Results for 'Howard Benjamin Shaeffer'

921 found
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  1. The Arcades Project.Walter Benjamin, Howard Eiland & Kevin Mclaughlin - 1999 - Science and Society 65 (2):243-246.
     
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  2.  11
    Review of Private Goods, Public Goods, by Raymond Geuss. [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2006 - Essays in Philosophy 7 (1):132-145.
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  3.  26
    Review of Considered Judgment, by Catherin Z. Elgin. [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2001 - Essays in Philosophy 2 (1):18-23.
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  4.  25
    "Review of" Good and Evil". [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2003 - Essays in Philosophy 4 (1):76-79.
  5.  19
    "Review of" Welfare and Rational Care". [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2006 - Essays in Philosophy 7 (2):14.
  6.  36
    Response to commentary on A Neural Correlate of Consciousness Related to Repression.Howard Shevrin, Jess H. Ghannam & Benjamin Libet - 2002 - Consciousness and Cognition 11 (2):345-346.
  7.  87
    A Neural Correlate of Consciousness Related to Repression.Howard Shevrin, Jess H. Ghannam & Benjamin W. Libet - 2002 - Consciousness and Cognition 11 (2):334-341.
    In previous research Libet discovered that a critical time period for neural activation is necessary in order for a stimulus to become conscious. This necessary time period varies from subject to subject. In this current study, six subjects for whom the time for neural activation of consciousness had been previously determined were administered a battery of psychological tests on the basis of which ratings were made of degree of repressiveness. As hypothesized, repressive subjects had a longer critical time period for (...)
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  8.  33
    Letter to the Editor.Howard Mann, Benjamin Djulbegovic & Paul Gold - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (1):5-6.
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  9. Surrogate Perspectives on Patient Preference Predictors: Good Idea, but I Should Decide How They Are Used.Dana Howard, Allan Rivlin, Philip Candilis, Neal W. Dickert, Claire Drolen, Benjamin Krohmal, Mark Pavlick & David Wendler - 2022 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 13 (2):125-135.
    Background: Current practice frequently fails to provide care consistent with the preferences of decisionally-incapacitated patients. It also imposes significant emotional burden on their surrogates. Algorithmic-based patient preference predictors (PPPs) have been proposed as a possible way to address these two concerns. While previous research found that patients strongly support the use of PPPs, the views of surrogates are unknown. The present study thus assessed the views of experienced surrogates regarding the possible use of PPPs as a means to help make (...)
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  10.  22
    Review of “Public Philosophy: Essays in Morality and Politics”. [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2007 - Essays in Philosophy 8 (1):25.
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  11.  9
    Review of Welfare and Rational Care, by Stephen Darwall. [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2006 - Essays in Philosophy 7 (2):260-262.
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  12.  22
    Review of “Private Goods, Public Goods”. [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2006 - Essays in Philosophy 7 (1):16.
  13.  21
    Review of Public Philosophy: Essays in Morality and Politics, by Michael J. Sandel. [REVIEW]H. Benjamin Shaeffer - 2007 - Essays in Philosophy 8 (1):254-257.
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  14.  10
    Failure of equipoise to resolve the ethical tension in a randomized clinical trial.Howard Mann, Benjamin Djulbegovic & Paul Gold - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (1):5.
  15.  47
    Informed Faces.Andrew Benjamin, Mark Howard & Christopher Townsend - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (1):1 - 3.
    Angelaki, Volume 16, Issue 1, Page 1-3, 01Mar2011.
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  16. Finding middle ground between intellectual arrogance and intellectual servility: Development and assessment of the limitations-owning intellectual humility scale.Megan Haggard, Daniel Howard-Snyder, Wade C. Rowatt, Joseph C. Leman, Benjamin Meagher, Courtney Lomax, Thomas Ferguson, Heather Battaly, Jason Baehr & Dennis Whitcomb - 2018 - Personality and Individual Differences 124:184-193.
    Recent scholarship in intellectual humility (IH) has attempted to provide deeper understanding of the virtue as personality trait and its impact on an individual's thoughts, beliefs, and actions. A limitations-owning perspective of IH focuses on a proper recognition of the impact of intellectual limitations and a motivation to overcome them, placing it as the mean between intellectual arrogance and intellectual servility. We developed the Limitations-Owning Intellectual Humility Scale to assess this conception of IH with related personality constructs. In Studies 1 (...)
