Results for 'Eugène-Bernard Leroy'

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  1. Les mensonges vitaux, études sur quelques variétés de l'obscurantisme contemporain; Bibl. de phil. contemporaine.Vernon Lee & Eugène Bernard-Leroy - 1923 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 95:447-450.
     
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  2.  15
    David Hume.Bernard Wand & Andre-Louis Leroy - 1954 - Philosophical Review 63 (4):629.
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  3. Loisy et le Collége de France.Pierre-Eugène Leroy - 2010 - Revue de Théologie Et de Philosophie 142 (2):105-122.
     
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  4. The Reawakening of Christian Faith.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1949
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  5. Higher education and the human spirit.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1953 - [Chicago]: University of Chicago Press.
  6. Seeds of redemption.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1947 - New York,: Macmillan.
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  7. Growth toward order.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1940 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 21 (3):257.
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  8. Modern Man's Worship.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1936 - Philosophical Review 45:221.
     
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  9. The ascetic temper of modern humanism.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1945 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 26 (2):153.
  10. Two paths to the good life.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1942 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 23 (1):55.
     
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  11. The retreat to tradition.Bernard Eugene Meland - 1943 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 24 (1):40.
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  12.  22
    Case Studies in Bioethics: The Unwanted Child: Caring for the Fetus Born Alive after an Abortion.Sissela Bok, Bernard N. Nathanson, David C. Nathan & Leroy Walters - 1976 - Hastings Center Report 6 (5):10.
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  13.  37
    Brain Oscillations in Sport: Toward EEG Biomarkers of Performance.Guy Cheron, Géraldine Petit, Julian Cheron, Axelle Leroy, Anita Cebolla, Carlos Cevallos, Mathieu Petieau, Thomas Hoellinger, David Zarka, Anne-Marie Clarinval & Bernard Dan - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  14.  57
    Long-Lasting Cortical Reorganization as the Result of Motor Imagery of Throwing a Ball in a Virtual Tennis Court.Ana M. Cebolla, Mathieu Petieau, Carlos Cevallos, Axelle Leroy, Bernard Dan & Guy Cheron - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  15.  37
    Rethinking "Liberal Eugenics": Reflections and Questions on Habermas on Bioethics.Bernard G. Prusak - 2005 - Hastings Center Report 35 (6):31.
    : In the new "liberal eugenics," children could be genetically improved as long as the enhancements let children choose from among a wide range of ways to live their lives. The German political philosopher Jürgen Habermas has opened a debate with the proponents of this view. Habermas suggests that a person could not really regard her life as her own if she lived with a body that somebody else had, without asking her opinion, "enhanced" for her.
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  16.  12
    Alain Leroy Locke.Eugene C. Holmes - 1954 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 28:65 - 66.
  17.  37
    Registration in relation to eugenics.Bernard Mallet - 1922 - The Eugenics Review 14 (1):23.
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  18.  12
    THEOBALD, Christoph; SAUGIER, Bernard; LEROY, Jean; LE MAIRE, Marc; GRÉSILLON, Dominique. L´Univers n´est pas sourd. Pour un nouveau rapport sciences et foi.João Batista Libanio - 2006 - Horizonte 5 (9):163-165.
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  19.  28
    The Music Criticism and Aesthetics of George Bernard Shaw.Eugene Gates - 2001 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 35 (3):63.
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  20.  6
    Baudelaire: Individualism,, dandyism and the philosophy of history.Bernard Howells - 1996 - Oxford: Legenda, European Humanities Research Centre.
    Bernard Howells explores the problematics surrounding individualism and history in a number of prose texts, and situates Baudelaire within the broader contexts of nineteenth century historical, cultural and artistic speculation, represented by Emerson, Carlyle, Joseph de Maistre, Guiseppe Ferrari and Eugene Chreveul. This major new work will be of interest not only to Baudelaire specialists, but also to scholars working in any area of nineteenth-century French studies.".
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  21. John Stuart-Glennie’s Lost Legacy.Eugene Halton - 2019 - In Christopher T. Conner, Nicholas M. Baxter & David R. Dickens (eds.), Forgotten Founders and Other Neglected Social Theorists. pp. 11-26.
    This chapter examines the lost legacy of John Stuart-Glennie (1841-1910), a contributor to the founding of sociology and a major theorist, whose work was known in his lifetime but disappeared after his death. Stuart-Glennie was praised by philosopher John Stuart Mill, was a friend of and influence upon playwright George Bernard Shaw, and was an active contributor to the fledgling Sociological Society in London in the first decade of the twentieth century. Stuart-Glennie’s most significant idea in hindsight was his (...)
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  22. The Degenerate Monkey.Eugene Halton - 2014 - In Torkild Thellefsen & Bent Sorensen (eds.), Charles S. Peirce in his Own Words: 100 years of Semiotics, Communication and Cognition. pp. 245-251.
