Results for 'Dan Burnstone'

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  1.  25
    Moral synonymy: John Stuart mill and the ethics of style.Dan Burnstone - 1997 - Philosophy and Literature 21 (1):46-60.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Moral Synonymy: John Stuart Mill and the Ethics of StyleDan BurnstoneI“A common language in which values may be expressed”: this is a phrase John Stuart Mill might well have used to describe utility—the common denominator of different ethical values in utilitarian moral reckoning. In fact, this is Mill’s phrase describing money as a circulating medium. 1 In utilitarianism, utility is the ubiquitous form of moral currency; like money in (...)
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  2.  58
    Community: The Neglected Tradition of Public Health.Dan E. Beauchamp - 2012 - Hastings Center Report 15 (6):28-36.
    The dominant language of politics in the United States has been political individualism, with minimal restrictions on property and personal, voluntary conduct. But there are second languages of community that stress cooperation and group action. These second languages include the constitutional tradition for public health. Public health offers a community justification for paternalistic measures that, for example, discourage smoking or require seatbelts.
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  3.  64
    Beyond Empathy. Phenomenological Approaches to Intersubjectivity.Dan Zahavi - 2011 - Santalka: Filosofija, Komunikacija 18 (1):69-82.
    Drawing on the work of Scheler, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Husserl and Sartre, this article presents an overview of some of the diverse approaches to intersubjectivity that can be found in the phenomenological tradition. Starting with a brief description of Scheler’s criticism of the argument from analogy, the article continues by showing that the phenomenological analyses of intersubjectivity involve much more than a ‘solution’ to the ‘traditional’ problem of other minds. Intersubjectivity doesn’t merely concern concrete faceto-face encounters between individuals. It is also (...)
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  4. The Ethics of Racist Monuments.Dan Demetriou & Ajume Wingo - 2018 - In David Boonin (ed.), Palgrave Handbook of Philosophy and Public Policy. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
    In this chapter we focus on the debate over publicly-maintained racist monuments as it manifests in the mid-2010s Anglosphere, primarily in the US (chiefly regarding the over 700 monuments devoted to the Confederacy), but to some degree also in Britain and Commonwealth countries, especially South Africa (chiefly regarding monuments devoted to figures and events associated with colonialism and apartheid). After pointing to some representative examples of racist monuments, we discuss ways a monument can be thought racist, and neutrally categorize removalist (...)
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  5.  5
    On the hardness of approximate reasoning.Dan Roth - 1996 - Artificial Intelligence 82 (1-2):273-302.
  6.  31
    Psychosemantics: The Problem of Meaning in the Philosophy of Mind.Dan Lloyd - 1991 - Philosophical Review 100 (2):289.
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  7.  42
    “Should It Be Considered Plagiarism?” Student Perceptions of Complex Citation Issues.Dan Childers & Sam Bruton - 2016 - Journal of Academic Ethics 14 (1):1-17.
    Most research on student plagiarism defines the concept very narrowly or with much ambiguity. Many studies focus on plagiarism involving large swaths of text copied and pasted from unattributed sources, a type of plagiarism that the overwhelming majority of students seem to have little trouble identifying. Other studies rely on ambiguous definitions, assuming students understand what the term means and requesting that they self-report how well they understand the concept. This study attempts to avoid these problems by examining student perceptions (...)
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  8.  88
    Dignitarian Hunting.Dan Demetriou & Bob Fischer - 2018 - Social Theory and Practice 44 (1):49-73.
    Faced with the choice between supporting industrial plant agriculture and hunting, Tom Regan’s rights view can be plausibly developed in a way that permits a form of hunting we call “dignitarian.” To motivate this claim, we begin by showing how the empirical literature on animal deaths in plant agriculture suggests that a non-trivial amount of hunting would not add to animal harm. We discuss how Tom Regan’s miniride principle appears to morally permit hunting in that case, and we address recent (...)
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  9.  49
    Does interaction matter? Testing whether a confidence heuristic can replace interaction in collective decision-making.Dan Bang, Riccardo Fusaroli, Kristian Tylén, Karsten Olsen, Peter E. Latham, Jennifer Y. F. Lau, Andreas Roepstorff, Geraint Rees, Chris D. Frith & Bahador Bahrami - 2014 - Consciousness and Cognition 26:13-23.
