Results for 'Merle Eugene Curti'

988 found
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  1. Methodological Advances in Experimental Philosophy.Eugen Fischer & Mark Curtis (eds.) - 2019 - London: Bloomsbury Press.
    Until recently, experimental philosophy has been associated with the questionnaire-based study of intuitions; however, experimental philosophers now adapt a wide range of empirical methods for new philosophical purposes. New methods include paradigms for behavioural experiments from across the social sciences as well as computational methods from the digital humanities that can process large bodies of text and evidence. This book offers an accessible overview of these exciting innovations. The volume brings together established and emerging research leaders from several areas of (...)
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  2.  16
    Causation attributions and corpus analysis.Justin Sytsma, Roland Bluhm, Pascale Willemsen, Kevin Reuter, Eugen Fischer & Mark Douglas Curtis - 2019 - In Advances in Experimental Philosophy. pp. 209-238.
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  3.  4
    The American Exploration of Dreams and Dreamers.Merle Curti - 1966 - Journal of the History of Ideas 27 (3):391.
  4.  2
    The American Scholar in Three Wars.Merle Curti - 1942 - Journal of the History of Ideas 3 (3):241.
  5. Human Nature in American Thought: A History.Merle Curti - 1981 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 17 (2):186-192.
     
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  6.  5
    Jane Addams on Human Nature.Merle Curti - 1961 - Journal of the History of Ideas 22 (2):240.
  7. The Growth of American Thought.Merle Curti - 1944 - Science and Society 8 (3):264-267.
     
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  8.  2
    The Growth of American Thought. By Theodore Brameld. [REVIEW]Merle Curti - 1943 - Ethics 54:304.
  9.  6
    Developmental changes in the use of categorization as a study strategy.Curtis W. McIntyre, Christopher T. Weaver, Eugene A. Lovelace & Richard S. Niska - 1978 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 11 (6):407-410.
  10.  12
    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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  11.  16
    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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  12.  10
    Roger Boisjoly and the Challenger disaster: The ethical dimensions. [REVIEW]Russell P. Boisjoly, Ellen Foster Curtis & Eugene Mellican - 1989 - Journal of Business Ethics 8 (4):217 - 230.
    This case study focuses on Roger Boisjoly's attempt to prevent the launch of the Challenger and subsequent quest to set the record straight despite negative consequences. Boisjoly's experiences before and after the Challenger disaster raise numerous ethical issues that are integral to any explanation of the disaster and applicable to other management situations. Underlying all these issues, however, is the problematic relationship between individual and organizational responsibility. In analyzing this fundamental issue, this paper has two objectives: first, to demonstrate the (...)
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  13.  9
    Aristotle’s Politics: Living Well and Living Together. By Eugene Garver. [REVIEW]Curtis N. Johnson - 2013 - Ancient Philosophy 33 (1):222-228.
  14.  10
    Epistemological Warfare and Hope in Critical Dystopia by Emrah Atasoy (review).Claire P. Curtis - 2023 - Utopian Studies 33 (3):519-520.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Epistemological Warfare and Hope in Critical Dystopia by Emrah AtasoyClaire P. CurtisEmrah Atasoy. Epistemological Warfare and Hope in Critical Dystopia. Ankara: Nobel Bilimsel Eserler, 2021. vii+ 167 pp. ISBN: 978-625-7589-04-8This book is an application of the idea of critical dystopia to three understudied novels and the beginning of an argument about utopian desire itself. Emrah Atasoy, a prolific author who reviewed Turkish speculative fiction in a well-received 2021 (...)
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  15.  1
    Merle Curti's The Growth of American Thought.Herbert W. Schneider - 1944 - Journal of the History of Ideas 5 (1/4):243.
  16.  4
    Merle Curti, "Human Nature in American Thought". [REVIEW]Herbert Wallace Schneider - 1982 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 20 (3):312.
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  17.  6
    Merle Curti, "Human Nature in American Historical Thought". [REVIEW]Herbert Wallace Schneider - 1970 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 8 (3):361.
