Results for 'Colton Leavitt'

162 found
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  1.  10
    Leveraging Community Context, Data, and Resources to Inform Suicide Prevention Strategies.Leslie M. Barnard, Talia L. Spark, Colton Leavitt, Jacob Leary, Lee J. Lehmkuhl, Nicole Johnston & Erik A. Wallace - 2023 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 51 (1):83-92.
    Colorado has consistently had one of the highest rates of suicide in the United States, and El Paso County has the highest number of suicide and firearm-related suicide deaths within the state. Community-based solutions like those of the Suicide Prevention Collaborative of El Paso County may be more effective in preventing suicide as they are specific to local issues, sensitive to local culture, and informed by local data, community members, and stakeholders.
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  2.  34
    To Have a Need.Russ Colton - 2023 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 10.
    Philosophers often identify needing something with requiring it to avoid harm. This view of need is roughly accurate, but no adequate analysis of the relevant sort of requirement has been given, and the relevant notion of harm has not been clarified. Further, the harm-avoidance picture must be broadened, because we also need what is required to reduce danger. I offer two analyses of need (one probabilistic) to address these shortcomings. The analyses are at a high level of generality and accommodate (...)
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  3.  18
    Memory Deletion Threatens Authenticity by Destabilizing Values.Colton G. W. Hayse & Adina L. Roskies - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 12 (1):52-54.
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  4.  15
    The Death of Adam: Evolution and its Impact on Western Thought.John Colton Greene - 1959 - Ames,: Iowa State University Press.
  5.  10
    Editor’s Introduction.Randall G. Colton - 2018 - Quaestiones Disputatae 9 (1):3-8.
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  6.  28
    Informal medicine: ethical analysis.F. J. Leavitt - 2005 - Journal of Medical Ethics 31 (12):689-692.
    Context: Doctors have been known to treat or give consultation to patients informally, with none of the usual record keeping or follow up. They may wish to know whether this practice is ethical.Objective: To determine whether this practice meets criteria of medical ethics.Design: Informal medicine is analysed according to standard ethical principles: autonomy, beneficence and non-maleficence, distributive and procedural justice, and caring.Setting: Hospital, medical school, and other settings where patients may turn to physicians for informal help.Conclusion: No generalisation can be (...)
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  7.  92
    A volunteer to be killed for his organs.F. J. Leavitt - 2003 - Journal of Medical Ethics 29 (3):175-175.
    Most of the audience were students and physicians. But this man looked more like a patient. The panel discussion, part of a third year round, Brain Death and Organ Transplantation, was open to the public.I’d been arguing, on the basis of well known data,1–4 that “brain death” is not death. So, taking a heart from a “brain dead” patient is killing. But I would not totally oppose killing patients for their organs, provided that there is informed consent, and with further (...)
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  8.  27
    Inalienable Rights.Frank J. Leavitt - 1992 - Philosophy 67 (259):115 - 118.
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  9. The endymion myth and poussin's detroit painting.Judith Colton - 1967 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 30 (1):426-431.
  10.  15
    Aquinas and Poinsot (John of St. Thomas) on Instruments, Signs, and Teaching.Randall G. Colton - 2019 - New Blackfriars 100 (1087):320-334.
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  11.  19
    A Thomistic Defense of the Distinction Between the Moral and Intellectual Virtues.Randall Colton - 2016 - International Philosophical Quarterly 56 (4):393-410.
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  12.  30
    Modeling Leadership in Tolkien’s Fiction: Craft and Wisdom, Gift and Task.Randall G. Colton - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 163 (3):401-415.
    This article contributes to conversations about the “Hitler problem” in leadership ethics and the use of literary narratives in leadership studies by proposing Tolkien’s fiction as a model of leadership. Resonating with Aristotelian and Thomistic themes, these narratives present leadership as more a matter of practical wisdom than of morally neutral craft, or, more precisely, they model leadership as a matter of using craft for the sake of wisdom’s ends. Those ends become intelligible in terms of a triadic account of (...)
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  13.  22
    St. Thomas, Teaching, and the Intellectual Virtue of Art.Randall G. Colton - 2019 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 93 (1):101-127.
