Results for 'James Buba Mshelia'

983 found
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  1.  11
    Social responsibility in micro businesses in an African context: Towards a theoretical understanding.Chijioke Dike Uba, Md Nazmul Hasan & James Buba Mshelia - 2022 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 32 (1):164-178.
    Business Ethics, the Environment &Responsibility, Volume 32, Issue 1, Page 164-178, January 2023.
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  2.  14
    Plato Republic.James Plato, D. A. Adam & Rees - 1993 - London: Methuen. Edited by Floyer Sydenham, Thomas Taylor, W. H. D. Rouse & Ernest Barker.
  3.  30
    Heidegger's Volk: between National Socialism and poetry.James Phillips - 2005 - Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
    In 1933 the philosopher Martin Heidegger declared his allegiance to Hitler. Ever since, scholars have asked to what extent his work is implicated in Nazism. To address this question properly involves neither conflating Nazism and the continuing philosophical project that is Heidegger's legacy, nor absolving Heidegger and, in the process, turning a deaf ear to what he himself called the philosophical motivations for his political engagement. It is important to establish the terms on which Heidegger aligned himself with National Socialism. (...)
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  4.  6
    What Are Observables in Hamiltonian Einstein–Maxwell Theory?James Pitts - 2019 - Foundations of Physics 49 (8):786-796.
    Is change missing in Hamiltonian Einstein–Maxwell theory? Given the most common definition of observables, observables are constants of the motion and nonlocal. Unfortunately this definition also implies that the observables for massive electromagnetism with gauge freedom are inequivalent to those of massive electromagnetism without gauge freedom. The alternative Pons–Salisbury–Sundermeyer definition of observables, aiming for Hamiltonian–Lagrangian equivalence, uses the gauge generator G, a tuned sum of first-class constraints, rather than each first-class constraint separately, and implies equivalent observables for equivalent massive electromagnetisms. (...)
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  5.  11
    Pythagoras and Early Pythagoreanism.James A. Philip (ed.) - 1966 - [Toronto]: University of Toronto Press.
  6.  63
    Constructing Quarks: A Sociological History of Particle Physics. Andrew Pickering.James T. Cushing - 1985 - Philosophy of Science 52 (4):640-641.
  7.  17
    Democratic Equality.James Lindley Wilson - 2019 - Princeton University Press.
    Democracy establishes relationships of political equality, ones in which citizens equally share authority over what they do together and respect one another as equals. But in today's divided public square, democracy is challenged by political thinkers who disagree about how democratic institutions should be organized, and by antidemocratic politicians who exploit uncertainties about what democracy requires and why it matters. Democratic Equality mounts a bold and persuasive defense of democracy as a way of making collective decisions, showing how equality of (...)
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  8. Social structure and the effects of conformity.Kevin James Spears Zollman - 2010 - Synthese 172 (3):317-340.
    Conformity is an often criticized feature of human belief formation. Although generally regarded as a negative influence on reliability, it has not been widely studied. This paper attempts to determine the epistemic effects of conformity by analyzing a mathematical model of this behavior. In addition to investigating the effect of conformity on the reliability of individuals and groups, this paper attempts to determine the optimal structure for conformity. That is, supposing that conformity is inevitable, what is the best way for (...)
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  9. Placing ugliness in Kant's third critique : A reply to Paul Guyer.James Phillips - 2011 - Kant Studien 102 (3):385-395.
    Kant's treatment of pure aesthetic judgement can ignore ugliness, since an analytic of the ugly, according to a recent essay by Paul Guyer, uncovers the aesthetic impurity of the criteria against which we judge ugliness. Free beauty, as Kant expounds it, does not admit a contrary, and hence a Kantian account of ugliness, such as Guyer's, must look elsewhere in order to scrabble together terms for its definition. Yet if we recognise the ugly by its unsuitability as an object of (...)
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  10.  29
    Schizophrenia and the narrative self.James Phillips - 2003 - In Tilo Kircher & Anthony S. David (eds.), The Self in Neuroscience and Psychiatry. Cambridge University Press. pp. 319--335.
  11.  25
    On Arendt’s Reading of Kant’s Third Critique in advance.James Phillips - forthcoming - Arendt Studies.
