Results for 'John A. Allan'

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  1. The Epistle to the Ephesians (The Torch Bible Commentaries).John A. Allan - 1959
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  2.  8
    Legal Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies: TOPOFF 2 and other Lessons.John A. Heaton, Anne M. Murphy, Susan Allan & Harald Pietz - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (S4):43-44.
    There is a fine balance between civil liberties and protection of the public’s health.Legislators, especially those in the western United States, are concerned about selling the Model State Act because of the loss of civil liberties. State constitutions give governors broad powers, such as declaring martial law and giving public health leaders the authority to act. State laws should consider issues such as property rights; taking of businesses and supplies; quarantine and isolation; due process; coordination among states, counties and cities; (...)
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  3.  34
    Arrow's Theorem with a fixed feasible alternative.John A. Weymark, Aanund Hylland & Allan F. Gibbard - unknown
    Arrow's Theorem, in its social choice function formulation, assumes that all nonempty finite subsets of the universal set of alternatives is potentially a feasible set. We demonstrate that the axioms in Arrow's Theorem, with weak Pareto strengthened to strong Pareto, are consistent if it is assumed that there is a prespecified alternative which is in every feasible set. We further show that if the collection of feasible sets consists of all subsets of alternatives containing a prespecified list of alternatives and (...)
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  4.  21
    Legal Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies: TOPOFF 2 and Other Lessons.John A. Heaton, Anne M. Murphy, Susan Allan & Harald Pietz - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (s4):43-44.
    There is a fine balance between civil liberties and protection of the public’s health.Legislators, especially those in the western United States, are concerned about selling the Model State Act because of the loss of civil liberties. State constitutions give governors broad powers, such as declaring martial law and giving public health leaders the authority to act. State laws should consider issues such as property rights; taking of businesses and supplies; quarantine and isolation; due process; coordination among states, counties and cities; (...)
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  5.  6
    Conversations with John Gardner.John Gardner & Allan Richard Chavkin - 1990
    Gathers interviews with John Gardner from each period of his career, and offers a brief profile of his life and accomplishments.
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  6. Concreteness, imagery, and meaningfulness values for 925 nouns.Allan Paivio, John C. Yuille & Stephen A. Madigan - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 76 (1p2):1.
  7.  12
    An introduction to Allan gibbard’s Harvard seminar paper.John A. Weymark - 2014 - Economics and Philosophy 30 (3):263-268.
  8.  14
    Nature, Truth, and Value: Exploring the Thinking of Frederick Ferrz.George Allan, Merle Allshouse, Harley Chapman, John B. Cobb, John Compton, Donald A. Crosby, Paul T. Durbin, Barbara Meister Ferré, Frederick Ferré, Frank B. Golley, Joseph Grange, John Granrose, David Ray Griffin, David Keller, Eugene Thomas Long, Elisabethe Segars McRae, Leslie A. Muray, William L. Power, James F. Salmon, Hans Julius Schneider, Kristin Shrader-Frechette, Udo E. Simonis, Donald Wayne Viney & Clark Wolf (eds.) - 2005 - Lexington Books.
    In this thorough compendium, nineteen accomplished scholars explore, in some manner the values they find inherent in the world, their nature, and revelence through the thought of Frederick Ferré. These essays, informed by the insights of Ferré and coming from manifold perspectives—ethics, philosophy, theology, and environmental studies, advance an ambitious challenge to current intellectual and scholarly fashions.
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  9.  51
    Nature, Truth, and Value: Exploring the Thinking of Frederick Ferrz.George Allan, Merle Allshouse, Harley Chapman, John B. Cobb, John Compton, Donald A. Crosby, Paul T. Durbin, Barbara Meister Ferré, Frederick Ferré, Frank B. Golley, Joseph Grange, John Granrose, David Ray Griffin, David Keller, Eugene Thomas Long, Elisabethe Segars McRae, Leslie A. Muray, William L. Power, James F. Salmon, Hans Julius Schneider, Dr Kristin Shrader-Frechette, Udo E. Simonis, Donald Wayne Viney & Clark Wolf (eds.) - 2005 - Lexington Books.
