Results for 'Fred Albin'

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  1.  1
    Fred Hoyle, Chandra N. Wickramasinghe, Le Nuage de la vie. Les origines de la vie dans l’univers, trad. française de l’anglais par René Bernex. Paris, Albin Michel, 1980. 13,5 × 21, 256 p.(« Science d’aujourd’hui»)./Francis Crick, La Vie vient de l’espace, trad. française de l’américain. Paris, Hachette, 1982. 14 × 22, 200 p./Joël De Rosnay, Les Origines de la vie (de l’atome à la cellule). Paris, Le Seuil, 2ᵉ éd. 1977. 11,7 × 18, 192 p.(« Points-Sciences », S 10). [REVIEW]Anne Diara - 1984 - Revue de Synthèse 105 (115):360-371.
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  2.  24
    Pleasure and the Good Life: Concerning the Nature Varieties and Plausibility of Hedonism.Fred Feldman - 2004 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press. Edited by Fred Feldman.
    Fred Feldman's fascinating new book sets out to defend hedonism as a theory about the Good Life. He tries to show that, when carefully and charitably interpreted, certain forms of hedonism yield plausible evaluations of human lives. Feldman begins by explaining the question about the Good Life. As he understands it, the question is not about the morally good life or about the beneficial life. Rather, the question concerns the general features of the life that is good in itself (...)
  3.  17
    The logic of natural language.Fred Sommers - 1982 - New York: Oxford University Press.
  4.  4
    A Multilevel Analysis of the Relationship Between Ethical Leadership and Ostracism: The Roles of Relational Climate, Employee Mindfulness, and Work Unit Structure.Amanda Christensen-Salem, Fred O. Walumbwa, Mayowa T. Babalola, Liang Guo & Everlyne Misati - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 171 (3):619-638.
    Drawing on insights from social learning and social cognitive perspectives and research on the multilevel reality of leadership influences, we developed and tested a multilevel model that examines mechanisms and conditions through which ethical leadership deters work unit- and individual-level ostracism. Based on two field studies using multiple measurement points, we found that at the work unit level of analysis, relational climate partially mediates the negative relationship between ethical leadership and work unit-level ostracism whereas state mindfulness partially mediates the cross-level (...)
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  5.  4
    Distributive Justice: Getting What We Deserve From Our Country.Fred Feldman - 2016 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Everyone agrees that justice is a profoundly important value. People march and protest to demand it; more than a few have died in its pursuit. Yet when we stop to reflect on what makes for justice, or try to state in a clear way what we mean when we speak of justice, we may be perplexed. But if you are going to die in defense of some value, it is important for you to have a fairly clear conception of what (...)
  6.  9
    Types and ontology.Fred Sommers - 1963 - Philosophical Review 72 (3):327-363.
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  7.  27
    Measurement Theory.Fred S. Roberts (ed.) - 1985 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book provides an introduction to measurement theory for non-specialists and puts measurement in the social and behavioural sciences on a firm mathematical foundation. Results are applied to such topics as measurement of utility, psychophysical scaling and decision-making about pollution, energy, transportation and health. The results and questions presented should be of interest to both students and practising mathematicians since the author sets forth an area of mathematics unfamiliar to most mathematicians, but which has many potentially significant applications.
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  8.  7
    The Good Life: A Defense of Attitudinal Hedonism.Fred Feldman - 2002 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (3):604-628.
    What makes a life go well for the one who lives it? Hedonists hold that pleasure enhances the value of a life; pain diminishes it. Hedonism has been subjected to a number of objections. Some are (a) based on the claim that hedonism is a form of “mental statism”. Others are (b) based on the claim that some pleasures are base or degrading. Yet others are (c) based on the claim that when a bad person enjoys a pleasure, his receipt (...)
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  9.  7
    Adjusting Utility for Justice.Fred Feldman - 1995 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (3):567-585.
    1. Introduction. In a famous passage near the beginning of A Theory of Justice, John Rawls discusses utilitarianism’s notorious difficulties with justice. According to classic forms of utilitarianism, a certain course of action is morally right if it produces the greatest sum of satisfactions. And, as Rawls points out, the perplexing implication is “…that it does not matter, except indirectly, how this sum of satisfactions is distributed among individuals any more than it matters, except indirectly, how one man distributes his (...)