    Arendt’s reading of Kant’s aesthetics as political theory has proven contentious, as exegesis regarding the Critique of the Power of Judgment and still more as description of the concerns and norms of political action. Although Arendt’s politicisation of aesthetics is more fraught than she at times admits (but less reckless than some of her critics maintain while also more anarchic than some of her defenders acknowledge), I argue her insight into the republican promise of the model of non–conformist sociability that (...)
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  12.  59
    Is a Good God Logically Possible?James P. Sterba - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    Using yet untapped resources from moral and political philosophy, this book seeks to answer the question of whether an all good God who is presumed to be all powerful is logically compatible with the degree and amount of moral and natural evil that exists in our world. It is widely held by theists and atheists alike that it may be logically impossible for an all good, all powerful God to create a world with moral agents like ourselves that does not (...)
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  13.  8
    Robust solutions to Stackelberg games: Addressing bounded rationality and limited observations in human cognition.James Pita, Manish Jain, Milind Tambe, Fernando Ordóñez & Sarit Kraus - 2010 - Artificial Intelligence 174 (15):1142-1171.
  14. Sensitive and insensitive causation.James Woodward - 2006 - Philosophical Review 115 (1):1-50.
  15.  7
    Philosophical perspectives on technology and psychiatry.James Phillips (ed.) - 2009 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Our lives are dominated by technology. We live with and through the achievements of technology. What is true of the rest of life is of course true of medicine. Many of us owe our existence and our continued vigour to some achievement of medical technology. And what is true in a major way of general medicine is to a significant degree true of psychiatry. Prozac has long since arrived, and in its wake an ever-growing armamentarium of new psychotropics; beyond that, (...)
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  16.  17
    The Limits of Self-Constitution.James Phillips - 2023 - Philosophy Psychiatry and Psychology 30 (3):209-210.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Limits of Self-ConstitutionJames Phillips, MD (bio)I am in general agreement with the authors that a psychoanalytic or psychodynamic approach is a good response to simple pruning procedures. That said, however, I do have questions about how they develop their argument.I was surprised at the very notion of pruning, and quite surprised that it is as popular as the authors suggest. The idea that Pete should deal with his (...)
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  17.  31
    For the unruly subject the covenant, for the Christian sovereign the grace of God: The different arguments of Hobbes’ Leviathan.James Phillips - 2016 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (10):1082-1104.
    This article proposes that Hobbes runs two different arguments for sovereignty in Leviathan. The one is polemical and takes up the notion of a covenant from early-modern resistance theory in order to redeploy it in the cause of absolutism. The other is biblical and constructs an image of the sovereign whose authority is a Mosaic legacy. The one argument is addressed to the unruly subject and teaches obedience, whereas the other is addressed to the sovereign and sets out the positive (...)
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  18. Pythagoras and early Pythagoreanism.James A. Philip - 1966 - [Toronto]: University of Toronto Press.
  19.  46
    The Troubling Relationship between Pleasure and Universality in Kant’s Impure Aesthetic Judgements.James Phillips - 2022 - Kant Studien 113 (2):219-237.
    Kant calls judgements of adherent beauty impure aesthetic judgements because they presuppose the empirical concept of the object and are thus not determined exclusively by a feeling of pleasure. Glossed over in Kant’s account is what kind of universality these judgements have. This article argues that the subjective universality of pure aesthetic judgements and the objective universality of cognitive judgements do not merge in impure aesthetic judgements and that the tension between them reaches also into Kant’s pure aesthetic judgements with (...)
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  20.  91
    From radical to banal evil: Hannah Arendt against the justification of the unjustifiable.James Phillips - 2004 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (2):129-158.
    Two central strands in Arendt's thought are the reflection on the evil of Auschwitz and the rethinking in terms of politics of Heidegger's critique of metaphysics. Given Heidegger's taciturnity regarding Auschwitz and Arendt's own taciturnity regarding the philosophical implications of Heidegger's political engagement in 1933, to set out how these strands interrelate is to examine the coherence of Arendt's thought and its potential for a critique of Heidegger. By refusing to countenance a theological conception of the evil of Auschwitz, Arendt (...)
