Results for 'Fred Terry Holland'

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  1.  12
    Introduction: The view from judgment day.Terry Eagleton, Colin Richmond, Lionel Gossman, William Weber, Glenn Holland & Peter N. Miller - 2008 - Common Knowledge 14 (1):29-33.
    This essay introduces a cluster of articles titled “Devalued Currency: An Elegiac Symposium on Paradigm Shifts.” Eagleton's piece addresses, from a perspective indebted to Walter Benjamin, the notion of Thomas Kuhn that “shifts” in the controlling paradigms of disciplines and practices are entirely transformative not only of their futures but also of their pasts. Benjamin argued that a work of art is a set of potentials that may or may not be realized in the vicissitudes of its afterlife. The true (...)
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  2.  47
    BAIER, KURT, The Rational and the Moral Order: The Social Roots of Reason and Morality, reviewed by Sarah Stroud.. 577.Edwin B. Allaire, Peter Carruthers, B. Allaire, John Charvet, Terry Pinkard, Gerald A. Cohen, Stephen Darwall, Herbert A. Davidson, William Demopoulos & Fred Dretske - 1997 - Philosophical Review 106 (4):589.
  3.  54
    Book Review Section 1. [REVIEW]J. Stanley Ahmann, Victor Nubou Kobayashi, Mark B. Ginsburg, Arden W. Holland, Fred Drewe, Josphat KipKoech Yego, David B. Baral, Robert Primrack, Creta D. Sabine, Alan J. De Young, David N. Campbell, Richard A. Brosio, Frederick D. Harper & Roy L. Cox - 1980 - Educational Studies 11 (3):259-276.
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  4.  57
    Book Review Section 1. [REVIEW]Brian J. Spittle, Samuel M. Vinocur, Virginia Underwood, Robert L. Leight, L. Glenn Smith, Harold M. Bergsma, Robert H. Graham, William M. Bart, George D. Dalin, Lyle S. Maynard, Fred Drewe, Theodore Hutchcroft, Francesco Cordasco, Frank Andrews Stone, Roy R. Nasstrom, Edward B. Goellner, Margaret Gillett, Robert E. Belding, Kenneth V. Lottich & Arden W. Holland - 1981 - Educational Studies 12 (4):431-459.
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  5.  15
    Human Action and Its Explanation R. Tuomela Dordrecht, Holland and Boston, U.S.A.: D. Reidel. U.S. $39.50.Fred Wilson - 1982 - Dialogue 21 (3):571-578.
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  6.  4
    Impossible Presence: Surface and Screen in the Photogenic Era.Terry Smith - 2001 - University of Chicago Press.
    Impossible Presence brings together new work in film studies, critical theory, art history, and anthropology for a multifaceted exploration of the continuing proliferation of visual images in the modern era. It also asks what this proliferation—and the changing technologies that support it—mean for the ways in which images are read today and how they communicate with viewers and spectators. Framed by Terry Smith's introduction, the essays focus on two kinds of strangeness involved in experiencing visual images in the modern (...)
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  7.  11
    Interpreting Ricardo.Terry Peach - 1993 - Cambridge University Press.
    David Ricardo was the leading political economist of the early nineteenth century. This book presents a reconstruction of the substance and evolution of Ricardo's thought on the interrelated topics of value, distribution and accumulation. It also provides a detailed summary of, and critical commentary on, the vast secondary literature. The author rejects Sraffa's influential 'corn model' interpretation of Ricardo's early writings; the alleged similarity between the work of Ricardo and Sraffa; the Hollander and Hicks view of Ricardo's treatment of wages; (...)
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  8.  29
    The Reagan “Revolution”: 1978-1981, R.I.P.Fred Seigel - 1984 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (60):125-129.
    Policy Review, the organ of the conservative Heritage Foundation, devoted their winter 1984 issue to lamenting the failures of the Reagan administration. Publisher M. Stan ton Evans complained that “This has been essentially another Ford Administration, … not much different from any other Republican administration in our lifetime. While the other Senator from Colorado, arch-conservative William Armstrong noted that Reagan had ‘managed to polarize the country over budget cuts that didn't happen.” “He cut the budget,” bemoaned Armstrong, “enough to make (...)
