Results for 'Clyde Charles Holler'

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  1.  9
    The ‘Moment of 1976’ Revisited.Clyde Chitty - 1998 - British Journal of Educational Studies 46 (3):318-323.
    This paper, which is a response to a previous one by Charles Batteson published in the Journal, challenges the view that James Callaghan's personal intervention in the politics of education in 1976 in making the Ruskin Speech was pivotal in shaping the subsequent direction of Labour's policies for school reform. The paper also queries the idea that the Ruskin Speech was the immediate harbinger of New Right education policies. Instead, it is suggested, the historical record points up that such (...)
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  2.  27
    The 'Moment of 1976' Revisited.Clyde Chitty - 1998 - British Journal of Educational Studies 46 (3):318 - 323.
    This paper, which is a response to a previous one by Charles Batteson (1997) published in the Journal, challenges the view that James Callaghan's personal intervention in the politics of education in 1976 in making the Ruskin Speech was pivotal in shaping the subsequent direction of Labour's policies for school reform. The paper also queries the idea that the Ruskin Speech was the immediate harbinger of New Right education policies. Instead, it is suggested, the historical record points up that (...)
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  3.  30
    "Betagraphic": An Alternative Formulation of Predicate Calculus: Interdisciplinary Seminar on Peirce.Thomas McLaughlin, Elize Bisanz, Scott R. Cunningham & Clyde Hendrick - 2015 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 51 (2):137-172.
    There are at least a few plausible grounds for our use of the term Beta in our title, notwithstanding that there is a key departure, in our framework, from classical Beta Existential Graphs. The situation, in brief, is as follows.The reader accustomed to Peirce’s graphical development of quantificational logic may, if desired, continue to think of formulas being written on a “sheet of assertion.” We retain the “cut” notation for negation and continue to represent conjunction simply by juxtaposition of diagrams. (...)
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  4.  7
    Nicholas of Cusa and his age: intellect and spirituality: essays dedicated to the memory of F. Edward Cranz, Thomas P. McTighe, and Charles Trinkaus.Thomas M. Izbicki & Christopher M. Bellitto (eds.) - 2002 - Boston, MA: Brill.
    This volume commemorates the 6th centennial of the birth of Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464), a Renaissance polymath whose interests included law, politics, metaphysics, epistemology, theology, mysticism and relations between Christians and non-Christian peoples. The contributors to this volume reflect Cusanus' multiple interests; and, by doing so they commemorate three deceased luminaries of the American Cusanus Society: F. Edward Cranz, Thomas P. McTighe and Charles Trinkaus. Contributors include: Christopher M. Bellitto, H. Lawrence Bond, Elizabeth Brient, Louis Dupré, Wilhelm Dupré, Walter (...)
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  5.  60
    A Companion to African-American Philosophy.Tommy Lee Lott & John P. Pittman (eds.) - 2003 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    Part I Philosophic Traditions Introduction to Part I 3 1 Philosophy and the Afro-American Experience 7 CORNEL WEST 2 African-American Existential Philosophy 33 LEWIS R. GORDON 3 African-American Philosophy: A Caribbean Perspective 48 PAGET HENRY 4 Modernisms in Black 67 FRANK M. KIRKLAND 5 The Crisis of the Black Intellectual 87 HORTENSE J. SPILLERS Part II The Moral and Political Legacy of Slavery Introduction to Part II 107 6 Kant and Knowledge of Disappearing Expression 110 RONALD A. T. JUDY 7 (...)
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  6. "But What Are You Really?": The Metaphysics of Race.Charles W. Mills - 1998 - In Blackness Visible: Essays on Philosophy and Race. Cornell University Press. pp. 41-66.
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  7. Ethics and Language.Charles L. Stevenson - 1945 - Ethics 55 (3):209-215.
     
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  8. Ethics and Language.Charles L. Stevenson - 1946 - Philosophy of Science 13 (1):80-80.
     
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  9. “Ideal Theory” as Ideology.Charles W. Mills - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (3):165-184.
  10. Ethics and Language.Charles L. Stevenson - 1946 - Science and Society 10 (4):434-437.
     
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  11. “Ideal Theory” as Ideology.Charles W. Mills - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (3):165-184.
  12.  98
    Commissurotomy, Consciousness, and Unity of Mind.Charles E. Marks - 1980 - Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
    An examination of split-brain syndrome, and whether split-brain patients have two minds.
