Results for 'George H. Long'

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  1. Some popular philosophy.George H. Long - 1903 - London,: S. Sonnenschein & co..
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  2.  56
    Justification.George H. Tavard - 1987 - Philosophy and Theology 1 (3):267-281.
    This article and its sequel illustrate the thesis that oblivion of the doctrine of justification and liturgical-eucharistic decadence went together in the middle ages. The ensuing contradictions led directly to the Reformation. Luther recovered the doctrine of justification as he tried to answer the question, how do sinners become just in God’s eyes? But his liturgical reforms were inspired by a medieval theology which made it impossible for him to restore the patristic insight into liturgy and the eucharistic mystery. The (...)
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    Justification.George H. Tavard - 1987 - Philosophy and Theology 1 (3):267-281.
    This article and its sequel illustrate the thesis that oblivion of the doctrine of justification and liturgical-eucharistic decadence went together in the middle ages. The ensuing contradictions led directly to the Reformation. Luther recovered the doctrine of justification as he tried to answer the question, how do sinners become just in God’s eyes? But his liturgical reforms were inspired by a medieval theology which made it impossible for him to restore the patristic insight into liturgy and the eucharistic mystery. The (...)
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  4.  13
    European and American Philosophers.John Marenbon, Douglas Kellner, Richard D. Parry, Gregory Schufreider, Ralph McInerny, Andrea Nye, R. M. Dancy, Vernon J. Bourke, A. A. Long, James F. Harris, Thomas Oberdan, Paul S. MacDonald, Véronique M. Fóti, F. Rosen, James Dye, Pete A. Y. Gunter, Lisa J. Downing, W. J. Mander, Peter Simons, Maurice Friedman, Robert C. Solomon, Nigel Love, Mary Pickering, Andrew Reck, Simon J. Evnine, Iakovos Vasiliou, John C. Coker, Georges Dicker, James Gouinlock, Paul J. Welty, Gianluigi Oliveri, Jack Zupko, Tom Rockmore, Wayne M. Martin, Ladelle McWhorter, Hans-Johann Glock, Georgia Warnke, John Haldane, Joseph S. Ullian, Steven Rieber, David Ingram, Nick Fotion, George Rainbolt, Thomas Sheehan, Gerald J. Massey, Barbara D. Massey, David E. Cooper, David Gauthier, James M. Humber, J. N. Mohanty, Michael H. Dearmey, Oswald O. Schrag, Ralf Meerbote, George J. Stack, John P. Burgess, Paul Hoyningen-Huene, Nicholas Jolley, Adriaan T. Peperzak, E. J. Lowe, William D. Richardson, Stephen Mulhall & C. - 2017 - In Robert L. Arrington (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophers. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 109–557.
    Peter Abelard (1079–1142 ce) was the most wide‐ranging philosopher of the twelfth century. He quickly established himself as a leading teacher of logic in and near Paris shortly after 1100. After his affair with Heloise, and his subsequent castration, Abelard became a monk, but he returned to teaching in the Paris schools until 1140, when his work was condemned by a Church Council at Sens. His logical writings were based around discussion of the “Old Logic”: Porphyry's Isagoge, aristotle'S Categories and (...)
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  5.  15
    Long-term memory following serial discrimination reversal learning.William H. Calhoun & George W. Handley - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 1 (5):354-356.
  6.  86
    Statistical Power, the Belmont Report, and the Ethics of Clinical Trials.Sara H. Vollmer & George Howard - 2010 - Science and Engineering Ethics 16 (4):675-691.
    Achieving a good clinical trial design increases the likelihood that a trial will take place as planned, including that data will be obtained from a sufficient number of participants, and the total number of participants will be the minimal required to gain the knowledge sought. A good trial design also increases the likelihood that the knowledge sought by the experiment will be forthcoming. Achieving such a design is more than good sense—it is ethically required in experiments when participants are at (...)