    The chapter discusses the following quotation from Charles Peirce: "One of these days, perhaps, there will come a writer of opinions less humdrum than those of Dr. (Alfred Russel) Wallace, and less in awe of the learned and official world...who will argue, like a new Bernard Mandeville, that man is but a degenerate monkey, with a paranoic talent for self-satisfaction, no matter what scrapes he may get himself into, calling them 'civilization,' and who, in place of the unerring instincts (...)
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  23.  45
    Reading Minkowski with Husserl.Bernard Pachoud - 2001 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 8 (4):299-301.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 8.4 (2001) 299-301 [Access article in PDF] Reading Minkowski with Husserl Bernard Pachoud Eugene Minkowski is generally regarded as one of the main figures of the phenomenological strand of psychiatry in France. However, it is striking that, as a phenomenologist, he very rarely mentions Husserl or Heidegger in his texts. Nor, for that matter, does he use their concepts or rely on their descriptions (...)
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  24.  57
    Private Vices, Publick Benefits? The Contemporary Reception of Bernard Mandeville. [REVIEW]Eugene Heath - 1999 - Hume Studies 25 (1-2):225-240.
    Of those philosophers that Hume credits with having "begun to put the science of man on a new footing", Bernard Mandeville has received relatively little attention from contemporary philosophers and Hume scholars. In contrast, Mandeville was not so neglected in his own age, a point well-chronicled in F. B. Kaye's introduction to The Fable of the Bees, and substantiated, tangibly, by this collection of writings excellently assembled and edited by J. Martin Stafford. In the eighteenth century and, more particularly, (...)
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  25.  9
    Brain and mind.Bernard Hollander - 1932 - The Eugenics Review 24 (1):69.
  26.  18
    The reform of vital statistics: Outline of a system of national registration.Bernard Mallet - 1929 - The Eugenics Review 21 (2):87.
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  27.  14
    The social problem group: The president's account of the society's next task.Bernard Mallet - 1931 - The Eugenics Review 23 (3):203.
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  28.  37
    Is Britain over-populated?Bernard Charlesworth - 1946 - The Eugenics Review 38 (1):59.
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  29.  78
    The debate over liberal eugenics.Nicholas Agar, Dan W. Brock, Paul Lauritzen & Bernard G. Prusak - forthcoming - Hastings Center Report.
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  30.  22
    J. Martin Stafford's Private Vices, Publick Benefits? [REVIEW]Eugene Heath - 1999 - Hume Studies 25 (1):225-240.
    Of those philosophers that Hume credits with having "begun to put the science of man on a new footing", Bernard Mandeville has received relatively little attention from contemporary philosophers and Hume scholars. In contrast, Mandeville was not so neglected in his own age, a point well-chronicled in F. B. Kaye's introduction to The Fable of the Bees, and substantiated, tangibly, by this collection of writings excellently assembled and edited by J. Martin Stafford. In the eighteenth century and, more particularly, (...)
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  31.  8
    Bernard Eugene Meland.Barry A. Woodbridge - 1975 - Process Studies 5 (4):285-302.
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  32.  15
    Life and Thought of Bernard Eugene Meland, American Constructive Theologian, 1899–1993 by W. Creighton Peden.Daniel J. Ott - 2015 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 36 (3):292-295.
    This book offers another in a long line of Creighton Peden’s contributions to understanding the thought of perhaps neglected religious thinkers in the American liberal tradition. Peden has stated that his approach in writing about figures like Gerald Birney Smith, George Burman Foster, and Edward Scribner Ames has not been critical or even comparative, but explicative. His goal is to make more of their work more accessible. And Peden is especially well positioned to do so in the case of (...) Meland, as he has been a long-standing student, colleague, interlocutor, and ultimately literary executor to Meland.The book has a slightly quirky structure. The first twenty or so pages are an intellectual autobiography.. (shrink)
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  33.  27
    Eugenics and Bernard Shaw.C. J. Bond - 1929 - The Eugenics Review 21 (2):159.
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  34.  15
    Harold Eugene Davis, "Latin American Thought"; Walter Bernard Redmond, "Bibliography of the Philosophy in the Iberian Colonies of America"; A. Owen Aldridge, ed., "The Ibero-American Enlightenment". [REVIEW]Antón Donoso - 1973 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 11 (3):413.
  35.  12
    Bernard Dionysius Geoghegan, Code: From Information Theory to French Theory.Carolyn Pedwell - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (7-8):293-299.
    Assembling a distinctive genealogy of cybernetic thought situated in relation to Progressive Era technocracy, industrial capitalism, (de)colonial relations, and eugenic machinery, Code uncovers the vital interdependence of informatics, the humanities, and the human sciences in the 20th century. Rather than figuring cybernetics as emerging from Second World War military technologies and post-war digital computing, Code argues that liberal technocrats’ inter-war visions of social welfare delivered via ‘neutral’ communication techniques shaped the informatic interventions of both the Second World War and the (...)
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  36. Beyond Things: The Ontological Importance of Play According to Eugen Fink.Jan Halák - 2016 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 43 (2):199-214.
    Eugen Fink’s interpretation of play is virtually absent in the current philosophy of sport, despite the fact that it is rich in original descriptions of the structure of play. This might be due to Fink’s decision not to merely describe play, but to employ its analysis in the course of an elucidation of the ontological problem of the world as totality. On the other hand, this approach can enable us to properly evaluate the true existential and/or ontological value of play. (...)