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  18. Merle Curti, "Human Nature in American Thought: A History". [REVIEW]James Campbell - 1981 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 17 (2):186.
     
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  19.  4
    Human Nature in American Thought: A History. Merle Curti.David E. Leary - 1983 - Isis 74 (1):102-103.
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  20.  5
    Review of Merle Curti: The Growth of American Thought[REVIEW]Theodore Brameld - 1944 - Ethics 54 (4):304-305.
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  21.  1
    Book Review:The Growth of American Thought. Merle Curti[REVIEW]Theodore Brameld - 1944 - Ethics 54 (4):304-.
  22.  4
    Human Nature in American Thought: A History by Merle Curti[REVIEW]David Leary - 1983 - Isis 74:102-103.
  23.  8
    Cinematic art and reversals of power: Deleuze via Blanchot.Eugene B. Young - 2022 - London: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Bringing together Deleuze, Blanchot, and Foucault, this book provides a detailed and original exploration of the ideas that influenced Deleuze's thought leading up to and throughout his cinema volumes and, as a result, proposes a new definition of art. Examining Blanchot's suggestion that art and dream are "outside" of power, as imagination has neither reality nor truth, and Foucault's theory that power forms knowledge by valuing life, Eugene Brent Young relates these to both Deleuze's philosophy of time and his (...)
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  24. The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences.Eugene Wigner - 1960 - Communications in Pure and Applied Mathematics 13:1-14.
  25.  73
    A New Modern Philosophy: An Inclusive Anthology of Primary Sources.Eugene Marshall & Susanne Sreedhar (eds.) - 2019 - New York: Routledge.
    The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries are arguably the most important period in philosophy’s history, given that they set a new and broad foundation for subsequent philosophical thought. Over the last decade, however, discontent among instructors has grown with coursebooks’ unwavering focus on the era’s seven most well-known philosophers—all of them white and male—and on their exclusively metaphysical and epistemological concerns. While few dispute the centrality of these figures and the questions they raised, the modern era also included essential contributions from (...)
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  26.  8
    "Our Original Barbarism": Man vs. Nature in Thomas Jefferson's Moral Experience.Maurizio Valsania - 2004 - Journal of the History of Ideas 65 (4):627-645.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Our Original Barbarism":Man vs. Nature in Thomas Jefferson's Moral ExperienceMaurizio ValsaniaJefferson, perhaps more than any other early democratic theorist, recognized that the development of social institutions and government could not be left to chance or to the "Laws of Nature."1One of the most fundamental fact about Thomas Jefferson—maybe the fundamental fact about Thomas Jefferson—is that he was a white man, and a landholding white man at that. Scholars of (...)
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  27.  6
    American Intellectual Histories and Historians.Robert Allen Skotheim - 2015 - Princeton University Press.
    This study of American intellectual histories sketches their development from colonial chronicles to today's professional scholarship. It concentrates upon the writings of a dozen or more major historians between the late 1800's and the middle 1900's who have contributed to the study of the history of ideas in America, including Moses Coit Tyler, Edward Eggleston, Charles Beard, Carl Becker, Vernon Farrington, Merle Curti, Perry Miller, and Ralph Gabriel. The various histories are analyzed partly from the perspective of a (...)
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  28.  16
    Altri tre codici dei commenti biblici attribuiti a Salonio.Carmelo Curti - 1995 - Augustinianum 35 (1):397-407.
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  29.  1
    Il linguaggio relativo al Padre e al Figlio in alcuni passi dei “Commentarii in Psalmos” di Eusebio di Cesarea.Carmelo Curti - 1973 - Augustinianum 13 (3):483-506.
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  30.  8
    Il regno millenario in Vittorino di Petovio.Carmelo Curti - 1978 - Augustinianum 18 (3):419-433.
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  31. Il telelavoro: la sfida del futuro alle soglie del 2000.A. Curti - forthcoming - Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy.
  32. Le rime di baccio uugolini.Alessandra Curti - 1998 - Rinascimento 38:163-203.
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  33. The poems of Baccio Ugolini.A. Curti - 1998 - Rinascimento 38:163-203.