    Applying Thomas Aquinas’s account of the intellectual virtue of art to teaching yields valuable results both for those who wish to understand teaching better and those looking for models of the approach to virtue epistemology Roberts and Wood call “regulative.” To vindicate that claim, this article proceeds in four steps: First, I introduce Thomas’s taxonomy of the intellectual virtues in light of a pair of distinctions between practical and speculative knowledge and between immanent and transient operations. In the second section, (...)
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  14.  18
    St. Thomas, Teaching, and the Intellectual Virtue of Art.Randall G. Colton - 2019 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 93 (1):101-127.
    Applying Thomas Aquinas’s account of the intellectual virtue of art to teaching yields valuable results both for those who wish to understand teaching better and those looking for models of the approach to virtue epistemology Roberts and Wood call “regulative.” To vindicate that claim, this article proceeds in four steps: First, I introduce Thomas’s taxonomy of the intellectual virtues in light of a pair of distinctions between practical and speculative knowledge and between immanent and transient operations. In the second section, (...)
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  15.  73
    Bridging the gap between argumentation theory and the philosophy of mathematics.Alison Pease, Alan Smaill, Simon Colton & John Lee - 2009 - Foundations of Science 14 (1-2):111-135.
    We argue that there are mutually beneficial connections to be made between ideas in argumentation theory and the philosophy of mathematics, and that these connections can be suggested via the process of producing computational models of theories in these domains. We discuss Lakatos’s work (Proofs and Refutations, 1976) in which he championed the informal nature of mathematics, and our computational representation of his theory. In particular, we outline our representation of Cauchy’s proof of Euler’s conjecture, in which we use work (...)
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  16.  25
    Memory impairment in the aged: Storage versus retrieval deficit.David A. Drachman & Janet Leavitt - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 93 (2):302.
  17.  21
    Clerihew.Nick Colton - 1992 - Philosophy Now 3:19-19.
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  18.  68
    Pursuing Wisdom.Randall G. Colton - 2015 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 18 (4):32-58.
    In works of impressive erudition based in ancient philosophy, Pierre Hadot and John Cooper have recently reasserted a familiar complaint about the Scholastic philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas and his neo-Thomist heirs. Scholasticism, they complain, diminished philosophy by rejecting its claim to be a holistic way of life, requiring the transformation of the whole person, and reconceiving it as an exercise in merely conceptual and logical maneuvering, requiring nothing more from the philosopher but the ability to compute logical relations. I (...)
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  19.  8
    Repetition and the fullness of time: gift, task, and narrative in Kierkegaard's upbuilding ethics.Randall G. Colton - 2013 - Macon Georgia: Mercer University Press.
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  20. Two Rival Versions of Sexual Virtue: Simon Blackburn and John Paul II on Lust and Chastity.Randall Colton - 2006 - The Thomist 70:71-101.
     
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  21.  18
    Letter identification in word, nonword, and single-letter displays.James F. Juola, David D. Leavitt & Chong S. Choe - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (4):278-280.
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  22. Wittgensteinian Philosophy, Anthropology and the Ethics of Psychiatry.Hadas Gabizon-David & Frank Leavitt - 2005 - Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 15 (1):2-5.
     
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  23.  18
    Coping with Bereavement: Long‐Term Perspectives on Grief and Mourning.Karen J. Brison & Stephen C. Leavitt - 1995 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 23 (4):395-400.
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  24.  28
    The Spirit’s Alchemicana.Richard Colton Lyon - 2012 - Overheard in Seville 30 (30):19-31.
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  25.  12
    The Spirit’s Alchemicana.Richard Colton Lyon - 2012 - Overheard in Seville 30 (30):19-31.
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  26.  48
    Good Without Knowing it: Subtle Contextual Cues can Activate Moral Identity and Reshape Moral Intuition.Keith Leavitt, Lei Zhu & Karl Aquino - 2016 - Journal of Business Ethics 137 (4):785-800.
    The role of moral intuition has been increasingly implicated in business decisions and ethical business behavior. But troublingly, because implicit processes often operate outside of conscious awareness, decision makers are generally unaware of their influence. We tested whether subtle contextual cues for identity can alter implicit beliefs. In two studies, we found that contextual cues which nonconsciously prime moral identity weaken the implicit association between the categories of “business” and “ethical,” an implicit association which has previously been linked to unethical (...)