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  7.  8
    Kierkegaard's Journals and Notebooks, Volume 6: Journals Nb11 - Nb14.Bruce H. Kirmmse, K. Brian Söderquist, Niels Jørgen Cappelørn, Alastair Hannay, David Kangas, George Pattison, Joel D. S. Rasmussen & Vanessa Rumble (eds.) - 2013 - Princeton University Press.
    For over a century, the Danish thinker Søren Kierkegaard has been at the center of a number of important discussions, concerning not only philosophy and theology, but also, more recently, fields such as social thought, psychology, and contemporary aesthetics, especially literary theory. Despite his relatively short life, Kierkegaard was an extraordinarily prolific writer, as attested to by the 26-volume Princeton University Press edition of all of his published writings. But Kierkegaard left behind nearly as much unpublished writing, most of which (...)
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  8.  7
    Kierkegaard's Journals and Notebooks, Volume 5: Journals Nb6-Nb10.Niels Jørgen Cappelørn, Alastair Hannay, David Kangas, Bruce H. Kirmmse, George Pattison, Joel D. S. Rasmussen, Vanessa Rumble & K. Brian Söderquist (eds.) - 2012 - Princeton University Press.
    For over a century, the Danish thinker Søren Kierkegaard has been at the center of a number of important discussions, concerning not only philosophy and theology, but also, more recently, fields such as social thought, psychology, and contemporary aesthetics, especially literary theory. Despite his relatively short life, Kierkegaard was an extraordinarily prolific writer, as attested to by the 26-volume Princeton University Press edition of all of his published writings. But Kierkegaard left behind nearly as much unpublished writing, most of which (...)
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  9.  10
    Kierkegaard's Journals and Notebooks, Volume 4: Journals Nb-Nb5.Niels Jørgen Cappelørn, Alastair Hannay, David Kangas, Bruce H. Kirmmse, George Pattison, Joel D. S. Rasmussen, Vanessa Rumble & K. Brian Söderquist (eds.) - 2011 - Princeton University Press.
    For over a century, the Danish thinker Søren Kierkegaard has been at the center of a number of important discussions, concerning not only philosophy and theology, but also, more recently, fields such as social thought, psychology, and contemporary aesthetics, especially literary theory. Despite his relatively short life, Kierkegaard was an extraordinarily prolific writer, as attested to by the 26-volume Princeton University Press edition of all of his published writings. But Kierkegaard left behind nearly as much unpublished writing, most of which (...)
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  10.  30
    The politics of method in the human sciences: positivism and its epistemological others.George Steinmetz (ed.) - 2005 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    The Politics of Method in the Human Sciences provides a remarkable comparative assessment of the variations of positivism and alternative epistemologies in the contemporary human sciences. Often declared obsolete, positivism is alive and well in a number of the fields; in others, its influence is significantly diminished. The essays in this collection investigate its mutations in form and degree across the social science disciplines. Looking at methodological assumptions field by field, individual essays address anthropology, area studies, economics, history, the philosophy (...)
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  11.  3
    One Thousand ḥijaj.George Warner - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 142 (2).
    This article is a study of the earliest Twelver Shiʿi literature on pilgrimage to the tombs of the Prophet Muḥammad and his revered descendants. Such tombs had been visited since the first centuries of Islam, holding especial importance for Shiʿis, but the associated pilgrimage rites were not discussed in early Islamic legal literature. This had changed by the mid-fourth/tenth century, as Twelver scholars sought to codify ziyāra alongside long-established rites like prayer and ḥajj. As they did so, these scholars (...)
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  12. The Philosophy of Medicine Reborn: A Pellegrino Reader.H. Tristram Engelhardt & Fabrice Jotterand (eds.) - 2008 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    Edmund D. Pellegrino has played a central role in shaping the fields of bioethics and the philosophy of medicine. His writings encompass original explorations of the healing relationship, the need to place humanism in the medical curriculum, the nature of the patient’s good, and the importance of a virtue-based normative ethics for health care. In this anthology, H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr., and Fabrice Jotterand have created a rich presentation of Pellegrino’s thought and its development. Pellegrino’s work has been dedicated to (...)