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  9. Permanent loss of consciousness : expert opinion and community standards.Fred Plum - 2006 - In Arthur L. Caplan, James J. McCartney & Dominic A. Sisti (eds.), The case of Terri Schiavo: ethics at the end of life. Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.
     
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  10.  27
    Fred Sommers. On a Fregean dogma. Problems in the philosophy of mathematics, Proceedings of the International Colloquium in the Philosophy of Science, London, 1965, volume 1, edited by Imre Lakatos, Studies in logic and the foundations of mathematics, North-Holland Publishing Company, Amsterdam 1967, pp. 47–62. [REVIEW]Gerald Standley - 1974 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 39 (2):360-361.
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  11. O'REILLY: "Unresolved problem" segment tonight, dying with dignity. That's what the Terri Schiavo case was supposed to be all about, but I didn't see much dignity in starvation. Did you?Peter Singer - unknown
    In Oregon, doctors are allowed to kill patients who are terminal and want to die. In Vermont, they're debating whether to do that. And in Holland, they not only allow euthanasia, but also at least two doctors there are killing babies born with catastrophic illness.
     
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  12.  53
    Problems for Moral Twin Earth Arguments.Joshua Gert - 2006 - Synthese 150 (2):171-183.
    Terry Horgan and Mark Timmons have recently presented a series of papers in which they argue against what has come to be called the ‘new wave’ moral realism and moral semantics of David Brink, Richard Boyd, Peter Railton, and a number of other philosophers. The central idea behind Horgan and Timmons’s criticism of these ‘new wave’ theories has been extended by Sean Holland to include the sort of realism that drops out of response-dependent accounts that make use of (...)
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  13.  20
    Foucault, Weber, Neoliberalism and the Politics of Governmentality.Terry Flew - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (7-8):317-326.
    This paper argues that Michel Foucault’s lectures that form The Birth of Biopolitics owe a considerable debt to the thought of Max Weber, particularly in their analysis of how different socio-legal regimes shape distinctive national forms of capitalist economies, and the role that is played by social and economic institutions in the shaping of individual identities. This is in contrast to a common interpretation of Foucault’s account of neoliberalism, which synthesizes his work into neo-Marxist notions of hegemony and capitalist domination. (...)
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  14. Ideology: an introduction.Terry Eagleton - 1983 - New York: Verso.
    Unravels the many different definitions of ideology, explores the history of the concept from the Enlightenment to postmodernism, and interprets the works of ...
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  15.  64
    A Better Statutory Approach to Whistle-blowing.Terry Morehead Dworkin & Janet P. Near - 1997 - Business Ethics Quarterly 7 (1):1-16.
    Abstract:Statutory approaches toward whistle-blowing currently appear to be based on the assumption that most observers of wrongdoing will report it unless deterred from doing so by fear of retaliation. Yet our review of research from studies of whistle-blowing behavior suggests that this assumption is unwarranted. We propose that an alternative legislative approach would prove more successful in encouraging valid whistle-blowing and describe a model for such legislation that would increase self-monitoring of ethical behavior by organizations, with obvious benefits to society (...)
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  16. Socrates and the early dialogues.Terry Penner - 1992 - In Richard Kraut (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Plato. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 121--69.
  17. The unity of virtue.Terry Penner - 1973 - Philosophical Review 82 (1):35-68.
  18. The empiricist theory of memory.R. F. Holland - 1954 - Mind 63 (October):464-86.
  19. The illusions of postmodernism.Terry Eagleton - 1997 - Cambridge: Blackwell.
    He sets out not just to expose the illusions of postmodernism but to show the students he has in mind that they never believed what they thought they believed ...
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  20.  12
    Review symposium on Clifford Geertz. Clifford Geertz, after the fact: Two countries, four decades, one anthropologist. Cambridge, ma: Harvard university press, 1995.? 17.95, 198 pp. isbn 0-674-00871-5.Fred Inglis - 1996 - History of the Human Sciences 9 (4):159-165.