    In this thorough compendium, nineteen accomplished scholars explore, in some manner the values they find inherent in the world, their nature, and revelence through the thought of Frederick FerrZ. These essays, informed by the insights of FerrZ and coming from manifold perspectives—ethics, philosophy, theology, and environmental studies, advance an ambitious challenge to current intellectual and scholarly fashions.
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  10.  35
    Latency of imaginal and verbal mediators as a function of stimulus and response concreteness-imagery.John C. Yuille & Allan Paivio - 1967 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 75 (4):540.
  11. A Treatise on God as First Principle.John Duns Scotus & Allan B. Wolter - 1967 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 23 (3):389-390.
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  12.  13
    A hermeneutic study of the concept of ‘focusing’ in critical care nursing practice.Allan John Walters - 1994 - Nursing Inquiry 1 (1):23-30.
    A phenomenological hermeneutic study of the lifeworld of critical care nursing was undertaken, from which emerged the concept of ‘focusing’. Focusing is defined as empathizing concern for the critically ill person and his/her family amid the high technology of the intensive care unit. When nurses focus on the patient and the patient's family they are able to empathize with die personal dimensions of caring. The study used a phenomenological hermeneutic approach to describe die nature of the lived experience of clinical (...)
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  13.  39
    Changes in associative strategies and paired-associate learning over trials as a function of work imagery and type of learning set.Allan Paivio & John C. Yuille - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 79 (3p1):458.
  14.  27
    Book Review Section 3. [REVIEW]Max A. Bailey, Kenneth R. Conklin, William J. Mathis, Harold J. Noah, John Bremer, Beatrice E. Sarlos, Eric Russell Lacy, David W. Minar, Dabney Park Jr, Nathan Kravetz, Allan R. Sullivan, Dwight W. Allen, Joel H. Spring, Walden Crabtree & Leo D. Leonard - 1973 - Educational Studies 4 (1):35-48.
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  15.  4
    Becoming Human: The Matter of the Medieval Child.John Allan Mitchell - 2014 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    _Becoming Human_ argues that human identity was articulated and extended across a wide range of textual, visual, and artifactual assemblages from the twelfth to the fifteenth centuries. J. Allan Mitchell shows how the formation of the child expresses a manifold and mutable style of being. To be human is to learn to dwell among a welter of things. A searching and provocative historical inquiry into human becoming, the book presents a set of idiosyncratic essays on embryology and infancy, play (...)
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  16.  45
    Special Supplement: The XYY Controversy: Researching Violence and Genetics.Diane Bauer, Ronald Bayer, Jonathan Beckwith, Gordon Bermant, Digamber S. Borgaonkar, Daniel Callahan, Arthur Caplan, John Conrad, Charles M. Culver, Gerald Dworkin, Harold Edgar, Willard Gaylin, Park Gerald, Clarence Harris, Johnathan King, Ruth Macklin, Allan Mazur, Robert Michels, Carola Mone, Rosalind Petchesky, Tabitha M. Powledge, Reed E. Pyeritz, Arthur Robinson, Thomas Scanlon, Saleem A. Shah, Thomas A. Shannon, Margaret Steinfels, Judith P. Swazey, Paul Wachtel & Stanley Walzer - 1980 - Hastings Center Report 10 (4):1.
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  17.  21
    Testing the inescapable network of mutuality: Albert Luthuli, Martin Luther King Jr and the challenges of post-liberation South Africa.Allan A. Boesak - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):1-12.
    The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr, 50 years ago on 04 April 1968, has been recalled in the United States with memorial services, conferences, public discussions and books. In contrast, the commemoration in 2017 of the death of Albert John Mvumbi Luthuli, 50 years ago on December 1967, passed almost unremarked. That is to our detriment. Yet, these two Christian fighters for freedom, in different contexts, did not only have much in common, but they also left remarkably similar (...)