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  10.  18
    The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Death.Ben Bradley, Fred Feldman & Jens Johansson (eds.) - 2012 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Death has long been a pre-occupation of philosophers, and this is especially so today. The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Death collects 21 newly commissioned essays that cover current philosophical thinking of death-related topics across the entire range of the discipline. These include metaphysical topics--such as the nature of death, the possibility of an afterlife, the nature of persons, and how our thinking about time affects what we think about death--as well as axiological topics, such as whether death is bad (...)
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  11.  22
    Dissonant beliefs.Fred Sommers - 2009 - Analysis 69 (2):267-274.
    1. Philosophers tend to talk of belief as a ‘propositional attitude.’ As Fodor says:" The standard story about believing is that it's a two place relation, viz., a relation between a person and a proposition. My story is that believing is never an unmediated relation between a person and a proposition. In particular nobody grasps a proposition except insofar as he is appropriately related to some vehicle that expresses the proposition. " Fodor's story – that belief is a three-place relation (...)
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  12.  17
    The calculus of terms.Fred Sommers - 1970 - Mind 79 (313):1-39.
  13. On Purposeful Systems.Russell L. Ackoff & Fred E. Emery - 1976 - Philosophy of Science 43 (3):456-458.
  14.  9
    The ordinary language tree.Fred Sommers - 1959 - Mind 68 (270):160-185.
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  15.  9
    Structural ontology.Fred Sommers - 1971 - Philosophia 1 (1-2):21-42.
  16. Predicability.Fred Sommers - 1964 - In Max Black (ed.), Philosophy in America. Ithaca: Routledge. pp. 262--281.
     
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  17. Two Non-Counterexamples to Truth-Tracking Theories of Knowledge.Fred Adams & Murray Clarke - 2016 - Logos and Episteme 7 (1):67-73.
    In a recent paper, Tristan Haze offers two examples that, he claims, are counterexamples to Nozick's Theory of Knowledge. Haze claims his examples work against Nozick's theory understood as relativized to belief forming methods M. We believe that they fail to be counterexamples to Nozick's theory. Since he aims the examples at tracking theories generally, we will also explain why they are not counterexamples to Dretske's Conclusive Reasons Theory of Knowledge.
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  18.  15
    Empty Names and Pragmatic Implicatures.Fred Adams & Gary Fuller - 2007 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (3):449-461.
    What are the meanings of empty names such as ‘Vulcan,’ ‘Pegasus,’ and ‘Santa Claus’ in such sentences as ‘Vulcan is the tenth planet,’ ‘Pegasus flies,’ and especially ‘Santa Claus does not exist’?Our view, developed in Adams et al., consists of a direct-reference account of the meaning of empty names in combination with a pragmatic-implicature account of why we have certain intuitions that seem to conflict with a direct-reference account.
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  19.  6
    What Good is Consciousness?Fred Dretske - 1997 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 27 (1):1-15.
    If consciousness is good for something, conscious things must differ in some causally relevant way from unconscious things. If they do not, then, as Davies and Humphreys conclude, too bad for consciousness: ‘psychological theory need not be concerned with this topic.’Davies and Humphreys are applying a respectable metaphysical idea — the idea, namely, that if an object's having a property does not make a difference to what that object does, if the object's causal powers are in no way enhanced by (...)
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  20.  9
    The Cambridge companion to critical theory.Fred Rush (ed.) - 2004 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Critical Theory constitutes one of the major intellectual traditions of the twentieth century, and is centrally important for philosophy, political theory, aesthetics and theory of art, the study of modern European literatures and music, the history of ideas, sociology, psychology, and cultural studies. In this volume an international team of distinguished contributors examines the major figures in Critical Theory, including Horkheimer, Adorno, Marcuse, Benjamin, and Habermas, as well as lesser known but important thinkers such as Pollock and Neumann. The volume (...)
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  21.  8
    Do we need identity?Fred Sommers - 1969 - Journal of Philosophy 66 (15):499-504.