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  21.  48
    Managed care's reconstruction of human existence: The triumph of technical reason.James Phillips - 2002 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 23 (4-5):339-358.
    To achieve its goals of managing andrestricting access to psychiatric care, managedcare organizations rely on an instrument, theoutpatient treatment report, that carriessignificant implications about how they viewpsychiatric patients and psychiatric care. Inaddition to involving ethical transgressionssuch as violation of patient confidentiality,denial of access to care, spurious use ofconcepts like quality of care, and harassmentof practitioners, the managed care approachalso depends on an overly technical,instrumental interpretation of human beings andpsychiatric treatment. It is this grounding ofmanaged care in technical reason that I (...)
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  22.  16
    Understanding / Explanation.James Phillips - 2004 - In Jennifer Radden (ed.), The Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Companion. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 180--190.
  23.  17
    Merleau-Ponty and the Spirit of Painting.James Gordon Place - 1973 - Philosophy Today 17 (4):280-291.
  24. The painting and the natural thing in the philosophy of Merleau-ponty.James Gordon Place - 1976 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 4 (1):75-91.
  25. Visual and auditory space in baroque Rome.James Smith Pierce - 1959 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 18 (1):55-67.
  26.  18
    Investigating Influences on Managers' Moral Reasoning The Impact of Context and Personal and Organizational Factors.James Weber & David Wasieleski - 2001 - Business and Society 40 (1):79-110.
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  27.  34
    Finitude and the Precritical Imagination: Heidegger's Confrontation with Idealism in Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics and its Bearing on his Philosophy of Art.James Phillips - 2021 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 59 (4):606-628.
    Heidegger’s Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics (1929) turns on a reading of the productive imagination in the first edition of the Critique of Pure Reason (1781). In siding with the imagination, Heidegger declares his dissent from the neo-Kantianism of his contemporaries. Yet, when Heidegger subsequently elaborates his philosophy of art in the 1930s, he is dismissive of the imagination altogether. His earlier partisanship was qualified. In Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics, Heidegger treats the productive imagination of Kant’s critical (...)
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  28.  20
    The Fates of Flesh: Cinematic Realism Following Bazin and Mizoguchi.James Phillips - 2012 - Angelaki 17 (4):9 - 22.
    This article is an attempt to rethink the terms on which we understand cinematic realism. Cinema's very success in recording reality problematises the notion of reality by which ?realism? has otherwise been oriented. This is because the world of the age of cinema is a plurality of worlds, with the times and places captured on film competing for credibility. It is not a question, epistemologically, of discovering the real world so much as, ethically, relearning the art of being embodied. Bazin (...)
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  29.  16
    Freud and the Cognitive Unconscious.James Phillips - 2013 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 20 (3):247-249.
  30.  74
    Hegel and Heidegger on the Essence of Beauty.James Phillips - 2015 - Philosophy Today 59 (1):23-36.
    Heidegger’s discussions of beauty in the 1930s and ’40s arguably have more to do with a confrontation with Hegel than with a revisiting of the question of how best to analyse our experience of the beautiful. Beauty, for Heidegger as for Hegel, takes its definition from truth. At issue is a forcible rewriting of the harmony of the faculties to which Kant appeals in his defence of pure aesthetic judgements. The highest truth, and the truth of beauty, lies in a (...)
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  31.  12
    Hegel and Heidegger on the Essence of Beauty: Plotting a Trajectory from Kant’s Third Critique.James Phillips - 2015 - Philosophy Today 59 (1):23-36.
    Heidegger’s discussions of beauty in the 1930s and ’40s arguably have more to do with a confrontation with Hegel than with a revisiting of the question of how best to analyse our experience of the beautiful. Beauty, for Heidegger as for Hegel, takes its definition from truth. At issue is a forcible rewriting of the harmony of the faculties to which Kant appeals in his defence of pure aesthetic judgements. The highest truth, and the truth of beauty, lies in a (...)
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  32.  5
    Issues-Directed Science Education - Theory and Applications in Biology and Chemistry.James R. Philips & David L. Adams - 1991 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 11 (3):155-160.