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  17.  19
    A Pilot Study on Data-Driven Adaptive Deep Brain Stimulation in Chronically Implanted Essential Tremor Patients.Sebastián Castaño-Candamil, Benjamin I. Ferleger, Andrew Haddock, Sarah S. Cooper, Jeffrey Herron, Andrew Ko, Howard J. Chizeck & Michael Tangermann - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
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  18. Walter Benjamin: the colour of experience.Howard Caygill - 1998 - New York: Routledge.
    In this major reinterpretation, Howard Caygill argues that all of Benjamin's work is characterized by its focus on a concept of experience derived from Kant but applied by Benjamin to objects as diverse as urban experience, visual art, literature and philosophy. The book analyzes the development of Benjamin's concept of experience in his early writings showing that it emerges from an engagement with visual experience, and in particular the experience of colour. By representing Benjamin as (...)
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  19.  33
    Superimposition in Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project.Howard Eiland - 2007 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2007 (138):121-138.
    Among the more prominent nineteenth-century types populating Benjamin's Arcades Project—collector, flâneur, gambler, prostitute, worker, revolutionary—the figure of the flâneur is exemplary for the way he perceives the landscape of the modern city. Distracted to the point of intoxication by the spectacle of the streets, which he views for the most part en passant, he is nonetheless intimately, micrologically involved with some of the most familiar and therefore often most inconspicuous aspects of urban existence. Benjamin underlines this function of (...)
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  20.  55
    Benjamin's natural theology.Howard Caygill - 2016 - In .
    An analysis of Walter Benjamin's response to contemporary cosmology focusing on his reading of Eddington.
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  21.  2
    Introducing Walter Benjamin.Howard Caygill, Andrzej Klimowski, Richard Appignanesi & Alex Coles - 1998 - Totem Books.
    Walter Benjamin was a philosopher but perhaps more importantly he was an experienced critic of such passion, erudation and virtuosity.
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  22. Franklin G. Miller and Howard Brody reply: We argued that clinical equipoise is.Benjamin Djulbegovic - forthcoming - Hastings Center Report.
     
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  23.  40
    Extensions and Refinements of the Equipoise Concept in International Clinical Research: Would Benjamin Freedman Approve?Howard Mann - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (4):67-69.
    In his article “The Real Problem of Equipoise,” Chiong (2006) advances arguments that culminate in an assertion that the equipoise requirement “must be given uP′ if international clinical research...
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  24. Howard Margolis, Paradigms and Barriers: How Habits of Mind Govern Scientific Beliefs Reviewed by.Benjamin F. Armstrong Jr - 1994 - Philosophy in Review 14 (1):33-35.
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  25. Dick Howard, "From Marx to Kant". [REVIEW]Benjamin Gregg - 1989 - Theory and Society 18 (3):417.
  26.  32
    Virtue Ethics for the Real World: Improving Character without Idealization by Howard J. Curzer (review).Benjamin Hole - 2024 - Review of Metaphysics 77 (3):541-543.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Virtue Ethics for the Real World: Improving Character without Idealization by Howard J. CurzerBenjamin HoleCURZER, Howard J. Virtue Ethics for the Real World: Improving Character without Idealization. New York: Routledge, 2023. 272 pp. Cloth, $160.00The development of virtue ethics has been in a lull. This book is a welcome treatise in theory-building, developing a novel Aristotelian approach to virtue ethics that, first, avoids idealization and, second, (...)
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  27.  17
    Origin of the German Trauerspiel.Walter Benjamin - 2018 - Harvard University Press.
    Origin of the German Trauerspiel was Walter Benjamin's first full, historically oriented analysis of modernity. Readers of English know it as "The Origin of German Tragic Drama," but in fact the subject is something else--the play of mourning. Howard Eiland's completely new English translation, the first since 1977, is closer to the German text and more consistent with Benjamin's philosophical idiom. Focusing on the extravagant seventeenth-century theatrical genre of the trauerspiel, precursor of the opera, Benjamin identifies (...)
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  28.  25
    The Bloomsbury Companion to Analytic Philosophy. Edited by Barry Dainton and Howard Robinson. Pp. xviii, 675, London/New York, Bloomsbury, 2015, £22.49/$39.95. [REVIEW]Benjamin Murphy - 2018 - Heythrop Journal 59 (2):350-351.
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  29.  25
    Concepts of Experience in Royalist Recipe Collections.Benjamin I. Goldberg - 2023 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 11 (1):37-68.
    This essay explores the idea of experience and its epistemological and practical role in maintaining the health of a household among early modern English Royalists. A number of prominent royalists during the mid-seventeenth century British Civil Wars expended quite some effort in the collection of medical recipes, including Queen Henrietta Maria herself, as well as William and Margaret Cavendish, and the Talbot sisters—Elizabeth Grey and Alethea Howard. This essay looks at these Royalists and four of their collections: three published (...)