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  22.  1
    Differences that Make No Difference.Fred Dretske - 1994 - Philosophical Topics 22 (1-2):41-57.
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  23.  19
    The harmony of the faculties.Fred L. Rush - 2001 - Kant Studien 92 (1):38-61.
    The primary task confronting an examination of the claimed connection between Kant's general theory of cognition and his account of aesthetic judgment requires clarifying perhaps the most obscure component of that account, the doctrine of the harmony of the faculties. Kant's presentation of this doctrine makes it notoriously difficult to penetrate. Much of what Kant says about the harmony of the faculties – perhaps the very phrase “the harmony of the faculties” – is rather imprecise and metaphorical. Yet, the importance (...)
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  24.  8
    Living High and Letting Die.Fred Feldman - 1999 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (1):177-181.
    By contributing a few hundred dollars to a charity like UNICEF, a prosperous person can ensure that fewer poor children die, and that more will live reasonably long, worthwhile lives. Even when knowing this, however, most people send nothing, and almost all of the rest send little. What is the moral status of this behavior? To such common cases of letting die, our untutored response is that, while it is not very good, neither is the conduct wrong. What is the (...)
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  25.  6
    Aristotle on the Reality of Time.Fred D. Miller - 1974 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 56 (2):132.
  26.  3
    Distribution matters.Fred Sommers - 1975 - Mind 84 (333):27-46.
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  27.  8
    Predication in the Logic of Terms.Fred Sommers - 1989 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 31 (1):106-126.
  28. The intentionality of perception.Fred Dretske - 2003 - In Barry Smith (ed.), John Searle. Cambridge University Press. pp. 154-168.
     
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  29.  11
    On Concepts of Truth in Natural Languages.Fred Sommers - 1969 - Review of Metaphysics 23 (2):259 - 286.
    The purpose Tarski speaks of is "to do justice to our intuitions which adhere to the classical Aristotelian conception of truth." Tarski takes this to be some form of correspondence theory. He has earlier considered and rejected an even less satisfactory formula of this sort: 'a sentence is true if it corresponds to reality'. His own semantic conception of truth is meant to be a more precise variant doing justice to the correspondence standpoint. In this spirit I shall presently suggest (...)
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  30.  6
    Two Conceptions of Knowledge.Fred Dretske - 1991 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 40 (1):15-30.
    There are two ways to think about knowledge: From the bottom-up point of view, knowledge is an early arrival on the evolutionary scene; it is what animals need in order to coordinate their behavior with the environmental conditions. The top-down approach, departing from Descartes, considers knowledge constituted by a justified belief which gains its justification only in so far as the process by means of which it is reached conforms to canons of sciemific inference and rational theory choice. Keith Lehrer's (...)
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  31. Conceptual foundations of early Critical Theory.Fred Rush - 2004 - In The Cambridge companion to critical theory. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 6--39.
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  32.  6
    The Metaphysics of Freedom.Fred Dretske - 1992 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 22 (1):1-13.
    I offer Jimmy a dollar to wiggle his ears. He wiggles them because he wants the dollar and, as a result of my offer, thinks he will earn it by wiggling his ears. So I cause him to believe something that explains, or helps to explain, why he wiggles his ears. If I push a button, and a bell, wired to the button, rings because the button is depressed, I cause the bell to ring. I make it ring. Indeed, I (...)
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  33.  12
    Putnam’s Born-Again Realism.Fred Sommers - 1997 - Journal of Philosophy 94 (9):453-471.
  34.  1
    On a Fregean dogma.Fred Sommers - 1967 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 39 (2):47--62.
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  35. Philosophy and Sex (First Edition).Robert Baker & Fred Elliston (eds.) - 1975 - Prometheus Books.
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  36. Mill on psychology and the moral sciences.Fred Wilson - 1998 - In John Skorupski (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Mill. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 203--54.
     
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  37.  1
    Beyond Orientalism: Essays on Cross-Cultural Encounter.Paul Gallagher & Fred Dallmayr - 1998 - Philosophy East and West 48 (4):663.