  21. Sleeping beauty awakened: New odds at the dawn of the new day.Terry Horgan - 2004 - Analysis 64 (1):10–21.
  22.  79
    Contested commodities at both ends of life: Buying and selling gametes, embryos, and body tissues.Suzanne Holland - 2001 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 11 (3):263-284.
    : This essay examines the increasing commodification of the body with respect to tissues, gametes, and embryos. Such commodification contributes to a diminishing sense of human personhood on an individual level, even as it erodes commitments to human flourishing at the societal level. After the case for social harm resulting from the increasing commodification of the body is made, the question becomes whether that harm is best remedied by following any of three approaches by which government traditionally seeks to promote (...)
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  23.  43
    Visual mental images can be ambiguous: insights from individual differences in spatial transformation abilities.Fred W. Mast & Stephen M. Kosslyn - 2002 - Cognition 86 (1):57-70.
  24.  52
    Utopias, Past and Present: Why Thomas More Remains Astonishingly Radical.Terry Eagleton - 2016 - Utopian Studies 27 (3):412-417.
    Thomas More’s Utopia, a book that will be 500 years old next year, is astonishingly radical stuff. Not many lord chancellors of England have denounced private property, advocated a form of communism and described the current social order as a “conspiracy of the rich.” Such men, the book announces, are “greedy, unscrupulous and useless.” There are a great number of noblemen, More complains, who live like drones on the labour of others. Tenants are evicted so that “one insatiable glutton and (...)
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  25.  29
    The Ideal of the Dispassionate Judge: An Emotion Regulation Perspective.Terry A. Maroney & James J. Gross - 2014 - Emotion Review 6 (2):142-151.
    According to legal tradition, the ideal judge is entirely dispassionate. Affective science calls into question the legitimacy of this ideal; further, it suggests that no judge could ever meet this standard, even if it were the correct one. What judges can and should do is to learn to effectively manage—rather than eliminate—emotion. Specifically, an emotion regulation perspective suggests that judicial emotion is best managed by cognitive reappraisal and, often, disclosure; behavioral suppression should be used sparingly; and suppression of emotional experience (...)
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  26. Scepticism about the virtue ethics approach to nursing ethics.Stephen Holland - 2010 - Nursing Philosophy 11 (3):151-158.
    Nursing ethics centres on how nurses ought to respond to the moral situations that arise in their professional contexts. Nursing ethicists invoke normative approaches from moral philosophy. Specifically, it is increasingly common for nursing ethicists to apply virtue ethics to moral problems encountered by nurses. The point of this article is to argue for scepticism about this approach. First, the research question is motivated by showing that requirements on nurses such as to be kind, do not suffice to establish virtue (...)
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  27. Copping out on moral twin earth.Terry Horgan & Mark Timmons - 2000 - Synthese 124 (1-2):139-152.
    In "Milk, Honey, and the Good Life on Moral Twin Earth", David Copp explores some ways in which a defender of synthetic moral naturalism might attempt to get around our Moral Twin Earth argument. Copp nicely brings out the force of our argument, not only through his exposition of it, but through his attempt to defeat it, since his efforts, we think, only help to make manifest the deep difficulties the Moral Twin Earth argument poses for the synthetic moral naturalist.
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  28.  14
    The Structure of Biological Science.Fred Gifford - 1991 - Noûs 25 (1):123-125.
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  29. Going with the Flow.Terry L. Anderson & Donald R. Leal - 1991 - In Charles V. Blatz (ed.), Ethics and agriculture: an anthology on current issues in world context. Moscow, Idaho: University of Idaho Press. pp. 384.
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  30.  50
    So-called "clinical equipoise" and the argument from design.Fred Gifford - 2007 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (2):135 – 150.
    In this article, I review and expand upon arguments showing that Freedman's so-called "clinical equipoise" criterion cannot serve as an appropriate guide and justification for the moral legitimacy of carrying out randomized clinical trials. At the same time, I try to explain why this approach has been given so much credence despite compelling arguments against it, including the fact that Freedman's original discussion framed the issues in a misleading way, making certain things invisible: Clinical equipoise is conflated with community equipoise, (...)