    In a range of contexts, individuals arrive at collective decisions by sharing confidence in their judgements. This tendency to evaluate the reliability of information by the confidence with which it is expressed has been termed the ‘confidence heuristic’. We tested two ways of implementing the confidence heuristic in the context of a collective perceptual decision-making task: either directly, by opting for the judgement made with higher confidence, or indirectly, by opting for the faster judgement, exploiting an inverse correlation between confidence (...)
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  10. Two philosophical problems in the study of happiness.Dan Haybron - manuscript
    In this paper I discuss two philosophical issues that hold special interest for empirical researchers studying happiness. The first issue concerns the question of how the psychological notion(s) of happiness invoked in empirical research relates to those traditionally employed by philosophers. The second concerns the question of how we ought to conceive of happiness, understood as a purely psychological phenomenon. With respect to the first, I argue that ‘happiness’, as used in the philosophical literature, has three importantly different senses that (...)
     
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  11. Life satisfaction, ethical reflection, and the science of happiness.Dan Haybron - manuscript
    Life satisfaction is widely considered to be a central aspect of human welfare. Many have identified happiness with it, and some maintain that well-being consists largely or wholly in being satisfied with one’s life. Empirical research on well-being relies heavily on life satisfaction studies. The paper contends that life satisfaction attitudes are less important, and matter for different reasons, than is widely believed. For such attitudes are appropriately governed by ethical norms and are perspectival in ways that make the relationship (...)
     
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  12.  32
    Within the heart’s darkness: The role of emotions in Arendt’s political thought.Dan Degerman - 2016 - European Journal of Political Theory 18 (2):147488511664785.
    Interest in the political relevance of the emotions is growing rapidly. In light of this, Hannah Arendt’s claim that the emotions are apolitical has come under renewed fire. But many critics have misunderstood her views on the relationship between individuals, emotions and the political. This paper addresses this issue by reconstructing the conceptual framework through which Arendt understands the emotions. Arendt often describes the heart – where the emotions reside – as a place of darkness. I begin by tracing this (...)
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  13.  16
    First-person thoughts and embodied self-awareness: Some reflections on the relation between recent analytical philosophy and phenomenology.Zahavi Dan - 2002 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1 (1):7-26.
    The article examines some of the main theses about self-awareness developed in recent analytic philosophy of mind (especially the work of Bermúdez), and points to a number of striking overlaps between these accounts and the ones to be found in phenomenology. Given the real risk of unintended repetitions, it is argued that it would be counterproductive for philosophy of mind to ignore already existing resources, and that both analytical philosophy and phenomenology would profit from a more open exchange.
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  14. Universal Health Care, American Style: A Single Fund Approach to Health Care Reform.Dan E. Beauchamp - 1992 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 2 (2):125-135.
    With increasing momentum for health care reform, attention is shifting to finance reform that will provide for direct methods for controlling health care spending. This article outlines the two principal paths to direct cost control and outlines a national plan that retains our multiple sources of payment, yet also contains a powerful direct cost control technique: a single fund to finance all health care.
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  15.  15
    Decisionmaking Competence and Risk.Dan W. Brock - 1991 - Bioethics 5 (2):105-112.
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  16. Health care resource prioritization and rationing: why is it so difficult?Dan W. Brock - 2007 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 74 (1):125-148.
    Rationing is the allocation of a good under conditions of scarcity, which necessarily implies that some who want and could be benefitted by that good will not receive it. One reflection of our ambivalence towards health care rationing is reflected in our resistance to having it distributed in a market like most other goods—most Americans reject ability to pay as the basis for distributing health care. They do not view health care as just another commodity to be distributed by markets. (...)
     
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  17.  32
    Creating Embryos for Use in Stem Cell Research.Dan W. Brock - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (2):229-237.
    The intense and extensive debate over human embryonic stem cell research has focused primarily on the moral status of the human embryo. Some commentators assign full moral status of normal adult human beings to the embryo from the moment of its conception. At the other extreme are those who believe that a human embryo has no significant moral status at the time it is used and destroyed in stem cell research. And in between are many intermediate positions that assign an (...)
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  18.  25
    What Are "Purely Qualitative" Terms?Dan Goldstick - 1986 - American Philosophical Quarterly 23 (1):71 - 81.
  19.  20
    Hermas’ Authority in Irenaeus’ Works: A Reassessment.Dan Batovici - 2015 - Augustinianum 55 (1):5-31.
    Irenaeus of Lyon is a landmark in the reception history of the Shepherd of Hermas, as he seems to consider it scriptural, while being the earliest author to quote its text. The present article reconsiders the presence of the Shepherd of Hermas in the works of Irenaeus of Lyon, offering a fresh assessment of the rather differing stances on the matter in modern scholarship and some new considerations, with relevance for better understanding the circulation, function and use of authoritative texts (...)