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  18. Donation after cardiocirculatory death: a call for a moratorium pending full public disclosure and fully informed consent.Ari R. Joffe, Joe Carcillo, Natalie Anton, Allan deCaen, Yong Y. Han, Michael J. Bell, Frank A. Maffei, John Sullivan, James Thomas & Gonzalo Garcia-Guerra - 2011 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 6:17.
    Many believe that the ethical problems of donation after cardiocirculatory death (DCD) have been "worked out" and that it is unclear why DCD should be resisted. In this paper we will argue that DCD donors may not yet be dead, and therefore that organ donation during DCD may violate the dead donor rule. We first present a description of the process of DCD and the standard ethical rationale for the practice. We then present our concerns with DCD, including the following: (...)
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  19.  2
    A sacramental universe.Archibald Allan Bowman & John Waugh Scott - 1939 - London,: H. Milford, Oxford university press. Edited by John Waugh Scott.
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  20.  13
    Rabi: Scientist and Citizen. John S. Rigden.Allan A. Needell - 1988 - Isis 79 (1):174-175.
  21.  10
    John Krige. American Hegemony and the Postwar Reconstruction of Science in Europe. viii + 376 pp., bibl., index. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2006. $40. [REVIEW]Allan A. Needell - 2008 - Isis 99 (1):217-218.
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  22.  11
    Criminologies of the military: militarism, national security and justice.Andrew John Goldsmith & Benjamin Allan Wadham (eds.) - 2018 - Oxford, UK: Bloomsbury Publishing.
    This innovative collection offers one of the first analyses of criminologies of the military from an interdisciplinary perspective. While some criminologists have examined the military in relation to the area of war crimes, this collection considers a range of other important but less explored aspects such as private military actors, insurgents, paramilitary groups and the role of military forces in tackling transnational crime. Drawing upon insights from criminology, this book's editors also consider the ways the military institution harbours criminal activity (...)
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  23.  46
    The John H. Scheide Biblical Papyri: Ezekiel.James A. Montgomery, Allan C. Johnson, H. S. Gehman & Edmund H. Kase - 1939 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 59 (2):262.
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  24.  95
    Reconciling our aims: in search of bases for ethics.Allan Gibbard - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Barry Stroud.
    In these three Tanner lectures, distinguished ethical theorist Allan Gibbard explores the nature of normative thought and the bases of ethics. In the first lecture he explores the role of intuitions in moral thinking and offers a way of thinking about the intuitive method of moral inquiry that both places this activity within the natural world and makes sense of it as an indispensable part of our lives as planners. In the second and third lectures he takes up the (...)
  25. New books. [REVIEW]Austin Duncan-Jones, C. D. Broad, William Kneale, Martha Kneale, L. J. Russell, D. J. Allan, S. Körner, Percy Black, J. O. Urmson, Stephen Toulmin, J. J. C. Smart, Antony Flew, R. C. Cross, George E. Hughes, John Holloway, D. Daiches Raphael, J. P. Corbett, E. A. Gellner, G. P. Henderson, W. von Leyden, P. L. Heath, Margaret Macdonald, B. Mayo, P. H. Nowell-Smith, J. N. Findlay & A. M. MacIver - 1950 - Mind 59 (235):389-431.
  26.  38
    Book Review Section 4. [REVIEW]Cyril O. Houle, Douglas E. Foley, Theodore A. Koschler, Donald F. Gerdy, John R. Shea, Lawrence D. Haskew, William E. Barron, Robert J. Nash, Ruth B. Johnson, Carl R. Ashbaugh, John H. Walker, A. C. Murphy, Earl J. Mcgrath, Jack C. Willers, William E. Drake, James E. Wagener, Billy F. Cowart, William Jefferson Mathis, Samuel E. Kellams, Ira S. Steinberg, Willis H. Griffin, Eugene E. Grollmes & Allan W. Purdy - 1972 - Educational Studies 3 (1):53-67.