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  30.  14
    Introduction.Sorana Corneanu, Benjamin I. Goldberg & Diego Lucci - 2023 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 11 (1):9-16.
    This essay explores the idea of experience and its epistemological and practical role in maintaining the health of a household among early modern English Royalists. A number of prominent royalists during the mid-seventeenth century British Civil Wars expended quite some effort in the collection of medical recipes, including Queen Henrietta Maria herself, as well as William and Margaret Cavendish, and the Talbot sisters—Elizabeth Grey and Alethea Howard. This essay looks at these Royalists and four of their collections: three published (...)
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  31.  14
    Walter Benjamin: a Critical Life. By Howard Eiland and Michael W. Jennings. Pp. 755, London/Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2014, £25.00. [REVIEW]Patrick Madigan - 2015 - Heythrop Journal 56 (6):1047-1048.
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  32.  44
    Caygill, Howard. Walter Benjamin: The Colour of Experience. [REVIEW]Peter Fenves - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (4):920-923.
  33.  42
    Howard Eiland and Michael W. Jennings. Walter Benjamin: A Critical Life. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2014. 768 pp. [REVIEW]David Ferris - 2016 - Critical Inquiry 42 (3):716-717.
  34.  24
    Howard Eiland/Michael W. Jennings: Walter Benjamin, Eine Biographie, aus dem Englischen von Ulrich Fries und Irmgard Müller, Berlin: Suhrkamp Verlag 2020, 1021 S. [REVIEW]Joachim H. Knoll - 2021 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 73 (2):160-164.
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  35. Benjamin's Arcades Project and the Postcolonial City.Rajeev S. Patke - 2000 - Diacritics 30 (4):2-14.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 30.4 (2000) 3-13 [Access article in PDF] Benjamin's Arcades Project and the Postcolonial City Rajeev S. Patke [Tables]Walter Benjamin. The Arcades Project. Trans. Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1999. [AP] Post-this, post-that, post-the-other, yet in the endNot past a thing. —Seamus Heaney, "On His Work in the English Tongue" Preamble Among the several Benjamins to be conjured from The Arcades Project (...)
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  36.  39
    The heavens of the sky and the heavens of the heart: the Ottoman cultural context for the introduction of post-Copernican astronomy I would like to thank Theodore Porter, Hossein Ziai, Carlo Ginzburg, Robert Westman, Mary Terrall, Benjamin Elman, Norton Wise, Herbert Davidson and Ahmad Alwisha for the notes and the encouragement. Thanks to Howard Goodman for the notes and the stylish English. Special thanks to the anonymous referees for the illuminating notes. The paper was first presented at the History of Science Colloquium at UCLA. [REVIEW]Avner Ben-Zaken - 2004 - British Journal for the History of Science 37 (1):1-28.
    In 1637 a Frenchman named Noël Duret published a book in Paris that referred to the heliocentric Copernican system. In 1660 an Ottoman scholar named Ibrahim Efendi al-Zigetvari Tezkireci translated the book into Arabic. For more than three centuries this manuscript was buried in an Ottoman archive in Istanbul until it resurfaced at the beginning of the 1990s. The discovery of the Arabic text has necessitated a re-evaluation of the history of early modern Arabic natural philosophy, one that takes into (...)
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  37.  45
    True Religion, Mystical Unity, and the Disinherited: Howard Thurman and the Black Social Gospel.Gary Dorrien - 2018 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 39 (1):74-99.
    The black social gospel leaders that came of age in the 1920s and '30s were long on graduate degrees, simmering anger, racial justice ambition, and lecture circuit eloquence. Most of them already assumed the social gospel when they began their careers. They came through the doors of educational achievement and ecumenical conferences, and a few became prominent by compelling the respect of audiences on both sides of the color line. Mordecai Johnson, building a black intellectual powerhouse at Howard University, (...)
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  38.  12
    Walter Benjamin: The Colour of Experience. [REVIEW]Peter Fenves - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (4):920-922.
    The revival of interest in Walter Benjamin's writings, many of which are now appearing in English for the first time, has generated a fairly large body of scholarship devoted to the question: How does Benjamin stand with respect to philosophy? Since Benjamin rarely engages in anything resembling traditional philosophical argumentation, this question has received a bewildering variety of responses, many of which have reflected the principal concerns of the commentators as much as Benjamin's own. This is (...)
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  39. Between Gandhi and Black Lives Matter: The Interreligious Roots of Civil Rights Activism. [REVIEW]Gail Presbey - 2019 - The Acorn 19 (2):197-202.