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  27.  33
    Popitz’s Imaginative Variation on Power as Model for Critical Phenomenology.J. Leavitt Pearl - 2018 - Human Studies 41 (3):475-483.
    Heinrich Popitz’s Phenomena of Power aims to uncover power as “a universal component in the genesis and operation of human societies”. In order to uncover this “universal” concept of power, Popitz employs Husserl’s method of the “imaginative variation” [Phantasievariation]. Yet, contrary to phenomenology’s traditionally descriptive posture, Phenomena of Power’s project is at once descriptive and normative—seeking not only to describe power, but to also describe the way in which power can be remade. In the present paper it is argued that (...)
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  28.  18
    After Finitude and the Question of Phenomenological Givenness.J. Leavitt Pearl - 2018 - PhaenEx 12 (2):13-36.
    Quentin Meillassoux’s 2006 After Finitude offered a sharp critique of the phenomenological project, charging that phenomenology was one of the “two principal media” of correlationism—ultimately reducible to an “extreme idealism.” Meillassoux grounds this accusation in an account of givenness that presupposes that “every variety of givenness” finds its genesis within the positing of the subject. However, this critique fails to hit its mark precisely because it presupposes an account of intuitive givenness that is entirely foreign to the phenomenological project. Quite (...)
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  29. Commentary by Frank J. Leavitt, Ph.D.Frank Leavitt - 1998 - Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 8 (4):108-108.
     
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  30.  14
    An Unpublished Remark of Russell's on "If... Then".Frank J. Leavitt - 2014 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 6:10.
  31.  22
    À Denys: Tracing Jean-Luc Marion’s Dionysian Hermeneutics.J. Leavitt Pearl - 2020 - Studia Phaenomenologica 20:307-338.
    Since his 1977 The Idol and Distance, Jean-Luc Marion has almost continually drawn upon the work of the 5th-6th century Christian mystic Pseudo-Denys the Areopagite, not only within his explicitly theological considerations, but throughout his Cartesian and phenomenological work as well. The present essay maps out the influence of Denys upon Marion’s thinking, organizing Marion’s career into a three-part periodization, each of which corresponds to a distinct portion of the Dionysian corpus—in Marion’s work of the seventies the Celestial Hierarchy and (...)
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  32.  13
    I Can’t: Acute Sexual Impotence and the Flesh.J. Leavitt Pearl - 2023 - Schutzian Research 14:71-90.
    Since Husserl’s phenomenological analyses of the living body (Leib) in Ideas II, the subjective experience of the body, what later French thinkers will name the flesh, has been particularly marked by its capacity for action—its potency. This privileging of the acting flesh, the potent organ, is echoed throughout the subsequent phenomenological tradition. For this tradition, from de Biran and Husserl, to Merleau‑Ponty and Henry, the flesh is distinguished from the mere body (Körper) by its unique capacity to act. For the (...)
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  33.  10
    Thomas J. J. Altizer.J. Leavitt Pearl & Christopher D. Rodkey - 2018 - In Christopher D. Rodkey & Jordan E. Miller (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Radical Theology. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 55-81.
    Thomas J.J. Altizer is one of the most important theologians of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, and all radical theology must pass through and be conversant with his work and the historical significance of his earlier contributions. This chapter presents Altizer’s essential ideas in a straightforward and accessible manner and provides a guide for the beginning reader.
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  34. The Bioethicist Of The Future: Commentary On Pollard And Gilbert, And Melanie Rock.Frank Leavitt - 1997 - Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 7 (5):133-134.
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  35. Modelling serendipity in a computational context.Joseph Corneli, Alison Pease, Simon Colton, Anna Jordanous & Christian Guckelsberger - unknown
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  36.  8
    Beyond Self-Report: Emerging Methods for Capturing Individual Differences in Decision-Making Process.Brenda L. Connors, Richard Rende & Timothy J. Colton - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  37.  44
    Is Any Medical Research Population Not Vulnerable?Frank J. Leavitt - 2006 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 15 (1):81-88.
