Results for 'Gregory W. Fuller'

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  1.  9
    Who’s Borrowing? Credit Encouragement vs. Credit Mitigation in National Financial Systems.Gregory W. Fuller - 2015 - Politics and Society 43 (2):241-268.
    Households and banks have increasingly displaced non-financial businesses and governments as the primary debtors in modern capitalist economies, resulting in more severe economic cycles, increased inequality, and external macroeconomic imbalances. Yet while the trend is nearly universal among developed economies, its intensity varies a great deal from country to country. This article highlights the common international causes behind the global expansion of household and financial sector debt; the divergent national approaches to household credit that cause household and financial sector indebtedness (...)
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  2.  8
    Gregory W. Fuller: The Political Economy of Housing Financialization.Tod Van Gunten - 2020 - Intergenerational Justice Review 6 (1).
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  3. Successful Psychopaths: Are They Unethical Decision-Makers and Why?Gregory W. Stevens, Jacqueline K. Deuling & Achilles A. Armenakis - 2012 - Journal of Business Ethics 105 (2):139-149.
    Successful psychopaths, defined as individuals in the general population who nevertheless possess some degree of psychopathic traits, are receiving increasing amounts of empirical attention. To date, little is known about such individuals, specifically with regard to how they respond to ethical dilemmas in business contexts. This study investigated this relationship, proposing a mediated model in which the positive relationship between psychopathy and unethical decision-making is explained through the process of moral disengagement, defined as a cognitive orientation that facilitates unethical choice. (...)
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  4. Supererogation, wrongdoing, and vice: On the autonomy of the ethics of virtue.Gregory W. Trianosky - 1986 - Journal of Philosophy 83 (1):26-40.
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  5.  34
    Theism and Explanation.Gregory W. Dawes - 2009 - New York: Routledge.
    In this timely study, Dawes defends the methodological naturalism of the sciences. Though religions offer what appear to be explanations of various facts about the world, the scientist, as scientist, will not take such proposed explanations seriously. Even if no natural explanation were available, she will assume that one exists. Is this merely a sign of atheistic prejudice, as some critics suggest? Or are there good reasons to exclude from science explanations that invoke a supernatural agent? On the one hand, (...)
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  6.  19
    Supererogation, Wrongdoing, and Vice.Gregory W. Trianosky - 1986 - Journal of Philosophy 83 (1):26-40.
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  7. Rule-utilitarianism and the slippery slope.Gregory W. Trianosky - 1978 - Journal of Philosophy 75 (8):414-424.
    It is sometimes said that permitting, say, voluntary euthanasia would erode the motivations and inhibitions supporting other, legitimate prohibitions on killing to the point where widespread disregard for the moral law would result. this paper discusses the relevance of such "slippery slope" arguments for the rule-utilitarian who claims that we can assess moral rules by asking whether their acceptance would maximize utility. first it is argued that any normative theory of this type cannot recognize slope arguments as legitimate considerations in (...)
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  8.  5
    VIRTUE, ACTION, AND THE GOOD LIFE: Toward a Theory of the Virtues.Gregory W. Trianosky - 1987 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 68 (2):124-147.
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  9.  23
    Enacted Others: Specifying Goffman's Phenomenological Omissions and Sociological Accomplishments.Gregory W. H. Smith - 2005 - Human Studies 28 (4):397-415.
    Erving Goffman's distinctive contribution to an understanding of others was grounded in his information control and ritual models of the interaction process. This contribution centered on the forms of the interaction order rather than self-other relations as traditionally conceived in phenomenology. Goffman came to phenomenology as a sympathetic but critical outsider who sought resources for the sociological mining of the interaction order. His engagement with phenomenological thinkers (principally Gustav Ichheiser, Jean-Paul Sartre and Alfred Schutz) has to be understood in these (...)
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  10. Rightly Ordered Appetites: How to Live Morally and Live Well.Gregory W. Trianosky - 1988 - American Philosophical Quarterly 25 (1):1 - 12.
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  11. On the obligation to be virtuous: Shaftesbury and the question, why be moral?Gregory W. Trianosky - 1978 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 16 (3):289-300.
  12.  21
    Supererogation, Wrongdoing, and Vice.Gregory W. Trianosky - 1986 - Journal of Philosophy 83 (1):26-40.
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  13.  4
    Variation of coercive force, isothermal remanent magnetization and magnetic memory in nickel with internal stress.W. Lowrie & M. Fuller - 1968 - Philosophical Magazine 18 (153):589-599.
  14. The Act of Faith: Aquinas and the Moderns.Gregory W. Dawes - 2015 - Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion 6:58-86.