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  13.  35
    Descriptive behaviorism versus cognitive theory in verbal operant conditioning.Charles D. Spielberger & L. Douglas DeNike - 1966 - Psychological Review 73 (4):306-326.
  14.  34
    The Language of Thought.Charles E. Marks - 1978 - Philosophical Review 87 (1):108.
  15.  38
    Malebranche and British philosophy.Charles James McCracken - 1983 - New York: Oxford University Press.
  16. Kant and Race, Redux.Charles W. Mills - 2014 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 35 (1-2):125-157.
  17. Complete chemical synthesis, assembly, and cloning of a mycoplasma genitalium genome.Daniel Gibson, Benders G., A. Gwynedd, Cynthia Andrews-Pfannkoch, Evgeniya Denisova, Baden-Tillson A., Zaveri Holly, Stockwell Jayshree, B. Timothy, Anushka Brownley, David Thomas, Algire W., A. Mikkel, Chuck Merryman, Lei Young, Vladimir Noskov, Glass N., I. John, J. Craig Venter, Clyde Hutchison, Smith A. & O. Hamilton - 2008 - Science 319 (5867):1215--1220.
    We have synthesized a 582,970-base pair Mycoplasma genitalium genome. This synthetic genome, named M. genitalium JCVI-1.0, contains all the genes of wild-type M. genitalium G37 except MG408, which was disrupted by an antibiotic marker to block pathogenicity and to allow for selection. To identify the genome as synthetic, we inserted "watermarks" at intergenic sites known to tolerate transposon insertions. Overlapping "cassettes" of 5 to 7 kilobases (kb), assembled from chemically synthesized oligonucleotides, were joined by in vitro recombination to produce intermediate (...)
     
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  18. Kant's untermenschen.Charles Mills - 2005 - In Andrew Valls (ed.), Race and Racism in Modern Philosophy. Cornell University Press. pp. 169--93.
  19. Alternative Epistemologies.Charles W. Mills - 1988 - Social Theory and Practice 14 (3):237-263.
  20.  36
    From Class to Race: Essays in White Marxism and Black Radicalism.Charles Wade Mills - 2003 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Mills argues for a new critical theory that develops the insights of the black radical political tradition. While challenging conventional interpretations of key Marxist concepts and claims, the author contends that Marxism has been 'white' insofar as it has failed to recognize the centrality of race and white supremacy to the making of the modern world.
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  21.  18
    Realizability and recursive set theory.Charles McCarty - 1986 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 32:153-183.
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  22.  37
    Protecting Communities in Biomedical Research.Charles Weijer & E. J. Emanuel - unknown
    Although for the last 50 years, ethicists dealing with human experimentation have focused primarily on the need to protect individual research subjects and vulnerable groups, biomedical research, especially in genetics, now requires the establishment of standards for the protection of communities. We have developed such a strategy, based on five steps. (i) Identification of community characteristics relevant to the biomedical research setting, (ii) delineation of a typology of different types of communities using these characteristics, (iii) determination of the range of (...)
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  23. Occupy Liberalism!Charles W. Mills - 2012 - Radical Philosophy Review 15 (2):305-323.
    The “Occupy Wall Street!” movement has stimulated a long listing of other candidates for radical “occupation.” In this paper, I suggest the occupation of liberalism itself. I argue for a constructive engagement of radicals with liberalism in order to retrieve it for a radical egalitarian agenda. My premise is that the foundational values of liberalism have a radical potential that has not historically been realized, given the way the dominant varieties of liberalism have developed. Ten reasons standardly given as to (...)
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  24.  67
    Conflicting Varieties of Realism: Causal Powers and the Problems of Social Structure.Charles R. Varela & Rom Harré - 1996 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 26 (3):313-325.
    Proponents of the view that social structures are ontologically distinct from the people in whose actions they are immanent have assumed that structures can stand in causal relations to individual practices. Were causality to be no more than Humean concomitance correlations between structure and practices would be unproblematic. But two prominent advocates of the ontological account of structures, Bhaskar and Giddens, have also espoused a powers theory of causality. According to that theory causation is brought about by the activity of (...)
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  25.  86
    Protecting Communities in Research: Philosophical and Pragmatic Challenges.Charles Weijer - 1999 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 8 (4):501-513.
    The issue of the protection of communities in clinical research first arose 10 years ago in studies conducted in technologically developing countries by scientists from technologically developed nations. The question was, which ethical standards ought to apply, those of the Western investigators or local standards?