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  27.  24
    Duns Scotus on Time and Existence: The Questions on Aristotle’s “De interpretatione.” by John Duns Scotus.Allan Bäck - 2016 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 54 (1):162-163.
    This book offers a translation of two short commentaries by John Duns Scotus on Aristotle’s On Interpretation. It comes with an introduction, notes, and a commentary. I think that this book would be difficult for a novice; perhaps the intended audience is someone with a general familiarity with medieval philosophy, although not necessarily with medieval logic. I do not think that someone just interested in general logical issues, such as existential import or future contingents, will find much to interest (...)
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  28.  11
    Is John Henry Newman's Nineteenth-Century The Idea of a University Relevant in the Twenty-First Century?Allan Patience - 2021 - Newman Studies Journal 18 (2):70-89.
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  29. Factive Presupposition and the Truth Condition on Knowledge.Allan Hazlett - 2012 - Acta Analytica 27 (4):461-478.
    In “The Myth of Factive Verbs” (Hazlett 2010), I had four closely related goals. The first (pp. 497-99, p. 522) was to criticize appeals to ordinary language in epistemology. The second (p. 499) was to criticize the argument that truth is a necessary condition on knowledge because “knows” is factive. The third (pp. 507-19) – which was the intended means of achieving the first two – was to defend a semantics for “knows” on which <S knows p> can be true (...)
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  30.  6
    Law's reality: a philosophy of law.Allan Beever - 2021 - Northampton, Massachusetts: Edward Elgar Publishing.
    520 "Allan Beever lays the foundation for a timely philosophical and empirical study of the nature of law with a detailed examination of the structure of evolving law through declaratory speech acts. This engaging book demonstrates both how law itself is achieved and also its ability to generate rights, duties, obligations, permissions and powers. Structured into three distinct parts - the philosophy of law and jurisprudence, the structure of the social word and the ontology of law, and the reconstruction (...)
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  31.  11
    Deceit, Desire, and The Dunciad : Mimetic Theory and Alexander Pope.Allan Doolittle - 2010 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 17:1-26.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Deceit, Desire, and The Dunciad:Mimetic Theory and Alexander PopeAllan Doolittle (bio)Anxiety expressed over what is often termed "information overload"1 is by no means solely a phenomenon of our electronic age. Recent scholarship has traced this concern as far back as the early modern period. The increased production and dissemination of books in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was a source of "wonder and anxiety"2 for authors and prompted the (...)
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  32.  25
    The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice.E. Allan Lind & Tom R. Tyler - 1988 - Springer Verlag.
    We dedicate this book to John Thibaut. He was mentor and personal friend to one of us, and his work had a profound intellectual influence on both of us. We were both strongly influenced by Thibaut's insightful articulation of the importance to psychology of the concept of pro cedural justice and by his empirical work with Laurens Walker in reactions to legal institu demonstrating the role of procedural justice tions. The great importance we accord the Thibaut and Walker work (...)
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  33. John Duns Scotus: a treatise on potency and act: questions on the Metaphysics of Aristotle, Book IX.Allan Bernard Wolter - 2000 - St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: Franciscan Institute. Edited by John Duns Scotus.
  34.  34
    John Duns Scotus: A Treatise on Memory and Intuition from Codex A of ORDINATION IV, Distinctio 45, Question 3.Allan B. Wolter & Marilyn McCord Adams - 1993 - Franciscan Studies 53 (1):193-211.
  35.  12
    The Morality of Life.Allan Gotthelf & Gregory Salmieri - 2016 - In Allan Gotthelf & Gregory Salmieri (eds.), A Companion to Ayn Rand. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 73–104.
    In this chapter, Ayn Rand's new concept of morality is contrasted with familiar concepts according to which morality is an imposition on an individual that demands that he forgo his own interests as a sacrifice, whether to other people or to God. This chapter explores Rand's view that man's life is the standard of value and looks at each value that John Galt describes as supreme and ruling and, then, at the range of other values that Rand thinks man's (...)
