to play an essential role in compaction of the early mouse embryo, and may illustrate the general importance of carbohydrate‐carbohydrate interactions in controlling cell surface interactions in development.
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  50.  7
    The Liberal Arts Tradition: A Documentary History.Bruce A. Kimball - 2010 - Upa.
    Based upon the author's twenty-five years of experience leading seminars concerning the history of liberal education, this collection presents a uniquely comprehensive and salient set of documents, ranging from Plato to Martha Nussbaum, while incorporating the neglected portrayal and discussion of women within the history of the liberal arts.
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