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  34. Affect and Accuracy in Recall. Studies of « flashbulb » memories.Eugene Winograd & Ulric Neisser - 1995 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 185 (1):117-117.
     
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  35. Is future bias a manifestation of the temporal value asymmetry?Eugene Caruso, Andrew J. Latham & Kristie Miller - forthcoming - Philosophical Psychology.
    Future-bias is the preference, all else being equal, for positive states of affairs to be located in the future not the past, and for negative states of affairs to be located in the past not the future. Three explanations for future-bias have been posited: the temporal metaphysics explanation, the practical irrelevance explanation, and the three mechanisms explanation. Understanding what explains future-bias is important not only for better understanding the phenomenon itself, but also because many philosophers think that which explanation is (...)
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  36.  9
    A process model.Eugene T. Gendlin - 2018 - Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.
    Body-environment (b-en) -- Functional cycle (fucy) -- An object -- The body and time -- Evolution, novelty, and stability -- Behavior -- Culture, symbol, and language -- Thinking with the implicit.
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  37.  5
    For Ethical Fundraising from Patients, Respect them as Partners.Brendan D. Curti - 2022 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 12 (1):9-10.
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  38.  18
    Female Literature of Migration in Italy.Lidia Curti - 2007 - Feminist Review 87 (1):60-75.
    Starting symbolically from a place of transit and mobility such as the Galleria in Naples, I look at the pace of immigration movements to Italy from both ex-colonial territories and other countries. Precarity characterizes the migrant condition in Italy: entrance and stay permits; work and housing, which are difficult to obtain and always temporary; bureaucratic control is severe and the right to citizenship is distant. The collective amnesia of the colonial enterprise obscures the fact that at least some of the (...)
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  39. Does von Neumann Entropy Correspond to Thermodynamic Entropy?Eugene Y. S. Chua - 2021 - Philosophy of Science 88 (1):145-168.
    Conventional wisdom holds that the von Neumann entropy corresponds to thermodynamic entropy, but Hemmo and Shenker (2006) have recently argued against this view by attacking von Neumann's (1955) argument. I argue that Hemmo and Shenker's arguments fail due to several misunderstandings: about statistical-mechanical and thermodynamic domains of applicability, about the nature of mixed states, and about the role of approximations in physics. As a result, their arguments fail in all cases: in the single-particle case, the finite particles case, and the (...)
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  40. Decoherence, Branching, and the Born Rule in a Mixed-State Everettian Multiverse.Eugene Y. S. Chua & Eddy Keming Chen - manuscript
    In Everettian quantum mechanics, justifications for the Born rule appeal to self-locating uncertainty or decision theory. Such justifications have focused exclusively on a pure-state Everettian multiverse, represented by a wave function. Recent works in quantum foundations suggest that it is viable to consider a mixed-state Everettian multiverse, represented by a (mixed-state) density matrix. Here, we develop the conceptual foundations for decoherence and branching in a mixed-state multiverse, and extend the standard Everettian justifications for the Born rule to this setting. This (...)
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  41. The whitewashing of blame.Eugene Chislenko - forthcoming - European Journal of Philosophy.
    I argue that influential recent discussions have whitewashed blame, characterizing it in ways that deemphasize or ignore its morally problematic features. I distinguish “definitional,” “creeping,” and “emphasis” whitewash, and argue that they play a central role in overall endorsements of blame by T.M. Scanlon, George Sher, and Miranda Fricker. In particular, these endorsements treat blame as appropriate by definition (Scanlon), or as little more than a wish (Sher), and infer from blame's having one useful function that it is a good (...)
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  42.  6
    Aristotle's Rhetoric: An Art of Character.Eugene Garver - 1994 - University of Chicago Press.
    In this major contribution to philosophy and rhetoric, Eugene Garver shows how Aristotle integrates logic and virtue in his great treatise, the _Rhetoric._ He raises and answers a central question: can there be a civic art of rhetoric, an art that forms the character of citizens? By demonstrating the importance of the _Rhetoric_ for understanding current philosophical problems of practical reason, virtue, and character, Garver has written the first work to treat the _Rhetoric_ as philosophy and to connect its (...)