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  15. Parts and Wholes: The Human Microbiome, Ecological Ontology, and the Challenges of Community.Gregory W. Schneider & Russell Winslow - 2014 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 57 (2):208-223.
    Starting in June 2012, a series of articles in the journal Nature and in the online journals of the Public Library of Science made public the first results of a massive, international collaborative scientific endeavor known as the “Human Microbiome Project” . This project, which is attempting to categorize the vast number of microbiological species and organisms that live in and on the “healthy” human body, raises important questions about what it means to be a whole individual organism, especially if (...)
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  16. Constructing Multiracial Democracy: To Deliberate or Not to Deliberate?Gregory W. Streich - 2002 - Constellations 9 (1):127-153.
  17.  75
    Analyticity and necessity in Leibniz.Gregory W. Fitch - 1979 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 17 (1):29-42.
  18.  3
    Religion, Philosophy and Knowledge.Gregory W. Dawes - 2016 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book offers a philosophical approach to religion that acknowledges both the diversity of religions and the many and varied dimensions of the religious life. Rather than restricting itself to Christian theism, it covers a wide range of religious traditions, examining their beliefs in the context of the actual practice of the religious life. After outlining the aims of religion, the book focuses on claims to knowledge. What kinds of knowledge do religions purport to offer? In what idiom is it (...)
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  19. Belief is not the issue: A defence of inference to the best explanation.Gregory W. Dawes - 2012 - Ratio 26 (1):62-78.
    Defences of inference to the best explanation (IBE) frequently associate IBE with scientific realism, the idea that it is reasonable to believe our best scientific theories. I argue that this linkage is unfortunate. IBE does not warrant belief, since the fact that a theory is the best available explanation does not show it to be (even probably) true. What IBE does warrant is acceptance: taking a proposition as a premise in theoretical and/or practical reasoning. We ought to accept our best (...)
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  20.  30
    Using the Earthly City.Gregory W. Lee - 2016 - Augustinian Studies 47 (1):41-63.
    Augustine’s political theology is characterized by two apparently contradictory impulses: his harsh moral critique of non-Christian political communities, and his approbation of Christian participation in these communities. I argue that Augustine’s ecclesiology illuminates the coherence of his thought on these matters. Augustine’s assertion against the Donatists that Christians do not contract guilt from ecclesial fellowship with sinners reflects his larger vision of the relation between the earthly and heavenly cities. Association with sinners is no more avoidable in the civic sphere (...)
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  21.  14
    Galileo and the Conflict Between Religion and Science.Gregory W. Dawes - 2016 - Routledge.
    For more than 30 years, historians have rejected what they call the ‘warfare thesis’ – the idea that there is an inevitable conflict between religion and science – insisting that scientists and believers can live in harmony. This book disagrees. Taking as its starting point the most famous of all such conflicts, the Galileo affair, it argues that religious and scientific communities exhibit very different attitudes to knowledge. Scripturally based religions not only claim a source of knowledge distinct from human (...)
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  22. Supererogation, Wrongdoing, and Vice.Gregory W. Trianosky - 1998 - In James Rachels (ed.), Ethical Theory 2: Theories About How We Should Live. Oxford University Press UK.
     
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  23.  21
    Comedy and the Satyr-Chorus.Gregory W. Dobrov - 2007 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 100 (3):251-265.
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  24.  77
    Identifying Pseudoscience: A Social Process Criterion.Gregory W. Dawes - 2018 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 49 (3):283-298.
    Many philosophers have come to believe there is no single criterion by which one can distinguish between a science and a pseudoscience. But it need not follow that no distinction can be made: a multifactorial account of what constitutes a pseudoscience remains possible. On this view, knowledge-seeking activities fall on a spectrum, with the clearly scientific at one end and the clearly non-scientific at the other. When proponents claim a clearly non-scientific activity to be scientific, it can be described as (...)
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  25. Religion, Science, and Explanation.Gregory W. Dawes - 2012 - Ars Disputandi: The Online Journal for Philosophy of Religion 12.
    A recent legal ruling in the United States regarding ‘intelligent design’ argued that ID is not science because it invokes a supernatural agent. It therefore cannot be taught in public schools. But the important philosophical question is not whether ID invokes a supernatural agent; it is whether it meets the standards we expect of any explanation in the sciences. More generally, could any proposed theistic explanation – one that invokes the deity of classical theism – meet those standards? Could it (...)
     
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  26. In defense of naturalism.Gregory W. Dawes - 2011 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 70 (1):3-25.