     
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  13.  27
    Emerson, Whitman, and Conceptual Art.George J. Leonard - 1989 - Philosophy and Literature 13 (2):297-306.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:George J. Leonard EMERSON, WHITMAN, AND CONCEPTUAL ART The widespread abandoning of the art object at the end of the 1960s was taken as something radically, even frighteningly, new, by critics and artists alike. Objects, concept artist Joseph Kosuth was asserting by 1969, are "irrelevant" to art. Though an artist might choose, as in the past, to "employ" objects, "all art is finally conceptual." In fact it was (...)
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  14.  4
    Kierkegaard and Speculative Theology.George Pattison - 2007 - Hegel Bulletin 28 (1-2):23-44.
    In recent years, the long-standing philosophical and religious duel between ‘Hegel’ and ‘Kierkegaard’ has quiedy transmuted into something that, if still far from an amicable resolution, is something much less black and white. We are, of course, collectively grateful to Jon Stewart for demonstrating not only something of the extent to which ‘Kierkegaard's relation to Hegel’ needs to be re-envisaged as ‘Kierkegaard'srelationsto Hegel,’ but also that, often, even mosdy, the passages where Kierkegaard is seemingly attacking Hegel are actually directed (...)
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  15.  20
    Grazing in the Sunlight: On H. S. Harris's “The Cows in the Dark Night”.George di Giovanni - 1987 - Dialogue 26 (4):653-.
    I have only two comments to make, both of which will appear incidental at first. Their full relevance to the paper you have just read will become clear at the end, as I hope.The first refers to Harris's remark that Jacobi, Schleiermacher and Herder “make strange bedfellows”. Actually, they do not. This is one more example, I believe, of Hegel's usual idiosyncratic yet conceptually sound classification of philosophers and philosophies. I am thinking especially of the Jacobi-Herder pair, but I suspect (...)
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  16. Literature, Ethics, and the Emotions.Kenneth George Asher - 2017 - Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    Recently there has been a renewed interest in the ethical value of literature. However, how exactly does literature contribute to our ethical understanding? In Literature, Ethics, and the Emotions, Kenneth Asher argues that literary scholars should locate this question in the long and various history of moral philosophy. On the basis of his own reading of this history, Asher contends for the centrality of emotions in our ethical lives and shows how literature - novels, poetry, and drama - can (...)
     
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  17.  8
    Social Studies and Objectivity.Maurice Mandelbaum & George H. Sabine - 1943 - Philosophical Review 52 (1):81.
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  18.  49
    The epistemology of causality from the point of view of evolutionary biology.H. J. Barr - 1964 - Philosophy of Science 31 (3):286-288.
    In 1958 I set down some thoughts that arose from an attempt to consider epistemological problems on the assumptions that The biology of the human nervous system is relevant to epistemology and The human nervous system, like every other object of biological investigation, is a product of evolution by natural selection. These thoughts lay more or less neglected until they were brought stunningly to mind by Professor George Gaylord Simpson's [1] recent paper on “Biology and the Nature of Science”. (...)
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  19.  7
    Educational leadership for ethics and social justice: views from the social sciences.Anthony H. Normore & Jeffrey S. Brooks (eds.) - 2014 - Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing.
    A volume in Educational Leadership for Social Justice Series Editor Jeffrey S. Brooks, University of Idaho, Denise E. Armstrong, Brock University; Ira Bogotch, Florida Atlantic University; Sandra Harris, Lamar University; Whitney H. Sherman, Virginia Commonwealth University; George Theoharis, Syracuse University The purpose of this book is to examine and learn lessons from the way leadership for social justice is conceptualized in several disciplines and to consider how these lessons might improve the preparation and practice of school leaders. In particular, (...)