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  20. G. W. Leibniz, Viaţa şi personalitatea filozofică.Dan Bădărău & G. W. Leibniz - 1974 - Studia Leibnitiana 6 (2):297-298.
     
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  21.  16
    Morality and the Health of the Body Politic.Dan E. Beauchamp - 1986 - Hastings Center Report 16 (6):30-36.
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  22.  42
    Some remarks on a research project of the centre D'Etudes des solidarites sociales (CESOL) integration: A challenge for business.Dan Bechmann - 1994 - World Futures 41 (1):65-66.
    (1994). Some remarks on a research project of the centre D'Etudes des solidarites sociales (CESOL) integration: A challenge for business. World Futures: Vol. 41, No. 1-3, pp. 65-66.
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  23.  11
    Is International Humanitarian Law Lapsing into Irrelevance in the War on International Terror?Dan Belz - 2006 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 7 (1):97-130.
    This article uses an economic narrative to examine the theoretical adequacy of applying humanitarian law to the regulation of the war on international terror. I will argue that problems inherent in collective action hinder the ability of this law to generate an optimal level of global security, and that the absence of the element of reciprocity lowers states’ compliance with it. The paper discusses factors such as audience costs, negative externalities of public conscience, NGOs’ activities, and the promotion of the (...)
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  24. The Prison and Its Metaphors.Dan Berger - 2010 - Chromatikon 6:89-100.
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  25.  27
    Good medical ethics: Table 1.Dan W. Brock - 2015 - Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (1):34-36.
  26. A critique of three objections to physician‐assisted suicide.Dan W. Brock - 1999 - Ethics 109 (3):519-547.
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  27.  20
    The Ørsted-Ritter partnership and the birth of Romantic natural philosophy.Dan Ch Christensen - 1995 - Annals of Science 52 (2):153-185.
    Summary Kant's critique of corpuscular theory created a tabula rasa situation in natural philosophy and opened up a vast new field of research, particularly related to the study of heat, light, electricity and magnetism. ?rsted introduced Kantian epistemology in Scandinavia and made friends with J. W. Ritter, an outstanding experimenter who was the first to make dynamical philosophy productive. The ?rsted?Ritter partnership aimed at the construction of a cosmology based on dynamical philosophy as well as galvanic interpretations of the Lichtenberg (...)
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  28.  49
    Why a modular approach to reason?Dan Sperber & Hugo Mercier - 2018 - Mind and Language 33 (5):533-541.
    In their reviews, Chater and Oaksford, Dutilh Novaes, and Sterelny are critical of our modularist approach to reason. In this response, we clarify our claim that reason is one of many cognitive modules that produce intuitive inferences each in its domain; the reason module producing intuitions about reasons. We argue that in‐principle objections to the idea of massive modularity based on Fodor's peculiar approach are not effective against other interpretations that have led to insightful uses of the notion in psychology (...)
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  29.  99
    The nature of faith in analytic theistic philosophy of religion.Dan-Johan Eklund - 2016 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 80 (1):85-99.
    In this article I shall analyse and evaluate analytic theists’ views of what it takes to be a person of faith. I suggest that the subject can be approached by posing requirements a person must allegedly fulfil in order to count as a person of faith. These requirements can be referred to as aspects of faith. According to my analysis, four different aspects of faith can be distinguished: the cognitive, the evaluative-affective, the practical, and the interpersonal. There have been divergent (...)
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  30.  92
    Creating Embryos for Use in Stem Cell Research.Dan W. Brock - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (2):229-237.
    In this paper I will address whether the restriction on the creation of human embryos solely for the purpose of research in which they will be used and destroyed in the creation of human stem cell lines is ethically justified. Of course, a cynical but perhaps accurate reading of the new Obama policy is that leaving this restriction in place was done for political, not ethical, reasons, in light of the apparent public opposition to creating embryos for use in this (...)
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  31.  43
    Neural correlates of temporality: Default mode variability and temporal awareness.Dan Lloyd - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (2):695-703.
    The continual background awareness of duration is an essential structure of consciousness, conferring temporal extension to the many objects of awareness within the evanescent sensory present. Seeking the possible neural correlates of ubiquitous temporal awareness, this article reexamines fMRI data from off-task “default mode” periods in 25 healthy subjects studied by Grady et al. , 2005). “Brain reading” using support vector machines detected information specifying elapsed time, and further analysis specified distributed networks encoding implicit time. These networks fluctuate; none are (...)