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  43.  8
    On the use of framed knowledge in language comprehension.Eugene Charniak - 1978 - Artificial Intelligence 11 (3):225-265.
  44.  4
    The Historical Foundations of American Environmental Attitudes.Eugene C. Hargrove - 1979 - Environmental Ethics 1 (3):209-240.
    John Passmore has claimed that American environmental attitudes are incompatible with Western traditions and Western civilization: they arose out of a Romantic transvaluation of values in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and today are defensible only in terms of antiscientific nature mysticism and Oriental religions. I argue that these attitudes developed out of an intricate interplay between Western science and art over the last three centuries, and are, therefore, of Western, not Eastern, origin. Moreover, they are apart of scientific and (...)
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  45.  5
    Pragmatism and the Practice of History: From Turner and Du Bois to Today.James T. Kloppenberg - 2004 - Metaphilosophy 35 (1-2):202-225.
    Pragmatism has affected American historical writing since the early twentieth century. Such contemporaries and students of Peirce, James, and Dewey as Frederick Jackson Turner, W. E. B. Du Bois, James Harvey Robinson, Charles Beard, Mary Beard, and Carl Becker drew on pragmatism when they fashioned what was called the “new history.” They wanted to topple inherited assumptions about the past and replace positivist historical methods with the pragmatists' model of a community of inquiry. Such widely read mid-twentieth-century historians as (...) Curti, Henry Steele Commager, and Richard Hofstadter embraced the perspectivalism, fallibilism, and instrumentalism of the pragmatists, thereby helping to sustain the tradition during its nadir in American philosophy departments. Many historians have been drawn to the study of pragmatism during its recent renaissance; others have advanced pragmatist-inspired philosophies of history. Through such prominent contemporary historians as Thomas Haskell, David Hollinger, and Joyce Appleby, the ideas of Pierce, James, and Dewey continue to influence the historical profession. (shrink)
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  46.  3
    Suffering and Transcendence.Eugene Thomas Long - 2006 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1-3):139-148.
    This essay explores the experience of suffering in order to see to what extent it can be understood within the context of the human condition without diverting the reality of suffering or denying the meaning of human existence and divine reality. Particular attention is given to describing and interpreting what I call the transcendent dimensions of suffering with the intent of showing that in the experience of suffereing persons come up against the limits of what can be accounted for in (...)
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  47.  4
    Twins' and Singletons' Linguistic Environment: A Systematic Review.Tommaso Trombetta, Piera Brustia, Lorenzo Curti, Angela M. Caldarera, Eva Gerino & Luca Rollè - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  48.  11
    Pure Form in Aristotle.Eugene E. Ryan - 1973 - Phronesis 18 (3):209-224.
  49.  5
    Business Ethics in a Transition Economy: Will the Next Russian Generation be any Better?Eugene D. Jaffe & Alexandr Tsimerman - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 62 (1):87-97.
    This study investigated students’ perceptions of ethical organizational climates, attitudes towards ethical issues, and the perceived relationship between ethical behavior and success in business organizations. Comparisons were made between the attitudes of these future managers with previously published studies of Russian managers’ attitudes. A survey of 100 business students in three Moscow universities showed that their attitudes toward ethical behavior were more negative than those of Russian managers. No significant differences were found in the perceptions or attitudes of students who (...)
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  50. Virtues of willpower.Eugene Chislenko - 2023 - Synthese 202 (5):1-21.
    Drawing on recent work in psychology, I argue that there are not one but several distinct virtues pertaining to willpower or strength of will: (1) the disposition to exercise willpower; (2) a distinctively volitional kind of modesty, or moderation in exposing oneself to volitional strain; and (3) a distinctively volitional kind of confidence, or proper inattention to the possibility of volitional failure. A multiple-virtue conception of willpower, I argue, provides a useful framework for cultivating a good relationship to one’s own (...)
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