    “Dissecting Bioethics,” edited by Tuija Takala and Matti Häyry, welcomes contributions on the conceptual and theoretical dimensions of bioethics.The section is dedicated to the idea that words defined by bioethicists and others should not be allowed to imprison people's actual concerns, emotions, and thoughts. Papers that expose the many meanings of a concept, describe the different readings of a moral doctrine, or provide an alternative angle to seemingly self-evident issues are therefore particularly appreciated.The themes covered in the section so far (...)
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  38.  24
    Educating Nurses for Their Future Role in Bioethics.Frank J. Leavitt - 1996 - Nursing Ethics 3 (1):39-52.
    The emerging new multidisciplinary and crosscultural field of bioethics will require sen sitive, open-minded professionals to take the lead in hospital ethics, in genetic coun selling, and in the teaching of bioethics to students in nursing, medicine and the basic sciences. Nurses with ward experience who return to university to gain an MA or PhD in bioethics are eminently suited for this leadership role, for they may be more likely than physicians to study for a liberal education to supplement their (...)
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  39.  72
    Let's keep metaphysics out of medical ethics: a critique of Poplawski and Gillett.F. J. Leavitt - 1992 - Journal of Medical Ethics 18 (4):206-209.
    I argue that the concept of 'longitudinal form', which Poplawski and Gillett have introduced into ethical discussions about embryos and gametes, involves too many metaphysical subtleties to be a useful aid to making moral decisions. I conclude by suggesting a criterion for relevance in medical ethics.
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  40.  42
    "Typhoid Mary" Strikes Back Bacteriological Theory and Practice in Early Twentieth-Century Public Health.Judith Leavitt - 1992 - Isis 83 (4):608-629.
  41.  28
    Special Supplement: Biomedical Ethics and the Shadow of Nazism.Daniel Callahan, Arthur Caplan, Harold Edgar, Laurence McCullough, Tabitha M. Powledge, Margaret Steinfels, Peter Steinfels, Robert M. Veatch, Joseph Walsh, Joel Colton, Lucy S. Dawidowicz, Milton Himmelfarb & Telford Taylor - 1976 - Hastings Center Report 6 (4):1.
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  42.  13
    Seeking Gifts from the Dead: Long‐Term Mourning in a Bumbita Arapesh Cargo Narrative.Stephen C. Leavitt - 1995 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 23 (4):453-473.
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  43.  6
    Dancing with absurdity: your most cherished beliefs (and all your others) are probably wrong.Fred Leavitt - 2015 - New York: Peter Lang.
    "Dancing with Absurdity" explores the limitations of knowledge and argues that neither reasoning nor direct observation can be trusted. Not only are they unreliable sources, they do not even justify assigning probabilities to claims about what we can know. This position, called radical skepticism, has intrigued philosophers since before the birth of Christ, yet nobody has been able to refute it. Fred Leavitt uses two unique methods of presentation. First, he supports abstract arguments with summaries of real-life examples from (...)
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  44.  88
    Hume Against Spinoza and Aristotle.Frank J. Leavitt - 1991 - Hume Studies 17 (2):203-208.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Hume Against Spinoza and Aristotle1 Frank J. Leavitt It is always good to try to make peace, to try to resolve differences between whatsomebelieveare conflictingpoints ofview. Nevertheless, sometimes the points ofview which are believed to be opposed to each other really do oppose one another and so the most ingenious attempts at reconciliation turn out to have been ill-conceived. Wim Klever has brought considerable scholarship to bear in (...)
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  45.  24
    Accuracy of report and central readiness.Frank Leavitt - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 81 (3):542.
  46. Are Philosophers Immune From Ethics?Frank Leavitt - 1996 - Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 6 (2):29-30.
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  47.  54
    A solution to an ethical paradox.Frank J. Leavitt - 1972 - Mind 81 (324):587-589.
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  48. As the Dream starts to become reality: More on the Senpo Sugihara Asian Bioethics Centre.Frank Leavitt - 1995 - Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 5 (4):86-87.
     
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  49.  19
    An Unpublished Remark of Russell's on "If... Then".Frank J. Leavitt - 1986 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 6:10.
  50. Are We Reaching the Bottom of the Slippery Slope? Commentary on Asai, Hughes and the Feron Case.Frank Leavitt - 1996 - Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 6 (4):101-103.
     
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