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  32. Parallel distributed processing and cognition: Only connect?Dan Lloyd - 1989 - In Dan Edward Lloyd (ed.), Simple Minds. MIT Press.
  33.  55
    Moral obligations of patients: A clinical view.Dan C. English - 2005 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 30 (2):139 – 152.
    After a unilateral focus on medical professional obligations to patients in most of the 20th century, there is a growing, if modest, interest in patient responsibility. This article critiques some public assertions, explores the ethics literature, and attempts to find some consensus and moral grounds for positions taken on the question, "Does a patient have moral obligations in the process of interactions with medical and other professional caregivers?" There is widespread agreement on a few responsibilities, such as "truth telling" and (...)
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  34.  51
    Conceptions of choice and conceptions of autonomy.Meir Dan-Cohen - 1992 - Ethics 102 (2):221-243.
  35.  24
    Charles Hartshorne.Dan Dombrowski - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  36.  42
    The Intentionality of Passive Experience.Dan Dahlstrom - 2007 - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 7:25-42.
  37.  53
    A proposal for the use of advance directives in the treatment of incompetent mentally ill persons.Dan W. Brock - 1993 - Bioethics 7 (2-3):247-256.
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  38.  23
    Trumping Advance Directives.Dan W. Brock - 1991 - Hastings Center Report 21 (5):5-6.
  39.  43
    Putting Foucault to work in educational research.Dan W. Butin - 2006 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 40 (3):371–380.
    This essay reviews three books that engage the writings of Michel Foucault. It examines to what extent and in what ways Foucault has been made to ‘work’ in educational practice and research. It suggests that Foucault has been narrowly appropriated in a way that is, ultimately, ironic—namely, as either liberating us from or entrapping us within our culture's structures and practices. This essay concludes by suggesting that Foucault's work was an attempt to avoid and subvert exactly such binaries.
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  40.  14
    Rereading Priestley: Science at the intersection of theology and politics.Dan Eshet - 2001 - History of Science 39 (2):127-159.
  41.  9
    Achieving Food Security in a Sustainable Development Era.Dan Banik - 2019 - Food Ethics 4 (2):117-121.
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  42.  46
    The Intentionality of Passive Experience: Husserl and a Contemporary Debate.Dan Dahlstrom - 2007 - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 7:25-42.
  43.  9
    Metaphor, Modularity, and the Evolution of Conceptual Integration.Dan L. Chiappe - 2000 - Metaphor and Symbol 15 (3):137-158.
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  44.  34
    Is anyone listening? Educational policy perspectives on the social foundations of education.Dan W. Butin - 2005 - Educational Studies 38 (3):286-297.
  45.  30
    Meaning in Culture.Dan Rashid & F. Allan Hanson - 1976 - Philosophical Quarterly 26 (105):384.
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  46.  32
    Audience, Implicit Racial Bias, and Cinematic Twists in Zootopia.Dan Flory - 2019 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 77 (4):435-446.
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  47.  26
    Ethics Committees and Cost Containment.Dan W. Brock - 1990 - Hastings Center Report 20 (2):29-31.
  48. God, Geography, and Justice.Dan Linford & William Patterson - 2015 - Essays in the Philosophy of Humanism 23 (2):189-216.
    The existence of various sufferings has long been thought to pose a problem for the existence of a personal God: the Problem of Evil. In this paper, we propose an original version of POE, in which the geographic distribution of sufferings and of opportunities for flourishing or suffering is better explained if the universe, at bottom, is indifferent to the human condition than if, as theists propose, there is a personal God from whom the universe originates: the Problem of Geography. (...)
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  49. Health Care Resource Prioritization and Rationing: Why Is It So Difficult?Dan Brock - 2007 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 74:125-148.
    Rationing is the allocation of a good under conditions of scarcity, which necessarily implies that some who want and could be benefitted by that good will not receive it. One reflection of our ambivalence towards health care rationing is reflected in our resistance to having it distributed in a market like most other goods—most Americans reject ability to pay as the basis for distributing health care. They do not view health care as just another commodity to be distributed by markets. (...)
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  50.  5
    Twenty-two weeks of pointless conversation.Dan Friedman - 1999 - In Lois Holzman (ed.), Performing psychology: a postmodern culture of the mind. New York: Routledge. pp. 157--196.
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