    History and the modern sciences are characterized by what is sometimes called a methodological naturalism that disregards talk of divine agency. Some religious thinkers argue that this reflects a dogmatic materialism: a non-negotiable and a priori commitment to a materialist metaphysics. In response to this charge, I make a sharp distinction between procedural requirements and metaphysical commitments. The procedural requirement of history and the sciences—that proposed explanations appeal to publicly-accessible bodies of evidence—is non-negotiable, but has no metaphysical implications. The metaphysical (...)
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  27.  25
    Ethical Decision Making for Christian Physicians.Gregory W. Schneider - 2003 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 3 (4):673-680.
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  28.  21
    Implementation of a Market Entry Reward within the United States.Gregory W. Daniel, Monika Schneider, Marianne Hamilton Lopez & Mark B. McClellan - 2018 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 46 (s1):50-58.
    As part of a multifactorial approach to address weak incentives for innovative antimicrobial drug development, market entry rewards are an emerging solution. Recently, the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy released the Priority Antimicrobial Value and Entry Award proposal, which combines a MER with payment reforms, transitioning from volume-based to “value-based” payments for antimicrobials. Here, the PAVE Award and similar MERs are reviewed, focusing on further refinement and avenues for implementation.
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  29.  22
    Republics and their loves: Rereading city of God 191.Gregory W. Lee - 2011 - Modern Theology 27 (4):553-581.
    In City of God 19.24, Augustine rejects Cicero's definition of res publica as a society founded on justice for a new definition focused on common objects of love. Robert Markus, Oliver O'Donovan, and a host of Augustinian political theologians have depicted this move as a positive gesture toward secular society. Yet this reading fails to account for why Augustine waited so long to address Cicero's definition, first discussed in Book 2, and for the radical dualism Augustine sets forth between the (...)
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  30.  9
    Ritual and Performativity: The Chorus of Old Comedy.Gregory W. Dobrov - 2010 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 103 (4):551-553.
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  31.  10
    Ritual and Performativity: The Chorus of Old Comedy (review).Gregory W. Dobrov - 2010 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 103 (4):551-553.
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  32.  44
    Reformation or Revolution? Herman Bavinck and Henri de Lubac on Nature and Grace.Gregory W. Parker - 2017 - Perichoresis 15 (3):81-95.
    Henri de Lubac’s treatment of the relationship between nature and grace will be critiqued by Herman Bavinck’s ‘grace restores nature’ theme. In two significant addresses, Bavinck critiqued a Roman Catholic approach to nature and grace. De Lubac’s influence upon Roman Catholic thinking addressing nature and grace occurred post-Bavinck and has altered Catholic thinking on the subject. Neo-Calvinist scholar, Wolter Huttinga admits that Bavinck and de Lubac offer similar critiques of Roman Catholicism. The question remains then, do Bavinck’s critiques still hold? (...)
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  33.  82
    The naturalism of the sciences.Gregory W. Dawes & Tiddy Smith - 2018 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 67:22-31.
    The sciences are characterized by what is sometimes called a “methodological naturalism,” which disregards talk of divine agency. In response to those who argue that this reflects a dogmatic materialism, a number of philosophers have offered a pragmatic defense. The naturalism of the sciences, they argue, is provisional and defeasible: it is justified by the fact that unsuccessful theistic explanations have been superseded by successful natural ones. But this defense is inconsistent with the history of the sciences. The sciences have (...)
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  34.  30
    A new science of religion.Gregory W. Dawes & James Maclaurin (eds.) - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    This volume examines the diversity of new scientific theories of religion, by outlining the logical and causal relationships between these enterprises.
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  35.  2
    Review Essay: Recent Trends in Comparative Political Economy and their Implications for Japan.Gregory W. Noble - 2003 - Japanese Journal of Political Science 4 (1):135-151.
  36. What is wrong with intelligent design?Gregory W. Dawes - 2007 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 61 (2):69 - 81.
    While a great deal of abuse has been directed at intelligent design theory (ID), its starting point is a fact about biological organisms that cries out for explanation, namely "specified complexity" (SC). Advocates of ID deploy three kind of argument from specified complexity to the existence of a designer: an eliminative argument, an inductive argument, and an inference to the best explanation. Only the first of these merits the abuse directed at it; the other two arguments are worthy of respect. (...)
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  37.  10
    Blurring distinctions between the dying and the dead: a call for discernment in organ donation.Gregory W. Rutecki - 1993 - Ethics and Medicine: A Christian Perspective on Issues in Bioethics 10 (3):60-67.
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  38.  10
    From" never to harm" to harnessing plague: A paradigm shift in plague ethics.Gregory W. Rutecki - 2008 - Ethics 6 (2-3):137-156.