    Azaransky's work highlights the theological contributions of Howard Thurman, Benjamin Mays, William Stuart Nelson, Pauli Murray and Bayard Rustin. She makes a compelling case that each of these thinker-activists needs to be better appreciated for their cutting-edge theological insights based on their thought and life experience with Mohandas Gandhi and his spiritual activism. Each reinterprets their own Christian views based on this larger worldwide experience that they have gained through study and/or travel. In this way they prefigure or (...)
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  40.  12
    Imprinting: An epigenetic approach.Howard Moltz - 1963 - Psychological Review 70 (2):123-138.
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  41. Testimony, Trust, and Authority.Benjamin McMyler - 2011 - , US: Oxford University Press.
    In Testimony, Trust, and Authority, Benjamin McMyler argues that philosophers have failed to appreciate the nature and significance of our epistemic dependence ...
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  42.  43
    Question Embedding and the Semantics of Answers.Benjamin Ross George - 2011 - Dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles
  43. Quality-space theory in olfaction.Benjamin D. Young, Andreas Keller & David Rosenthal - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
    Quality-space theory (QST) explains the nature of the mental qualities distinctive of perceptual states by appeal to their role in perceiving. QST is typically described in terms of the mental qualities that pertain to color. Here we apply QST to the olfactory modalities. Olfaction is in various respects more complex than vision, and so provides a useful test case for QST. To determine whether QST can deal with the challenges olfaction presents, we show how a quality space (QS) could be (...)
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  44.  29
    A reinforcement model of imprinting: Implications for socialization in monkeys and men.Howard S. Hoffman & Alan M. Ratner - 1973 - Psychological Review 80 (6):527-544.
  45.  13
    Disorienting Neoliberalism: Global Justice and the Outer Limit of Freedom.Benjamin L. McKean - 2020 - Oup Usa.
    Many people believe the global economy is unjust, but they don't know what to do about it. What responsibilities do American consumers have to workers in China making their iPhones? Should they still buy clothes made in Bangladesh's sweatshops? Offering an overview of how neoliberalism orients us to the world, Benjamin L. McKean shows the practical shortcomings of neoliberal approaches to the world and develops an alternative way of thinking and acting guided by a compelling new account of freedom. (...)
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  46. Open texture, rigor, and proof.Benjamin Zayton - 2022 - Synthese 200 (4):1-20.
    Open texture is a kind of semantic indeterminacy first systematically studied by Waismann. In this paper, extant definitions of open texture will be compared and contrasted, with a view towards the consequences of open-textured concepts in mathematics. It has been suggested that these would threaten the traditional virtues of proof, primarily the certainty bestowed by proof-possession, and this suggestion will be critically investigated using recent work on informal proof. It will be argued that informal proofs have virtues that mitigate the (...)
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  47. No conscientious objection without normative justification: Against conscientious objection in medicine.Benjamin Zolf - 2018 - Bioethics 33 (1):146-153.
    Most proponents of conscientious objection accommodation in medicine acknowledge that not all conscientious beliefs can justify refusing service to a patient. Accordingly, they admit that constraints must be placed on the practice of conscientious objection. I argue that one such constraint must be an assessment of the reasonability of the conscientious claim in question, and that this requires normative justification of the claim. Some advocates of conscientious object protest that, since conscientious claims are a manifestation of personal beliefs, they cannot (...)
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  48. Olfactory Amodal Completion.Benjamin D. Young & Bence Nanay - 2021 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 103 (2):372-388.
    Amodal completion is the representation of those parts of the perceived object that we get no sensory stimulation from. While amodal completion is rife and plays an essential role in all sense modalities, philosophical discussions of this phenomenon have almost entirely been limited to vision. The aim of this paper is to examine in what sense we can talk about amodal completion in olfaction. We distinguish three different senses of amodal completion – spatial, temporal and feature-based completion – and argue (...)
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  49. Smelling Phenomenal.Benjamin D. Young - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5:71431.
    Qualitative-consciousness arises at the sensory level of olfactory processing and pervades our experience of smells to the extent that qualitative character is maintained whenever we are aware of undergoing an olfactory experience. Building upon the distinction between Access and Phenomenal Consciousness the paper offers a nuanced distinction between Awareness and Qualitative-consciousness that is applicable to olfaction in a manner that is conceptual precise and empirically viable. Mounting empirical research is offered substantiating the applicability of the distinction to olfaction and showing (...)
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  50. Beyond the mask : Kierkegaard's postscript as antitheatrical, anti-Hegelian drama.Howard Pickett - 2018 - In Eric Ziolkowski (ed.), Kierkegaard, Literature, and the Arts. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University press.
     
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