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  20. The relativized a priori and the laboratory of the mind: towards a neo-Kantian account of thought experiments in science.Yiftach J. H. Fehige - 2013 - Epistemologia 36 (1):55-73.
    Building on a previously published contextualization of Marco Buzzoni’s Neo- Kantian account of scientific thought-experiments, this paper examines the explanatory power of this account. It is argued that Buzzoni’s account suffers from a number of shortcomings. Einstein’s clock-in-the-box thought experiment facilitates the demonstration of these deficits. In the light of both the identified inadequacies of Buzzoni’s account and the long-standing history of Kantian approaches to thought experiments, this paper finally sketches an alternative Neo-Kantian account. This alternative utilizes Michael Friedman’s (...)
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  21.  21
    Buddhist Thought in India. [REVIEW]P. J. H. - 1970 - Review of Metaphysics 23 (4):739-739.
    Copyrighted originally by George Allen and Unwin Ltd. in 1962 this paper edition makes Conze's review of Indian Buddhism available at a relatively low price. The book is divided into three parts: Archaic Buddhism which deals with facets common to all of Indian Buddhism, the Sthaviras which deals with the Hinayäna, and the Mahäyäna. Often a commentator will present a traditional view of Indian Buddhism through a translation of some Buddhist's compendium on Buddhism. This work, however, is the result (...)
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  22. Reading Eyes.R. H. Jackson - 2013 - Continent 3 (2):13-16.
    This piece, included in the drift special issue of continent. , was created as one step in a thread of inquiry. While each of the contributions to drift stand on their own, the project was an attempt to follow a line of theoretical inquiry as it passed through time and the postal service(s) from October 2012 until May 2013. This issue hosts two threads: between space & place and between intention & attention . The editors recommend that to experience the (...)
     
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  23. Mind, self and society.George H. Mead - 1934 - Chicago, Il.
     
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  24.  10
    Buddhist Thought in India. [REVIEW]J. H. P. - 1970 - Review of Metaphysics 23 (4):739-739.
    Copyrighted originally by George Allen and Unwin Ltd. in 1962 this paper edition makes Conze's review of Indian Buddhism available at a relatively low price. The book is divided into three parts: Archaic Buddhism which deals with facets common to all of Indian Buddhism, the Sthaviras which deals with the Hinayäna, and the Mahäyäna. Often a commentator will present a traditional view of Indian Buddhism through a translation of some Buddhist's compendium on Buddhism. This work, however, is the result (...)
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  25. George H. Hampsch -- nuclear deterrence and world peace.George H. Hampsch - 1984 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 10 (3-4):123-131.
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  26. Hypocretin regulates brain reward function and cocaine consumption in rats.Benjamin Boutrel, Paul J. Kenny, Cory Wright, R. Winsky, S. Specio, George Koob, Athina Markou & L. De Lecea - 2003 - Society for Neuroscience Abstracts 29:879.7.
    Hypocretin regulates brain reward function and cocaine consumption in rats. The hypocretinergic (Hcrt) system is implicated in energy homeostasis, feeding and sleep regulation. Hypocretinergic cell bodies are located in the lateral hypothalamus (LH) and project throughout the brain. The aim of the present studies was to investigate the role of the Hcrt system in regulating brain reward function and the reinforcing properties of cocaine in rats. Intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS) thresholds provide an accurate measure of brain reward function in rats. Here (...)
     
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  27.  18
    Self-interest and social order in classical liberalism: the essays of George H. Smith.George H. Smith - 2017 - Washington, D.C.: Cato Institute.
    There is a well-worn image and phrase for libertarianism: "atomized individualism." This hobgoblin has spread so thoroughly that even some libertarians think their philosophy unreservedly supports private persons, whatever the situation, whatever their behavior. Smith's Self-Interest and Social Order in Classical Liberalism, corrects this misrepresentation with careful intellectual surveys of Hume, Smith, Hobbes, Butler, Mandeville, and Hutcheson and their respective contributions to political philosophy.
