Results for 'Gail Louise Geiger'

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  1.  10
    A Systematic Review of Fear of Cancer Recurrence Among Indigenous and Minority Peoples.Kate Anderson, Allan ‘Ben' Smith, Abbey Diaz, Joanne Shaw, Phyllis Butow, Louise Sharpe, Afaf Girgis, Sophie Lebel, Haryana Dhillon, Linda Burhansstipanov, Boden Tighe & Gail Garvey - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    While cancer survivors commonly experience fear and anxiety, a substantial minority experience an enduring and debilitating fear that their cancer will return; a condition commonly referred to as fear of cancer recurrence. Despite recent advances in this area, little is known about FCR among people from Indigenous or other ethnic and racial minority populations. Given the high prevalence and poor outcomes of cancer among people from these populations, a robust understanding of FCR among people from these groups is critical. The (...)
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  2.  30
    African Philosophy and the Epistemic Marginalization of Women Jonathan O. Chimakonam and Louise du Toit (Eds.). London and New York: Routledge/ Taylor and Francis, 2018. ISBN 9780815359647. [REVIEW]Gail Presbey - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (e4):1-9.
    This book addresses the relative absence of the voices and ideas of African women in philosophy. Most of the authors (who are mostly African men) bemoan the fact that many voices are missing. Each contributes what they can to highlight the importance of the gap or to address the gap. The co-editors suggest that from its start, African philosophy intended to be egalitarian, emancipatory, and revolutionary, and so the current marginalization of African women should be a prominent concern. The review (...)
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  3.  9
    The Thought of C. S. Peirce. By Thomas A. Goudge Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1950. viii + 360 pp. $5.50.George R. Geiger - 1952 - Philosophy of Science 19 (2):182-182.
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  4. Moral Realism, Aesthetic Realism, and the Asymmetry Claim.Louise Hanson - 2018 - Ethics 129 (1):39-69.
    Many people accept, at least implicitly, what I call the asymmetry claim: the view that moral realism is more defensible than aesthetic realism. This article challenges the asymmetry claim. I argue that it is surprisingly hard to find points of contrast between the two domains that could justify their very different treatment with respect to realism. I consider five potentially promising ways to do this, and I argue that all of them fail. If I am right, those who accept the (...)
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  5. The Real Problem with Evolutionary Debunking Arguments.Louise Hanson - 2017 - Philosophical Quarterly 67 (268):508-33.
    There is a substantial literature on evolutionary debunking arguments (EDAs) in metaethics. According to these arguments, evolutionary explanations of our moral beliefs pose a significant problem for moral realism, specifically by committing the realist to an unattractive pessimism about the prospects of our having moral knowledge. In this paper, I argue that EDAs exploit an equivocation between two distinct readings of their central claim. One is plausibly true but has no epistemic relevance, and the other would have epistemic consequences for (...)
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  6.  32
    Kant and the Claims of the Empirical World: A Transcendental Reading of the Critique of the Power of Judgment.Ido Geiger - 2022 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Kant announces that the Critique of the Power of Judgment will bring his entire critical enterprise to an end. But it is by no means agreed upon that it in fact does so and, if it does, how. In this book, Ido Geiger argues that a principal concern of the third Critique is completing the account of the transcendental conditions of empirical experience and knowledge. This includes both Kant's analysis of natural beauty and his discussion of teleological judgments of (...)
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  7.  28
    Kant's missing analytic of artistic beauty.Aviv Reiter & Ido Geiger - forthcoming - European Journal of Philosophy.
    The Analytic of the Beautiful in Kant's Critique of Aesthetic Judgment is a text of unparalleled importance in the history of philosophical aesthetics. Its main claims are adopted by some and rejected by others. A significant number of responses, of both kinds, take the Analytic to apply to all experiences of beauty—most notably, to the beauty of both nature and fine art. Our principal claim is that this assumption is mistaken. The analysis in the misleadingly titled Analytic of the Beautiful (...)
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  8. Two Dogmas of the Artistic-Ethical Interaction Debate.Louise Hanson - 2020 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 50 (2):209-222.