  38.  4
    Belief De Mundo.Fred Sommers - 2005 - American Philosophical Quarterly 42 (2):117 - 124.
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  39.  11
    A program for coherence.Fred Sommers - 1964 - Philosophical Review 73 (4):522-527.
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  40.  4
    Why Is There Something and Not Nothing?Fred Sommers - 1966 - Analysis 26 (6):177 - 181.
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  41.  15
    Adorno's Negative Dialectic: Philosophy and the Possibility of Critical Rationality.Fred Rush - 2007 - Philosophical Review 116 (1):131-135.
  42. Ethics and Risk Factors for Esophageal Cancer & Awareness of Cancer Related Health Services Among Adults in Rural Kilimanjaro, Tanzania: A Prerequisite for Cancer Down Staging.Josephine Joseph Mwakisambwe, Fred Kasasi, Elia J. Mbaga & Darryl Macer - 2018 - Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 28 (3):82-94.
    The mortality and morbidity resulting from noncommunicable diseases including cancer in sub- Saharan Africa are predicted to overtake that of infectious diseases by the year 2030. Esophageal cancer is on the increase in Tanzania. This study estimates risk factors for esophageal cancer, ethical issues and the level of awareness of cancer related services among adults in rural Kilimanjaro. A cross sectional descriptive study was conducted of adults aged 18 years and above in three wards, namely, Kahe, mabogini and Arusha Chini, (...)
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  43. How We Naturally Reason.Fred Sommers - manuscript
    In the 17th century, Hobbes stated that we reason by addition and subtraction. Historians of logic note that Hobbes thought of reasoning as “a ‘species of computation’” but point out that “his writing contains in fact no attempt to work out such a project.” Though Leibniz mentions the plus/minus character of the positive and negative copulas, neither he nor Hobbes say anything about a plus/minus character of other common logical words that drive our deductive judgments, words like ‘some’, ‘all’, ‘if’, (...)
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  44.  17
    Meaning relations and the analytic.Fred Sommers - 1963 - Journal of Philosophy 60 (18):524-534.
  45.  8
    The passing of privileged uniqueness.Fred Sommers - 1952 - Journal of Philosophy 49 (11):392-397.
  46. Información, computación y cognición.Fred Dretske - 2010 - Agora 29 (2):113-120.
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  47.  9
    Category clustering in incidental learning.Fred Shima - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 79 (2p1):380.
  48.  2
    Emil Oestereicher (1936-1983) Notes on Neo-Liberalism.Fred Siegel - 1984 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (59):171-174.
    I spent last year teaching in Paris and when I came home for visits, Emil and I would play the analogy game between Western European and American political tendencies. Besides the obvious matches between Reagan, Thatcher and Chirac, we talked of the similarities between George Will and Ian Gilmore, the intellectual spokesman for the Tory Wets, both of whom drew on the same stock of quotes from Bolingbroke, Hume and Burke. But what of the American neo-liberals? Who were their counterparts? (...)
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  49.  1
    Is Archie Bunker Fit to Rule? Or: How Immanuel Kant Became One of the Founding Fathers.Fred Siegel - 1986 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1986 (69):9-29.
    Until the mid 1970s, pragmatism reigned as the “almost… official philosophy of America.” European critics charged that James’ and Dewey's pragmatism was less a philosophy than a “method of doing without one.” But pragmatism's loose and democratic emphasis on problem-solving suited the unbounded American personality with its optimistic faith in persistent progress. Dewey's pragmatism was at once so democratic and informal in its emphasis on shared methods of rational inquiry that Bertrand Russell once accused him of “being unable to distinguish (...)
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  50.  1
    The Alliance: America-Europe-Japan, Makers of the Post-War.Fred Siegel - 1984 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (60):219-223.
    Le Monde's financial analyst Paul Fabra captured the essence of the Western “Alliances'” difficulties in an article describing European reactions to Carter and Reagan economic policies. Under Carter he noted, the U.S. initially followed an expansionary policy of low interest rates and increased public spending driving the dollar downward. The cheaper dollar increased both American exports to Europe and European complaints about American competition. Reagan reversed course and the Europeans had a different, though equally intense set of grievances. “The fact (...)
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