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  31. The phenomenology of intentionality and the intentionality of phenomenology.Terry Horgan & John Tienson - 2002 - In David John Chalmers (ed.), Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings. New York: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 520--533.
     
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  32. Nondescriptivist Cognitivism: Framework for a New Metaethic.Terry Horgan & Mark Timmons - 2000 - Philosophical Papers 29 (2):121-153.
    Abstract We propose a metaethical view that combines the cognitivist idea that moral judgments are genuine beliefs and moral utterances express genuine assertions with the idea that such beliefs and utterances are nondescriptive in their overall content. This sort of view has not been recognized among the standard metaethical options because it is generally assumed that all genuine beliefs and assertions must have descriptive content. We challenge this assumption and thereby open up conceptual space for a new kind of metaethical (...)
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  33. The Phenomenology of Agency and Freedom: Lessons from Introspection and Lessons from Its Limits.Terry Horgan - 2011 - Humana Mente 4 (15).
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  34. The Phenomenology of Agency and Freedom: Lessons from Introspection and Lessons from Its Limits.Terry Horgan - 2011 - Humana. Mente 15:77-97.
     
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  35. The Death of the So-Called "Socratic Elenchus".Terry Penner - 2007 - In Michael Erler Luc Brisson (ed.), Gorgias - Menon: Selected Papers From the Seventh Symposium Platonicum. Sankt Augustin: Academia Verlag. pp. 3-19.
  36.  57
    The Emergence of Corporate Social Responsibility in Chile: The Importance of Authenticity and Social Networks.Terry Beckman, Alison Colwell & Peggy H. Cunningham - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 86 (S2):191 - 206.
    Little is known about how and why corporate social responsibility (CSR) emerged in lesser developed countries. In order to address this knowledge gap, we used Chile as a test case and conducted a series of in-depth interviews with leaders of CSR initiatives. We also did an Internet and literature search to help provide support for the findings that emerged from our data. We discovered that while there are similarities in the drivers of CSR in developed countries, there are distinct differences (...)
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  37. Humanitarian imperialism.Terry Nardin - 2005 - Ethics and International Affairs 19 (2):21–26.
    Tesón's “humanitarian rationales” for the war in Iraq strain the traditional understanding of humanitarian intervention: The first, that the war was fought to overthrow a tyrant. The second, that it was a defense strategy establishing democratic regimes peacefully, but by force if necessary.
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  38.  17
    Two notes on the Crito: the impotence of the many, and ‘persuade or obey’.Terry Penner - 1997 - Classical Quarterly 47 (1):153-166.
    So far, interpreters have not made the import of this last clause clear. F. J. Church translates the last phrase ‘they act at random’. Burnet says of Adam that he seems to have been the first to point out that the meaning cannot be ‘they act at random’. Instead, ‘the phrase expresses indifference’. Adam′s idea, which Burnet here commends, is that the many are thoughtless in their treatment of the individual; and Adam compares 48C below: the many would lightly put (...)
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  39.  17
    Psychological Analysis and the Philosophy of John Stuart Mill.Fred Wilson - 1990
    John Stuart Mill underwent a mental crisis in the 1820s. He emerged from it, argues Fred Wilson, with a new understanding of the notion of introspective analysis more dequare as an empirical method than the sort of analysis that had been used by earlier utilitarian thinkiers such as Bentham and James Mill. Wilson's study places Mill's innovations in the context of earlier work in ethics and perception and of subsequent developments in the history of psychology. He shows the significance (...)
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  40. The virtue ethics approach to bioethics.Stephen Holland - 2011 - Bioethics 25 (4):192-201.
    This paper discusses the viability of a virtue-based approach to bioethics. Virtue ethics is clearly appropriate to addressing issues of professional character and conduct. But another major remit of bioethics is to evaluate the ethics of biomedical procedures in order to recommend regulatory policy. How appropriate is the virtue ethics approach to fulfilling this remit? The first part of this paper characterizes the methodology problem in bioethics in terms of diversity, and shows that virtue ethics does not simply restate this (...)