    Can artworks be morally good or bad? Many philosophers have thought so. Does this moral goodness or badness bear on how good or bad a work isas art?This is very much a live debate.Autonomistsargue that moral value is not relevant to artistic value;interactionistsargue that it is. In this paper, I argue that the debate between interactionists and autonomists has been conducted unfairly: all parties to the debate have tacitly accepted a set of constraints which prejudices the issue against the interactionist. (...)
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  9.  41
    Batteux, Kant and Schiller on fine art and moral education.Aviv Reiter & Ido Geiger - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (6):1142-1158.
  10.  30
    Global health ethics: critical reflections on the contours of an emerging field, 1977–2015.Nathan Gibson Gail Robson, Solomon Benatar Alison Thompson & Avram Denburg - 2019 - BMC Medical Ethics 20 (1):1-10.
    Background The field of bioethics has evolved over the past half-century, incorporating new domains of inquiry that signal developments in health research, clinical practice, public health in its broadest sense and more recently sensitivity to the interdependence of global health and the environment. These extensions of the reach of bioethics are a welcome response to the growth of global health as a field of vital interest and activity. Methods This paper provides a critical interpretive review of how the term “global (...)
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  11.  14
    Book Review:Experience and Valuation: A Study in John Dewey's Naturalism Benjamin Wolstein. [REVIEW]George R. Geiger - 1950 - Philosophy of Science 17 (2):202-.
  12. Feminism, bioethics and genetics.Adrienne Asch & Gail Geller - forthcoming - Feminism and Bioethics: Beyond Reproduction.
  13.  94
    Substance and Separation in Aristotle.Gail Fine & Lynne Spellman - 1996 - Philosophical Review 105 (4):527.
    Spellman argues that Aristotle developed his views about substance in response to Plato’s theory of forms. In particular, she argues that Aristotelian substances are as much like Platonic forms as possible, minus the latter’s separation. Whether ASs are like PFs depends, of course, not only on what one takes ASs to be like, but also on what one takes PFs to be like; accordingly, Spellman provides accounts of both. She argues that ASs are what she calls specimens of natural kinds. (...)
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  14.  85
    The one over many.Gail Fine - 1980 - Philosophical Review 89 (2):197-240.
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  15.  75
    Globalization, Capitalism, and Collapse in Prehistory and the Present.Louise Hitchcock - 2021 - In C. Ronald Kimberling & Stan Oliver (eds.), Libertarianism: John Hospers, the Libertarian Party’s 50th Anniversary, and Beyond. Jameson Books. pp. 292-297.
    As a libertarian studying, embracing, and teaching a philosophy of individual freedom, John Hospers, like many of us, was heavily influenced by the philosophical writings of Ayn Rand. Rand’s major novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged continue to delight and empower readers through embracing the heroic creator or inventor, technological and scientific progress, and the competent individual. These are some of the archetypes of the Randian hero. At the other end of the scale were the incompetent looters and moochers who (...)
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  16.  28
    Brill Online Books and Journals.Gail Fine, Francisco J. Gonzalez, Verity Harte, Tim O'Keefe, Tad Brennan, T. H. Irwin & Bob Sharples - 1996 - Phronesis 41 (3):245-275.
  17.  40
    The Development of Plato's Metaphysics.Gail Fine - 1984 - Philosophical Review 93 (1):143.
  18.  86
    Aristotle's Two Worlds: Posterior Analytics 1.33.Gail Fine - 2010 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 110 (3pt3):323-46.
  19.  95
    Psychological identification, imagination and psychoanalysis.Louise Braddock - 2011 - Philosophical Psychology 24 (5):639 - 657.
    Identification as a psychological concept is widely used in psychology and in social science. This use relies on an ordinary understanding of what identification is, and this understanding has itself been influenced by psychoanalysis. The concept is, however, in need of philosophical exploration. Central to its use is the idea of character, its nature and its development, which like identification itself is under-theorized. I use Richard Wollheim's philosophical analysis of identification in terms of the imagination, to trace a path from (...)