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  39. From "never to harm" to harnessing plague : a paradigm shift in plague ethics.Gregory W. Rutecki - 2011 - In Jeremy S. Duncan (ed.), Perspectives on ethics. New York: Nova Science Publishers.
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  40.  37
    Snapshots 'sub specie aeternitatis': Sinunel, Goffman and formal sociology. [REVIEW]Gregory W. H. Smith - 1989 - Human Studies 12 (1-2):19 - 57.
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  41.  17
    The Worde Signifieth.Gregory W. Lanier - 1989 - Semiotics:355-363.
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  42.  13
    Challenges in the Appropriation of Augustine.Gregory W. Lee - 2019 - Studies in Christian Ethics 32 (1):124-128.
    James K. A. Smith’s Awaiting the King is the most effective popularization of Augustine’s political thought currently available, but its reliance on the work of Oliver O’Donovan obscures uncomfortable elements of Augustine’s thought, and it does not adequately address how the racial and socioeconomic composition of Christian communities is itself formative.
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  43.  11
    Animism and Naturalism: Practice and Theory.Gregory W. Dawes - 2022 - In Tiddy Smith (ed.), Animism and Philosophy of Religion. Springer Verlag. pp. 153-177.
    If animism is regarded as an ontology—a set of beliefs regarding the kinds of entities that exist—it is incompatible with naturalism: the idea that the only causal entities and powers are those identified by our best science. But an enactivist and practice-based theory of knowledge enables us to see that ontologies emerge from practices. An animistic ontology is one way of theorizing ‘animic’ practices, while naturalism is one way of theorizing the practice of science. There exist different ways of theorizing (...)
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  44.  11
    Could There Be Another Galileo Case? Galileo, Augustine, and Vatican II.Gregory W. Dawes - 2011 - Journal of Religion and Society 4.
    In his 1615 letter to the Grand Duchess Christina of Lorraine, Galileo argues for a “principle of limitation”: the authority of Scripture should not be invoked in scientific matters. In doing so, he claims to be following the example of St Augustine. But Augustine’s position would be better described as a “principle of differing purpose”: although the Scriptures were not written in order to reveal scientific truths, such matters may still be covered by biblical authority. The Roman Catholic Church has (...)
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  45.  5
    Empiricism.Gregory W. Dawes - 2019 - In Graham Oppy (ed.), A Companion to Atheism and Philosophy. Hoboken: Blackwell. pp. 97–110.
    One might expect that empiricists would be hostile to religion. Religions are customarily based on belief in an occult realm, a realm of gods, spirits, demons, and mysterious forces. This realm is inaccessible to sense perception, which empiricists regard as our only source of knowledge. One can, however, distinguish between empiricism as a doctrine and empiricism as a stance. A liberal kind of doctrinal empiricism will allow for inferences to unobservable entities, which may also fall within the scope of empiricism (...)
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  46.  19
    Old questions, new contexts: Yiftach Fehige : Science and religion: east and west, science and technology studies. London: Routledge, 2016, viii+232pp, £95.00 HB.Gregory W. Dawes - 2017 - Metascience 26 (2):315-318.
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  47.  13
    Religion, Science, and Explanation.Gregory W. Dawes - 2014 - Ars Disputandi 12 (1):19-34.
    A recent legal ruling in the United States regarding ‘intelligent design’ (ID) argued that ID is not science because it invokes a supernatural agent. It therefore cannot be taught in public schools. But the important philosophical question is not whether ID invokes a supernatural agent; it is whether it meets the standards we expect of any explanation in the sciences. More generally, could any proposed theistic explanation – one that invokes the deity of classical theism – meet those standards? Could (...)
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  48.  16
    Science and the church: Maurice Finocchiaro: On trial for reason: science, religion, and culture in the Galileo affair. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019, ix+289pp, £25.00 HB.Gregory W. Dawes - 2021 - Metascience 30 (3):467-470.
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  49.  28
    Why Historicity Still Matters: Raymond Brown and the Infancy Narratives.Gregory W. Dawes - 2011 - Pacifica 19:156-176.
    The infancy narratives of Matthew and Luke pose in an acute form the question of the historical value of the Gospels. Raymond Brown suggests that redaction criticism can bypass this question by spelling out the theological message intended by the evangelists. But his own exegesis suggests this is to misunderstand the genre of this literature. Brown’s indifference to historicity would be justified only if the evangelists were writing something resembling allegory, a form of narrative in which the literal sense of (...)
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  50.  73
    Defeating the Christian’s Claim to Warrant.Gregory W. Dawes & Jonathan Jong - 2012 - Philo 15 (2):127-144.
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