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David Kline [5]David A. Kline [1]
  1.  66
    Nomic reliabilism: Weak reliability is not enough.Frederick Adams & David Kline - 1987 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 25 (4):433-443.
    Reliabilism has received its share of bad press of late both as a theory of knowledge and as a theory of epistemic justification. We believe its credibility as a theory of knowledge may have been unjustly tarnished and we plan to defend it. However, we hasten to add that we shall defend reliabilism from attack only upon its credentials as a basis for a theory of knowledge. We shall not defend it as a theory of epistemic justification, although we do (...)
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  2.  10
    Nomic Reliabilism: Weak Reliability is Not Enough.Frederick Adams & David Kline - 1987 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 25 (4):433-443.
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  3.  12
    The Value of Time and Leisure in a World of Work.Mitchell R. Haney & David A. Kline (eds.) - 2010 - Lexington Books.
    This book is concerned with how we should think and act in our work, leisure activities, and time utilization in order to achieve flourishing lives. The scope papers range from general theoretical considerations of the value, e.g. 'What is a balanced life?', to specific types of considerations, e.g. 'How should we cope with the effects of work on moral decision-making?'.
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  4.  25
    Global Arguments For The Safety Of Engineered Organisms.David Kline & Stephen M. Gendel - 1990 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 5 (2):59-64.
  5. Humanism against religion.David Kline - 2021 - In Anthony B. Pinn (ed.), The Oxford handbook of humanism. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
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  6.  20
    The Pragmatics of Resistance: Framing Anti-Blackness and the Limits of Political Ontology.David Kline - 2017 - Critical Philosophy of Race 5 (1):51-69.
    This article argues that Frank B. Wilderson's political ontology can be read as both a critique and a radicalization of Giorgio Agamben's formal political-ontological framework constructed around the two extreme poles of sovereignty and bare life. Wilderson critiques and expands Agamben's framework by locating the zero point of political abjection not within bare life, which is still implicated within the ontological zone of Human being by way of an included exclusion, but within Black social death, which is cut off absolutely (...)
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