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  20.  10
    ELSI Implications of Prioritizing Biological Therapies in Times of COVID-19.Louise C. Druedahl, Audrey Lebret & Timo Minssen - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (3):579-582.
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  21. Signification, Essence, and Meno's Paradox: A Reply to David Charles's 'Types of Definition in the Meno'.Gail Fine - 2010 - Phronesis 55 (2):125-152.
    According to David Charles, in the Meno Socrates fleetingly distinguishes the signification from the essence question, but, in the end, he conflates them. Doing so, Charles thinks, both leads to Meno's paradox and prevents Socrates from answering it satisfactorily. I argue that Socrates doesn't conflate the two questions, and that his reply to Meno's paradox is more satisfactory than Charles allows.
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  22.  19
    Interview with N. Katherine Hayles.Louise Amoore & Volha Piotukh - 2019 - Theory, Culture and Society 36 (2):145-155.
    Following the publication of her 2017 book, Unthought: The Power of the Cognitive Nonconscious, N. Katherine Hayles discusses the themes of the book with Louise Amoore and Volha Piotukh. From the development of a theory of nonconscious cognition, to the capacities of novels to enact the connections between disparate phenomena, Hayles reflects on what is at stake ethically in new human-technical assemblages.
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  23.  34
    Out of their heads: Turning relational reinterpretation inside out.Louise Barrett - 2008 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (2):130-131.
    Although Penn et al's incisive critique of comparative cognition is welcomed, their heavily computational and representational account of cognition commits them to a purely internalist view of cognitive processes. This perhaps blinds them to a distributed alternative that raises the possibility that the human cognitive revolution occurred outside the head, and not in it.
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  24.  88
    The Object of Thought Argument: Forms and Thoughts.Gail Fine - 1988 - Apeiron 21 (3):105 - 145.
  25.  52
    Past Is Prologue: Ethical Issues in Pediatric Psychedelics Research and Treatment.Gail A. Edelsohn & Dominic Sisti - 2023 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 66 (1):129-144.
    Abstractabstract:Recent clinical trials of psychedelic drugs aim to treat a range of psychiatric conditions in adults. MDMA and psilocybin administered with psychotherapy have received FDA designation as "breakthrough therapies" for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and treatment-resistant depression (TRD) respectively. Given the potential benefit for minors burdened with many of the same disorders, calls to expand experimentation to minors are inevitable. This essay examines psychedelic research conducted on children from 1959 to 1974, highlighting methodological and ethical flaws. It provides ethics and (...)
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  26.  4
    Sharing Your Adventures Has Been an Interesting Experience:’ Indiana Jones and Professional Archaeology.Louise Hitchcock - 2023 - In Dean A. Kowalski (ed.), Indiana Jones and Philosophy: Why Did It Have to be Socrate? Wiley. pp. 178-187.
    What Indiana Jones can teach us about the ethics of practicing and teaching archeology.
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  27.  17
    Mismatch repair in mammalian cells.Louise A. Heywood & Julian F. Burke - 1990 - Bioessays 12 (10):473-477.
    A vital process in maintaining a low genetic error rate is the removal of mismatched bases in DNA. The importance of this process in E. coli is demonstrated by the 100–1000 fold increase in mutation frequency observed in cells deficient in this repair system(1). Mismatches can arise as a consequence of recombination, errors in replication and as a result of spontaneous chemical deamination, the latter process resulting in an estimated twelve T:G mismatches per genome per day in mammalian cells(2). Recent (...)
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  28.  23
    Modeling the cosmos: Transformative pedagogy in science and religion.Louise Hickman - 2018 - Zygon 53 (3):881-886.
    This article reflects on the classroom pedagogy promoted by Christopher Southgate and its implications for the science–theology conversation. It highlights several important aspects of Southgate's pedagogy. The use of models of God, humanity, and cosmos emphasize relationality while encouraging the synthesizing of ideas. The promotion of holism in theological reflection is vital for nurturing students to become theologians themselves through the active reevaluation of key doctrines and ideas. An emphasis on ethical considerations reinforces synthesis between theology, science, and ethics, and (...)