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  26.  79
    2.Alternative Epistemologies.Charles W. Mills - 1998 - In Blackness Visible: Essays on Philosophy and Race. Cornell University Press. pp. 21-40.
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  27.  60
    Theory of Action.Charles Marks & Lawrence H. Davis - 1980 - Philosophical Review 89 (4):634.
  28. Critical Philosophy of Race.Charles W. Mills - 2016 - In Herman Cappelen, Tamar Gendler & John Hawthorne (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophical Methodology. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    This article tries to provide a genealogy for, and a characterization of, “critical philosophy of race,” which has only recently begun to gain formal recognition as a subject within the discipline. After discussing the contested periodization of race and racism, the author turns to the related question of whether they have affected the history of Western philosophy from the classical epoch to modernity. Then he reviews contemporary scholarship in critical philosophy of race, looking at standard divisions of the field: metaphysics (...)
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  29.  45
    Further Reflections on Heidegger, Technology, and the Everyday.Charles Spinosa & Hubert L. Dreyfus - 2003 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 23 (5):339-349.
    This article traces the trajectory of Heidegger’s thinking about technology over the course of what is considered to be his early, middle, and late periods. Over the course of the years, Heidegger’s concerns moved from somewhat conventional concerns over the consumerism technology entails, and the damage it causes to the environment, to the more complex position that technicity distorts human nature with an accompanying loss of meaning. The real danger, he said, is not the destruction of nature or culture, nor (...)
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  30.  73
    Completeness and incompleteness for intuitionistic logic.Charles Mccarty - 2008 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 73 (4):1315-1327.
    We call a logic regular for a semantics when the satisfaction predicate for at least one of its nontheorems is closed under double negation. Such intuitionistic theories as second-order Heyting arithmetic HAS and the intuitionistic set theory IZF prove completeness for no regular logics, no matter how simple or complicated. Any extensions of those theories proving completeness for regular logics are classical, i.e., they derive the tertium non datur. When an intuitionistic metatheory features anticlassical principles or recognizes that a logic (...)
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  31.  30
    Two Kinds of Antiessentialism and Their Consequences.Charles Spinosa & Hubert L. Dreyfus - 1996 - Critical Inquiry 22 (4):735-763.
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  32.  34
    Place and the "Spatial Turn" in Geography and in History.Charles W. J. Withers - 2009 - Journal of the History of Ideas 70 (4):637-658.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Place and the "Spatial Turn" in Geography and in HistoryCharles W. J. WithersI. IntroductionA few years ago, British Telecom ran a newspaper advertisement in the British press about the benefits—and consequences—of advances in communications technology. Featuring a remote settlement in the north-west Highlands of Scotland, and with the clear implication that such "out-of-the-way places" were now connected to the wider world (as if they had not been before), the (...)
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  33.  37
    7.White Right: The Idea of a Herrenvolk Ethics.Charles W. Mills - 1998 - In Blackness Visible: Essays on Philosophy and Race. Cornell University Press. pp. 139-166.
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  34.  34
    The Use and Misuse of Uneven and Combined Development: A Critique of Anievas and Nişancıoğlu.Charles Post - 2018 - Historical Materialism 26 (3):79-98.
    Aneivas and Nişancıoğlu’s provocative book,How the West Came to Rule, attempts to provide an alternative account of the origins of capitalism to both ‘Political Marxism’ and ‘World-Systems Theory’. By making uneven and combined development a universal dynamic of human history and by utilising a flawed concept of ‘Eurocentrism’, however, they introduce a high degree of causal pluralism into their analysis. Despite important insights into the specific dynamics of different pre-capitalist forms of social labour, their account of the origins of capitalism (...)
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  35.  8
    An extension of Hull-Spence discrimination learning theory.Charles C. Spiker - 1970 - Psychological Review 77 (6):496-515.
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  36. 1.Non-Cartesian Sums: Philosophy and the African-American Experience.Charles W. Mills - 1998 - In Blackness Visible: Essays on Philosophy and Race. Cornell University Press. pp. 1-20.
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  37.  2
    Of an Alien Homecoming: Reading Heidegger's "Hölderlin".Charles Bambach - 2022 - SUNY Press.