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  37. Religion and violence: A dialectical engagement through the insights of Bernard Lonergan [Book Review].John Collins - 2017 - The Australasian Catholic Record 94 (2):243.
    Collins, John Review of: Religion and violence: A dialectical engagement through the insights of Bernard Lonergan, by Dominic Arcamone, Eugene, OR: Pickwick, 2015, pp. 281, paperback, $45.95.
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  38.  25
    Insight is A Body‐Feeling: Experiencing our Understanding.Jonathan Heaps - 2016 - Heythrop Journal 57 (3):461-472.
    Though Bernard Lonergan is often counted among the so-called “Transcendental Thomists”, this article offers a re-appraisal of his theory of understanding with a renewed emphasis on its a posteriori, rather than a priori, approach. For Lonergan, because understanding is experienced, it can be investigated empirically. It is the further conviction of the author that the experience in which understanding gives itself is a bodily experience. This is the case both in how the experience emerges from biological processes, but also (...)
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  39.  21
    Development and Adaptation: Evolutionary Concepts in British Morphology, 1870–1914.Peter J. Bowler - 1989 - British Journal for the History of Science 22 (3):283-297.
    Bernard Norton's research concentrated on the Biometrical school of Darwinism and the social implications of the hereditarian ideas that began to gain popularity in the closing years of the nineteenth century. In this article I want to look at the previous generation of evolutionists, the evolutionary morphologists against whom the Biometricians (and their great rivals, the early Mendelians) were reacting. Despite the prominence of evolutionary morphology in the post-Darwinian era, comparatively little historical work has been done on it. In (...)
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  40.  3
    Bonaventure's Reductio of the Nine Choirs of Angels: How Bonaventure Compressed Two Monumental Traditions into Nine Words and Nine Short Phrases.Randall B. Smith - 2023 - Nova et Vetera 21 (2):583-605.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Bonaventure's Reductio of the Nine Choirs of Angels:How Bonaventure Compressed Two Monumental Traditions into Nine Words and Nine Short PhrasesRandall B. Smith"There is probably no better illustration in medieval thought of how the genius of the symbolic imagination also involves deep speculative insight." So wrote Bernard McGinn of Bonaventure's Itinerarium mentis in deum in The Flowering of Mysticism: Men and Woman in the New Mysticism, 1200–1350.1 There is (...)
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  41.  1
    The ethical implications of Bergson's philosophy.Una Mirrielees Bernard Sait - 1914 - New York: Science Press.
  42.  27
    The logical systems of Lesniewski.Eugene C. Luschei - 1962 - Amsterdam,: North-Holland Pub. Co..
  43.  77
    The Spiritual Automaton: Spinoza's Science of the Mind.Eugene Marshall - 2013 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    Eugene Marshall presents an original, systematic account of Spinoza's philosophy of mind, in which the mind is presented as an affective mechanism that, when rational, behaves as a spiritual automaton. He explores key themes in Spinoza's thought, and illuminates his philosophical and ethical project in a striking new way.
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  44. Foundations of Environmental Ethics.Eugene C. Hargrove - unknown
    This book examines the social and philosophical attitudes in Western culture that relate to the environment including aesthetics, wildlife, and land use. Both the historical significance and a framework for further discussions of environmental ethics are discussed in the book.
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  45. Adequacy and Innateness in Spinoza.Eugene Marshall - 2008 - Oxford Studies in Early Modern Philosophy 4:51-88.
  46. Spinoza's cognitive affects and their feel.Eugene Marshall - 2008 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 16 (1):1 – 23.
  47. Spinoza on the problem of akrasia.Eugene Marshall - 2008 - European Journal of Philosophy 18 (1):41-59.
    : Two common ways of explaining akrasia will be presented, one which focuses on strength of desire and the other which focuses on action issuing from practical judgment. Though each is intuitive in a certain way, they both fail as explanations of the most interesting cases of akrasia. Spinoza 's own thoughts on bondage and the affects follow, from which a Spinozist explanation of akrasia is constructed. This account is based in Spinoza 's mechanistic psychology of cognitive affects. Because Spinoza (...)
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  48.  17
    Taste thresholds, detection models, and disparate results.Eugene Linker, Mary E. Moore & Eugene Galanter - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 67 (1):59.
  49. Weak Anthropocentric Intrinsic Value.Eugene C. Hargrove - 1992 - The Monist 75 (2):183-207.
    Professional environmental ethics arose directly out of the interest in the environment created by Earth Day in 1970. At that time many environmentalists, primarily because they had read Aldo Leopold’s essay, “The Land Ethic,” were convinced that the foundations of environmental problems were philosophical. Moreover, these environmentalists were dissatisfied with the instrumental arguments based on human use and benefit—which they felt compelled to invoke in defense of nature—because they thought these arguments were part of the problem. Wanting to counter instrumental (...)
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  50.  39
    The ethical engineer.Eugene Schlossberger - 1993 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
    Eugene Schlossberger has created a practical guide to ethical decision-making for engineers, students, and workers in business and industry.The Ethical Engineer ...
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