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  29. Decolonization, Western Civilization, and the Incredible Whiteness of Being in Black Athena.Louise Hitchcock - forthcoming - In Sarah Kielt Costello & Sarah Lepinski (eds.), Archaeological Ethics in Practice. Alexandria: American Society of Overseas Research.
    The reception of Martin Bernal’s Black Athena in 1987 by classicists focused on Bernal’s errors of fact rather than on the content of his message. The thrust of this message was that Classics is a Eurocentric project that systematically excluded the Levantine and Egyptian contribution to European civilization. In 1996, I was hired to develop a Black Athena course to counter the Afrocentric view that black people were systematically excluded from their contribution to the fetishization of “Western Civilization” in Classics, (...)
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  30.  18
    Theory for classics: a student's guide.Louise Hitchcock - 2008 - London: Routledge.
    This student's guide is a clear and concise handbook to the key connections between Classical Studies and critical theory in the twentieth century.
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  31.  6
    Colloquium 6.Gail Fine - 1994 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 10 (1):211-243.
  32.  49
    Synthesis of theories through parametrisation of laws.Gebhard Geiger - 1988 - Erkenntnis 29 (3):343 - 355.
    The paper presents an example of unified theory bearing interest from both a historical and systematic point of view. The example is chosen from evolutionary population genetics (neo-Darwinian synthetic theory). It exhibits various aspects of theoretical change in science that have been shown in Part I (Geiger, 1988) to be characteristic of syntheses of theories.
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  33. The Concept of Time.Louise Robinson Heath - 1937 - Philosophy 12 (47):364-364.
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  34. Aristotle's Two Worlds: Knowledge and Belief inPosterior Analytics 1.33.Gail Fine - 2010 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 110 (3pt3):323-346.
    At the end of Republic 5, Plato distinguishes epistêmê from doxa, knowledge from belief. In Posterior Analytics 1.33, Aristotle provides his own distinction between epistêmê and doxa. I explore his way of distinguishing them and compare it with Plato's.
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  35.  26
    Signification, Essence, and Meno’s Paradox: A Reply to David Charles’s ‘Types of Definition in the Meno’.Gail Fine - 2010 - Phronesis: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy 55 (2):125-152.
  36.  33
    Signification, Essence, and Meno’s Paradox: A Reply to David Charles’s ‘Types of Definition in the Meno’.Gail Fine - 2010 - Phronesis 55 (2):125-152.
  37.  9
    Body ownership and kinaesthetic illusions: Dissociated bodily experiences for distinct levels of body consciousness?Louise Dupraz, Jessica Bourgin, Lorenzo Pia, Julien Barra & Michel Guerraz - 2024 - Consciousness and Cognition 117 (C):103630.
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  38.  34
    Understanding Projective Identification.Louise Braddock - 2018 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 25 (2):65-79.
    How exactly does a patient succeed in imposing a phantasy and its corresponding affect upon his analyst in order to deny it in himself is a most interesting problem… In the analytic situation, a peculiarity of communication[s] of this kind is that, at first sight, they do not seem as if they had been made by the patient at all. The analyst experiences the affect as being his own response to something. The effort involved is in differentiating the patient's contribution (...)
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  39.  4
    Discursive control and power in virtual meetings.Gail Forey & Jane Lockwood - 2016 - Discourse and Communication 10 (4):323-340.
    Ways of communicating effectively in spoken English, using technology, in a virtual globalized context have received little attention from applied linguists. The role of language in synchronous computer-mediated discourse used in virtual teamwork is now emerging as a key area of research concern in business management and information technology disciplines. This article uses linguistic frameworks, most particularly critical discourse analysis and systemic functional linguistics, in particular appraisal analysis, to demonstrate how interpersonal meanings may create dominance, power and solidarity within a (...)
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  40. An Inquiry into the Historical Development of Philosophy in Japan.Kelly Louise Rexzy P. Agra - 2013 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 17 (2):27-59.