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  33.  45
    In the company of predators beowulf and the monstrous descendants of Cain.James Phillips - 2008 - Angelaki 13 (3):41 – 52.
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  34.  39
    Jean-Luc Nancy's Fraternal First Philosophy of the 'With': Rethinking Communion.James Phillips - 2013 - Theory and Event 16 (2).
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  35.  4
    Jean-Luc Nancy’s Fraternal First Philosophy of the ‘With’: Rethinking Communion.James Phillips - 2013 - Theory and Event 16 (2).
    Nancy revisits first philosophy's question of the relationship between the many ways of Being and defines ontological community and community more broadly by the communication/equivocation of the ways of Being rather than a common substance. Objections that Nancy's position is apolitical and ethically ambiguous take insufficient notice of the different task he has set himself. The preposition "with" names this new ontological conception of community, relieving it of a unifying point. A fraternal community of family resemblances without a father is (...)
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  36.  17
    Life in Space: William Burroughs and the Limits of the Society of Control.James Phillips - 2006 - Literature & Aesthetics 16 (1):95-112.
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  37.  6
    Off the Beaten Track.James Phillips - 2004 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 82 (2):368-368.
    Book Information Off the Beaten Track. Off the Beaten Track Heidegger Martin, trans. Julian Young and Kenneth Haynes, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002, 291, AUS$49.95 By Heidegger Martin., trans. Julian Young. and Kenneth Haynes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 291. AUS$49.95.
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  38.  17
    Navigation bicoded as functions of x-y and time?James G. Phillips & Rowan P. Ogeil - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (5):561-562.
    Evidence from egocentric space is cited to support bicoding of navigation in three-dimensional space. Horizontal distances and space are processed differently from the vertical. Indeed, effector systems are compatible in horizontal space, but potentially incompatible (or chaotic) during transitions to vertical motion. Navigation involves changes in coordinates, and animal models of navigation indicate that time has an important role.
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  39.  78
    On Narrative: Psychopathology Informing Philosophy.James Phillips - 2013 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 20 (1):11-23.
    In “Whole Life Narratives and the Self” David Lumsden (2013) has provided us with a clear review of the debate over narrative and personal identity and has staked out his own position in that debate. Arguing against neo-Lockean views of an atomistic self, he defends a narrative component in personal identity. Specifically, he argues that personal identity or self involves “a bundle of narrative threads” (p. 1), but does not require the grand unity of a master narrative—a whole life narrative. (...)
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  40.  17
    Painful Affect and Other Questions About the Ipseity Model of Schizophrenia.James Phillips - 2015 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 22 (3):209-212.
    In commenting on Hamm, Buck, and Lysaker’s “Reconciling the Ipseity-Disturbance Model with the Painful Affect in Schizophrenia”, let me first acknowledge the authors’ fine work in delineating this issue. They review very clearly the history of theoretical models of schizophrenia, including biological, psychoanalytic, and phenomenological approaches. They emphasize the need to include accounts of subjective experiences of persons with schizophrenia, and for this they underline the role of phenomenological research. In the latter, they note an emphasis on cognitive and perceptual (...)
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  41.  42
    Planning and control of action as solutions to an independence of visual mechanisms.James G. Phillips, Thomas J. Triggs & James W. Meehan - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (1):46-47.
    Glover proposes a planning–control model for the parietal lobe that contrasts with previous formulations that suggest independent mechanisms for perception and action. The planning–control model potentially solves practical functional problems with a proposed independence of perception and action, and offers some new directions for a study of human performance.
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  42.  18
    Predicting relationships between speed and accuracy of targetting movements is important.James G. Phillips, Mark A. Bellgrove & John L. Bradshaw - 1997 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (2):319-320.
    While explaining a large proportion of any variance, accounts of the speed and accuracy of targetting movements use techniques (e.g., log transforms) that typically reduce variability before ''explaining'' the data. Therefore the predictive power of such accounts are important. We consider whether Plamondon's model can account for kinematics of targetting movements of clinical populations.
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  43.  7
    Revisiting Greek Psychiatry.James Phillips - 2022 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 29 (4):291-292.