    Few themes resonate as powerfully in Heidegger as those connected to homecoming, homeland, and Heimat. This emphasis plays out most powerfully in Heidegger's reading of Hölderlin and his turn towards language, art, and poetizing as a way of thinking through the poet's relevance in the epoch of homelessness and the abandonment of the gods. As the first book-length study in English of the Heidegger-Hölderlin relation, Of an Alien Homecoming addresses the tension within Heidegger's work between his disastrous political commitments during (...)
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  38.  20
    Δ20-categoricity in Boolean algebras and linear orderings.Charles F. D. McCoy - 2003 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 119 (1-3):85-120.
    We characterize Δ20-categoricity in Boolean algebras and linear orderings under some extra effectiveness conditions. We begin with a study of the relativized notion in these structures.
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  39. The structure of random utility models.Charles F. Manski - 1977 - Theory and Decision 8 (3):229-254.
  40.  24
    Getting Even: Revenge as a Form of Justice.Charles K. B. Barton - 1999 - Open Court Publishing.
    "In Getting Even, Charles Barton contends that revenge can be a form of justice that is constructive and healing for our society. Our current judiciary system, he explains, denies both victims and the accused an active role in the legal proceedings and resolution of their cases, reducing them to bystanders in what is essentially their own conflict. Barton does not argue for an individual's right to take the law into his own hands, but does show that the courts should (...)
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  41.  16
    Digital Commensality: Eating and Drinking in the Company of Technology.Charles Spence, Maurizio Mancini & Gijs Huisman - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  42.  60
    Understanding religious ethics.Charles Mathewes - 2010 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    God and morality -- Jewish ethics -- Christian ethics -- Islamic ethics -- Friendship -- Sexuality -- Marriage and family -- Lying -- Forgiveness -- Love and justice -- Duty, law, conscience -- Capital punishment -- War (I) : towards war -- War (II) : in war -- Religion and the environment -- Pursuits of happiness : labor, leisure, and life -- Good and evil.
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  43. Non-Cartesian Sums.Charles W. Mills - 1994 - Teaching Philosophy 17 (3):223-243.
  44.  27
    Preface.Charles W. Mills - 1998 - In Blackness Visible: Essays on Philosophy and Race. Cornell University Press.
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  45.  37
    The Land Ethic, Moral Development, and Ecological Rationality.Charles Starkey - 2007 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 45 (1):149-175.
    There has been significant debate over both the imiplications and the merit of Leopold's land ethic. I consider the two most prominent objections and a resolution to them. One of these objections is that, far from being an alternative to an “economic” or cost‐benefit perspective on environmental issues, Leopold's land ethic merely broadens the range of economic considerations to be used in addressing such issues. The other objection is that the land ethic is a form of “environmental fascism” because it (...)
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  46.  8
    Thinking Clearly about Research Risk: Implications of the Work of Benjamin Freedman.Charles Weijer - 1999 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 21 (6):1.
  47. Evil and the Augustinian tradition.Charles T. Mathewes - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Recent scholarship has focused attention on the difficulties that evil, suffering, and tragic conflict present to religious belief and moral life. Thinkers have drawn upon many important historical figures, with one significant exception - Augustine. At the same time, there has been a renaissance of work on Augustine, but little discussion of either his work on evil or his influence on contemporary thought. This book fills these gaps. It explores the 'family biography' of the Augustinian tradition by looking at Augustine's (...)
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  48. The growth of political thought in the West.Charles Howard McIlwain - 1932 - New York,: Cooper Square Publishers.
  49.  18
    Berkeley's Principles and Dialogues: background source materials.Charles J. McCracken & I. C. Tipton (eds.) - 2000 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This volume sets Berkeley's philosophy in its historical context by providing selections from: firstly, works that deeply influenced Berkeley as he formed his main doctrines; secondly, works that illuminate the philosophical climate in which those doctrines were formed; and thirdly, works that display Berkeley's subsequent philosophical influence. The first category is represented by selections from Descartes, Malebranche, Bayle, and Locke; the second category includes extracts from such thinkers as Regius, Lanion, Arnauld, Lee, and Norris; while reactions to Berkeley, both positive (...)
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  50. Actualist rationality.Charles F. Manski - 2011 - Theory and Decision 71 (2):195-210.
    This article concerns the prescriptive function of decision analysis. Consider an agent who must choose an action yielding welfare that varies with an unknown state of nature. It is often asserted that such an agent should adhere to consistency axioms which imply that behavior can be represented as maximization of expected utility. However, our agent is not concerned the consistency of his behavior across hypothetical choice sets. He only wants to make a reasonable choice from the choice set that he (...)
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