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  36.  31
    A History of Cynicism, from Diogenes to the Sixth Century A.D. By D. R. Dudley, Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. (London: Methuen & Co. Ltd.1937. Pp. xii + 224. Price 12s. 6d.). [REVIEW]D. J. Allan - 1938 - Philosophy 13 (51):369-.
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  37.  67
    Reply to Hawthorne.Allan Gibbard - 2002 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 64 (1):179-183.
    Goodness, rational permissibility, and the like might be gruesome properties. That is to say, they might not well suit causal-explanatory purposes. Or at least, these properties are gruesome for all their normative concepts tell us by themselves. Perhaps hedonists are right and such properties are anything but gruesome, but perhaps instead, the most gruesome-minded ethical pluralists are right—normative concepts by themselves don’t settle the issue. At the end of his marvelous commentary, John Hawthorne depicts the morass of dank possibilities (...)
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  38.  38
    A Search for Unity in Diversity : The "Permanent Hegelian Deposit" in the Philosophy of John Dewey.James Allan Good - 2005 - Lexington Books.
    This study demonstrates that Dewey did not reject Hegelianism during the 1890s, as scholars maintain, but developed a humanistic/historicist reading that was indebted to an American Hegelian tradition. Scholars have misunderstood the "permanent Hegelian deposit" in Dewey's thought because they have not fully appreciated this American Hegelian tradition and have assumed that his Hegelianism was based primarily on British neo-Hegelianism. ;The study examines the American reception of Hegel in the nineteenth-century by intellectuals as diverse as James Marsh and Frederic Henry (...)
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  39.  23
    The Murder of Professor Schlick: The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle.Allan Janik - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (1):103-104.
    It is not unusual to speculate on the contrary-to-fact implications of political assassinations. Lincoln's is the classic case in point, but we need only think of Julius Caesar, Gandhi, or John Kennedy, if we require further examples. One totally neglected case in this context is that of Moritz Schlick. One of the remote consequences of his murder, on June 22, 1936, which was most definitely a political assassination, is that today's academic world may well have been an entirely different (...)
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  40. Utilitarianism and Human Rights.Allan Gibbard - 1984 - Social Philosophy and Policy 1 (2):92-102.
    INTRODUCTION We look to rights for protection. The hope of advocates of “human rights” has been that certain protections might be accorded to allof humanity. Even in a world only a minority of whose inhabitants live under liberal democratic regimes, the hope is, certain standards accepted in the liberal democracies will gain universal recognition and respect. These include liberty of persons as opposed to enslavement, freedom from cruelty, freedom from arbitrary execution, from arbitrary imprisonment, and from arbitrary deprivation of property (...)
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  41.  7
    Georg Hartmann. Hartmann’s Practika: A Manual for Making Sundials and Astrolabes with the Compass and Rule. Translated and edited by, John Lamprey. 312 pp., illus., figs., bibl., index. Bellvue, Colo.: John Lamprey, 2002. $174.95. [REVIEW]Allan Mills - 2003 - Isis 94 (2):372-373.
  42.  17
    Obituary.Allan Janik - 2011 - Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 15:351-357.
    Stephen Edelston Toulmin, philosopher and historian of science, pioneer in the logical analysis of substantive argumentation, was educated in physics and philosophy at Cambridge, where he studied with Paul Dirac, John Wisdom and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Cambridge, Issac Newton’s university, remained his philosophical home: he always was very critical of the way that philosophy was done at The Other Place, as Oxford is known there. The only philosopher whom he really revered there was John Austin – although it is (...)
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  43.  26
    Lizzini, O. "avicenna" [col. Pensatori]. Roma: Carocci ed., 2012. 339 P.Allan Neves Oliveira Silva - 2015 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 56 (131):297-302.