    Dr. Otto Doerr-Zegers's article is so interesting and insightful that I have nothing critical to say about it. On the other hand, in finding Greek, mainly Platonic, origins for psychotherapy, he offers us much to think about. In this brief commentary I will attempt to draw out some of the implications of his analysis for contemporary psychotherapy.Doerr-Zegers's analysis begins with a reflection on Socrates' Maieutics, Socrates' invoking the midwife metaphor to convey his use of dialectics to bring forth the ignorance (...)
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  44.  55
    Restoring Place to Aesthetic Experience: Heidegger's Critique of Rilke.James Phillips - 2010 - Critical Horizons 11 (3):341-358.
    Atypical among Heidegger’s numerous discussions of poets is the condemnation of Rilke in the 1942-43 lecture course Parmenides. At stake is the definition of “the open” (das Offene): Rilke reserves the open for animals as freedom from conceptual determinacy, whereas Heidegger reserves it for human beings as the place of Being in which things first appear as what they are. The open, for Heidegger, names the existential conception of place (as distinct from a geographical point) and features in his life-long (...)
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  45.  43
    Sovereignty’s Ontological Indecision: Derrida and Heidegger on the Other Line.James Phillips - 2014 - Substance 43 (2):68-82.
  46.  12
    Straddling the Senses of a Contested Term: A Comment on the Use of ‘Aesthetic’ in Mohan Matthen's ‘The Pleasure of Art’.James Phillips - 2017 - Australasian Philosophical Review 1 (1):90-94.
    ABSTRACTMatthen proposes a functional definition of art as that which is designed to elicit what he calls facilitating pleasure. While this definition has the air of a theory that unites disparate strands of aesthetic thought over the last several centuries, the linkages it assumes between pleasure and art require a support stronger than the historical polysemy of the contested term ‘aesthetic’. The co-existence of meanings within the tradition is not itself evidence that these meanings are philosophically co-ordinated. To define art (...)
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  47. Technology and Psychiatry.James Phillips - 2013 - In K. W. M. Fulford, Martin Davies, Richard Gipps, George Graham, John Sadler, Giovanni Stanghellini & Tim Thornton (eds.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy and psychiatry. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter evaluates the multiple roles of technology in psychiatry, drawing on philosophical resources and mindful of psychiatry's need to benefit from technology without reducing itself to nothing but a technology. It approaches the topic of technology and psychiatry from three perspectives. First, it addresses technology as a way of thinking-technical or instrumental reason-and how technical reason informs psychiatric theory and practice. For this analysis it invokes a philosophical tradition that stretches from Aristotle to Toulmin and Gadamer. Second, it takes (...)
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  48.  16
    The Cuckoo’s Egg in Honneth’s Hegel-Inspired Theory of Recognition: The Hobbesian Myth of Autonomy Revisited.James Phillips - 2017 - Critical Horizons 18 (1):19-32.
    Axel Honneth reads the young Hegel as engaged in a debate with Hobbes over the social nature of the autonomous self. In the passages that are crucial for the development of Honneth’s own theory of recognition the Jena manuscripts nevertheless do not mention Hobbes by name. Attributing to Hegel an advance on Hobbes’s influential early modern account of individual autonomy, Honneth does not duly consider the polemical context in which Hobbes wrote. A re-examination of the polemical use to which Hobbes (...)
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  49.  2
    “The Cuckoo’s Egg in Honneth’s Hegel-Inspired Theory of Recognition: The Hobbesian Myth of Autonomy Revisited”.James Phillips - 2017 - Critical Horizons 18 (1):19-32.
    Axel Honneth reads the young Hegel as engaged in a debate with Hobbes over the social nature of the autonomous self. In the passages that are crucial for the development of Honneth’s own theory of recognition the Jena manuscripts nevertheless do not mention Hobbes by name. Attributing to Hegel an advance on Hobbes’s influential early modern account of individual autonomy, Honneth does not duly consider the polemical context in which Hobbes wrote. A re-examination of the polemical use to which Hobbes (...)
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  50.  7
    The case for a Convergence of the Beautiful and the Sublime: Kant, Aesthetic form and the Temptations of Appearance.James Phillips - 2012 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 43 (2):161-177.
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