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  28.  4
    The Thoughts of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus [microform].George Marcus Aurelius & Long - 1900
  29.  32
    A Celebration of Subjective Thought. [REVIEW]John H. Lavely - 1987 - Idealistic Studies 17 (3):265-265.
    Hegel thought he had shown that if one wanted to be a metaphysician he/she had to be an idealist. One may not have to be a metaphysician, but if one is to be a metaphysician, then spirit, mind, person is the unavoidable analogy or model. Diefenbeck’s book can be understood as an elaborate documentation of Hegel’s claim. Thus we have a full-scale dialectical development of the position which holds that the subject and the subject’s activity, rather than “objective truth”, are (...)
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  30.  75
    A behavioristic account of the significant symbol.George H. Mead - 1922 - Journal of Philosophy 19 (6):157-163.
  31. The social self.George H. Mead - 1913 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 10 (14):374-380.
  32.  64
    The mechanism of social consciousness.George H. Mead - 1912 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 9 (15):401-406.
  33.  14
    The Mechanism of Social Consciousness.George H. Mead - 1912 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 9 (15):401-406.
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  34.  35
    Persecution and the Art of Writing.George H. Sabine - 1952 - Ethics 63 (3):220-222.
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  35.  12
    Concerning animal perception.George H. Mead - 1907 - Psychological Review 14 (6):383-390.
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  36.  36
    What social objects must psychology presuppose?George H. Mead - 1910 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 7 (7):174-180.
  37.  20
    Essays on Truth and Reality.George H. Sabine - 1914 - Philosophical Review 23 (5):550.
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  38. Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century.George H. Mead & Merritt H. Moore - 1936 - Philosophy 11 (44):486-487.
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  39. A History of Political Theory.George H. Sabine - 1938 - Science and Society 2 (3):409-411.
     
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  40.  11
    The Social Self.George H. Mead - 1913 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 10 (14):374-380.
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  41.  33
    Mysticism and Logic and Other Essays.George H. Sabine & Bertrand Russell - 1920 - Philosophical Review 29 (4):397.
  42.  41
    The Myth of the State.George H. Sabine - 1947 - Philosophical Review 56 (3):315.
  43.  30
    Suggestions toward a theory of the philosophical disciplines.George H. Mead - 1900 - Philosophical Review 9 (1):1-17.
  44. Scientific method and individual thinker.George H. Mead - 2020 - In John Dewey, Harold Chapman Brown, George Herbert Mead, Horace Meyer Kallen & Addison Webster Moore (eds.), Creative Intelligence: Essays in the Pragmatic Attitude. New York: Nova Snova.
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  45. Geist, Identität und Gesellschaft.George H. Mead & Charles W. Morris - 1970 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 24 (4):619-625.
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  46.  63
    Delineating Ricoeur’s Concept of Utopia.George H. Taylor - 2017 - Social Imaginaries 3 (1):41-60.
    This article elaborates the continuing significance of Ricoeur’s development of utopia. Ricoeur develops two not necessarily exclusive aspects of the utopia in its positive sense. First, it acts as an imaginative variation on existing reality, and second, it can act to ‘shatter’ and hence recast existing reality. While Ricoeur himself did not tend to distinguish rigorously between these two senses of the utopia, the article seeks to provide that delineation. Imaginative variation opens the sphere of human possibility but remains hypothetical, (...)
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  47.  85
    National-mindedness and international-mindedness.George H. Mead - 1929 - International Journal of Ethics 39 (4):385-407.
  48.  18
    National-Mindedness and International-Mindedness.George H. Mead - 1929 - International Journal of Ethics 39 (4):385-407.
  49.  64
    Natural rights and the theory of the political institution.George H. Mead - 1915 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 12 (6):141-155.
  50.  9
    Scientific Method and the Moral Sciences.George H. Mead - 1923 - International Journal of Ethics 33 (3):229-247.
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