    A questão "se uma elocução perde seu significado com a destruição das coisas "surge como uma questão sobre o valor-verdade de declarações com um termo vazio como sujeito, a saber, como um subproblema do sofisma "Se 'omnis homo de necessitate est animal' é verdade quando não há homem algum ". Neste trabalho, trarei as discussões conforme elas se apresentam em "De signis" IV.2 de Roger Bacon, em "Quaestiones logicales", q. 2–3 de Peter John Olivi, no OHNEA de Boethius of (...)
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  44.  22
    Allan Megill on History and Its Limits: Human, Animal, Violence. By Dominick LaCapra. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009. Pp. ix, 230. [REVIEW]Allan Megill - 2013 - History and Theory 52 (1):110-129.
    In this collection of critical essays, Dominick LaCapra, with characteristic verve, takes on a variety of authors who have addressed issues relating to intellectual history, history generally, violence, trauma, and the relation between the human and the animal. LaCapra offers two types of criticism—of historians for ignoring or misappropriating theory, and of theorists for engaging in “theoreticism,” a theorizing that rides roughshod over historical specificity and context. The present essay focuses on LaCapra’s discussion of the theoreticism of the critical theorists (...)
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  45. The De Primo Principio of John Duns Scotus. — A revised Text and a Translation.Evan Roche, Allan B. Wolter & S. J. Day - 1952 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 8 (4):444-445.
     
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  46.  72
    John Dewey's "Permanent Hegelian Deposit" and the Exigencies of War.James Allan Good - 2006 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 44 (2):293-313.
    From 1882 to 1903, Dewey explicitly espoused a Hegelian philosophy. Until recently, scholars agreed that he broke from Hegel no later than 1903, but never adequately accounted for what he called the "permanent deposit" that Hegel left in his mature thought. I argue that Dewey never made a clean break from Hegel. Instead, he drew on the work of the St. Louis Hegelians to fashion a non-metaphysical reading of Hegel, similar to that championed by Klaus Hartmann and other Hegel scholars (...)
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  47.  12
    Power and Possibility in Early Arabic Philosophy: Three Innovators Between Philoponus and Avicenna.Nicholas Allan Aubin - 2023 - De Gruyter.
    "The world is a finite body, and therefore has finite power." John Philoponus is remembered for using this Aristotelian premise to break ranks with Aristotle and argue that the world is not everlasting. This investigation reconsiders Philoponus’s arguments from finite power, and then explores the aftermath of this line of thinking in the works of three lesser-known Arabic intellectuals active in the generation before Avicenna (d. 1037): Abū l-Ḫayr Ibn Suwār (d. after 1017), Abū al-Ḥasan al-ʿĀmirī (d. 992), and (...)
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  48.  23
    Medieval Philosophy.The Evolution of Medieval Thought.Duns Scotus: Philosophical Writings.John Duns Scotus and the Principle "Omne Quod Movetur ab Alio Movetur. [REVIEW]James J. Walsh, Armand A. Maurer, David Knowles, Allan Wolter & Roy R. Effler - 1964 - Journal of Philosophy 61 (3):115.
  49. Mythology of the Factive.John Turri - 2011 - Logos and Episteme 2 (1):141-150.
    It’s a cornerstone of epistemology that knowledge requires truth – that is, that knowledge is factive. Allan Hazlett boldly challenges orthodoxy by arguing thatthe ordinary concept of knowledge is not factive. On this basis Hazlett further argues that epistemologists shouldn’t concern themselves with the ordinary concept of knowledge, or knowledge ascriptions and related linguistic phenomena. I argue that either Hazlett is wrong about the ordinary concept of knowledge, or he’s right in a way that leaves epistemologists to carry on (...)
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  50.  15
    The Rule of Law for All Sentient Animals.John Adenitire - 2022 - Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 35 (1):1-30.
    This paper argues for a theory of the rule of law that is inclusive of sentient non-human animals. It critiques the rule of law theories of Fuller, Waldron, and Allan, by showing that their theories presuppose that the legal subject is a person who can be guided by legal norms. This unduly excludes non-human animals, as well as certain humans who do not have rational capacities. If we view the basic idea of the rule of law as restraining arbitrary (...)
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