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  41.  74
    On the Textual Authenticity of Kant's Logic.Terry Boswell - 1988 - History and Philosophy of Logic 9 (2):193-203.
    Philological background information is presented on the origin and composition of the text generally known as Kant's Logic. The text, which was not in the strict sense of the word written by Kant himself, but rather assembled by another writer whom Kant had authorized to do so on his behalf, is a mixture of materials, not all of which originate directly from Kant, and cannot claim full authenticity.
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  42. The two-envelope paradox, nonstandard expected utility, and the intensionality of probability.Terry Horgan - 2000 - Noûs 34 (4):578–603.
  43.  14
    Democratizing Finance.Fred Block - 2014 - Politics and Society 42 (1):3-28.
    While financial institutions have not figured prominently in utopian thinking, the democratization of finance is central to any vision of bringing contemporary economies under democratic control. This paper is an initial effort to conceptualize a series of feasible reforms that could incrementally weaken the power of incumbent financial institutions while helping to facilitate economic development that is more egalitarian and sustainable. While the focus is on the US economy, the specific ideas have relevance in other national contexts. The core of (...)
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  44.  43
    Swimming Against the Current: The Rise of a Hidden Developmental State in the United States.Fred Block - 2008 - Politics and Society 36 (2):169-206.
    Despite the dominant role of market fundamentalist ideas in U.S. politics over the last thirty years, the Federal government has dramatically expanded its capacity to finance and support efforts of the private sector to commercialize new technologies. But the partisan logic of U.S. politics has worked to make these efforts invisible to mainstream public debate. The consequence is that while this “hidden developmental state” has had a major impact on the structure of the U.S. national innovation system, its ability to (...)
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  45. Self-undoing subjects.Terry Eagleton - 1997 - In Roy Porter (ed.), Rewriting the self: histories from the Renaissance to the present. New York: Routledge.
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  46.  33
    Historicism and neo-Kantianism.Fred Beiser - 2008 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 39 (4):554-564.
    This article treats the conflict between historicism and neo-Kantianism in the late nineteenth century by a careful examination of the writings of Wilhelm Windelband, the leader of the Southwestern neo-Kantians. Historicism was a profound challenge to the fundamental principles of Kant’s philosophy because it seemed to imply that there are no universal and necessary principles of science, ethics or aesthetics. Since all such principles are determined by their social and historical context, they differ with each culture and epoch. Windelband attempted (...)
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  47.  76
    Contemporary Art and Contemporaneity.Terry Smith - 2006 - Critical Inquiry 32 (4):681.
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  48.  46
    What Did Glaucon Draw?: A Diagrammatic Proof for Plato's Divided Line.Terry Echterling - 2018 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 56 (1):1-15.
    Elaborating the analogy between the sun and the good, Plato's Socrates tells Glaucon to divide a line αβ into two unequal segments at γ. The result is that αγ represents what is intelligible and γβ what is visible.1 Then Glaucon is to divide each of the two segments by the same ratio as he used in the original division.2 Whatever proportion he used to make the cuts γ, δ, and ε in the divided line, generating its four segments, the geometrical (...)
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  49.  10
    The Multivoiced Body: Society and Communication in the Age of Diversity.Fred Evans - 2009 - Columbia University Press.
    Ethnic cleansing and other methods of political and social exclusion continue to thrive in our globalized world, complicating the idea that unity and diversity can exist in the same society. When we emphasize unity, we sacrifice heterogeneity, yet when we stress diversity, we create a plurality of individuals connected only by tenuous circumstance. As long as we remain tethered to these binaries, as long as we are unable to imagine the sort of society we want in an age of diversity, (...)
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  50.  19
    'The concept of ignorance' in jean-paul sartre's notebooks for an ethics and truth and existence.Terry Keefe & Rosanna Keefe - 2001 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 32 (1):66-80.
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