    What is Japanese philosophy? This paper will address this question, not by giving a survey of the works of Japanese philosophers or a definition of the subject matter of Japanese philosophy, but by attempting to present how it emerged as a distinct philosophical tradition—by sketching the controversies that gave rise to its formation; the social, intellectual, and historical factors that paved the way to its development; and the revolution of thought which finally gave it the title “Japanese philosophy.” I will (...)
     
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  41.  57
    The Event Divides into Two or the Parallax of Change: Badiou, Žižek, Bosteels, and Johnston.Kelly Louise Rexzy Agra - 2018 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 12 (3).
    This paper takes off from a growing preoccupation in Western political-social philosophy on the thinkability of the materiality of change, that became most pronounced in Alain Badiou's philosophy of the event. It traces the development of the discourse of radical change tied to a materialist theory of subjectivity beginning from Badiou, down to the strong criticism posed against it by Slavoj Žižek. This is then followed by the discussion of Bruno Bosteels' potent defense of Badiou's philosophy. Finally, the last part (...)
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  42.  52
    On the essence and meaning of empathy, Part II.Moritz Geiger - 2015 - Dialogues in Philosophy, Mental and Neuro Sciences 8 (2):75-86.
    In this second part of his lecture, Geiger deals with the question of empathy for non-human entities, like various kinds of objects. Again, Geiger differentiates between various questions that are usually mixed together in the relevant literature. Thus, he distinguishes the question of fact from the psychological theories about possible mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon. In the last part there is an interesting debate showing how different is the approach between experimenters and philosophers. In his conclusion, Geiger (...)
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  43.  5
    A sufficiently fast algorithm for finding close to optimal clique trees.Ann Becker & Dan Geiger - 2001 - Artificial Intelligence 125 (1-2):3-17.
  44.  18
    Culture of Ceylon in Medieval Times.Ernest Bender, Wilhelm Geiger & Heinz Bechert - 1987 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 107 (4):847.
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  45.  16
    Science, folklore, and philosophy.Harry Girvetz, George Geiger, Harold Hantz & Bertram Morris - 1967 - New York: Harper & Row.
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  46.  57
    Two Dogmas of the Artistic-Ethical Interaction Debate – Erratum.Louise Hanson - 2020 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 50 (2):1-1.
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  47.  7
    Concepts.Louise Antony - 2013 - In Dan Ryder, Justine Kingsbury & Kenneth Williford (eds.), Millikan and her critics. Malden, MA: Wiley. pp. 107–122.
    This chapter contains section titles: Abilities Concepts Conclusion.
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  48.  4
    Optimization of Pearl's method of conditioning and greedy-like approximation algorithms for the vertex feedback set problem.Ann Becker & Dan Geiger - 1996 - Artificial Intelligence 83 (1):167-188.
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  49.  22
    Annual General Meeting Members Lunch.Elspeth Bodley, Louise Donohoe, Councillor Bill Coombes, Vice-President Rod Barnett, Michael Phelps, Walter Hawkins, Tal Williams, Gavin Lee & Jo Clay - 2006 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology.
    "Annual General Meeting Members Lunch." Ethos: Official Publication of the Law Society of the Australian Capital Territory, (202), pp. 17.
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  50.  19
    Philosophie, Politik Und Religion: Klassische Modelle von der Antike Bis Zur Gegenwart.Dirk Brantl, Rolf Geiger & Stephan Herzberg (eds.) - 2013 - [Berlin]: De Gruyter.
    Unter dem Eindruck einer "Renaissance des Religiösen" einerseits und der zunehmenden Politisierung von Religionen andererseits rückt die Verhältnisbestimmung von Politik und Religion im staatlichen wie im internationalen Kontext verstärkt in den Fokus des politischen und gesellschaftlichen Interesses. In den letzten Jahren trägt auch die politische Philosophie dieser Situation vermehrt Rechnung, was sich in einer steigenden Zahl von Veröffentlichungen zu diesem Thema niederschlägt. Dabei kann sie auf eine reiche Tradition philosophischer Modelle zum Neben-, Mit- oder Gegeneinander von Politik und Religion zurückblicken. (...)
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