Results for 'Robert E. Ragland'

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  1.  26
    Are You Ready for the Next Outbreak? An Exercise in Legal Preparedness.John O. Agwunobi, Sara Feigenholtz, Donna E. Levin, Robert E. Ragland, Joseph M. Henderson & Frederic E. Shaw - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (S4):77-78.
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  2.  33
    Assessing Cross-sectoral and Cross-jurisdictional Coordination for Public Health Emergency Legal Preparedness.Rick Hogan, Cheryl H. Bullard, Daniel Stier, Matthew S. Penn, Teresa Wall, John Cleland, James H. Burch, Judith Monroe, Robert E. Ragland, Thurbert Baker & John Casciotti - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (S1):36-41.
    A community's abilities to promote health and maximize its response to public health threats require fulfillment of one of the four elements of public health legal preparedness, the capacity to effectively coordinate law-based efforts across different governmental jurisdictions, as well as across multiple sectors and disciplines. Government jurisdictions can be viewed “vertically” in that response efforts may entail coordination in the application of laws across multiple levels, including local, state, tribal, and federal governments, and even with international organizations. Coordination of (...)
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  3.  26
    Assessing Cross-Sectoral and Cross-Jurisdictional Coordination for Public Health Emergency Legal Preparedness.Rick Hogan, Cheryl H. Bullard, Daniel Stier, Matthew S. Penn, Teresa Wall, Honorable John Cleland, James H. Burch, Judith Monroe, Robert E. Ragland, Honrable Thurbert Baker & John Casciotti - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (s1):36-41.
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  4.  80
    Is Hobbes Really an Antirealist about Accidents?Sahar Joakim & C. P. Ragland - 2018 - European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 14 (2):11-25.
    In Metaphysical Themes, Robert Pasnau interprets Thomas Hobbes as an anti-realist about all accidents in general. In opposition to Pasnau, we argue that Hobbes is a realist about some accidents (e.g., motion and magnitude). Section One presents Pasnau’s position on Hobbes; namely, that Hobbes is an unqualified anti-realist of the eliminativist sort. Section Two offers reasons to reject Pasnau’s interpretation. Hobbes explains that magnitude is mind-independent, and he offers an account of perception in terms of motion (understood as a (...)
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  5. The Amateur and the Professional: Antiquarians, Historians and Archaeologists in Victorian England 1838-1886.Philippa Levine & Robert E. Bieder - 1990 - Philosophy of Science 57 (3):546-548.
  6. 10. Laurence Thomas, The Family and the Political Self Laurence Thomas, The Family and the Political Self (pp. 580-585).Richard J. Arneson, Robert E. Goodin, David Schmidtz, Agnieszka Jaworska, Caspar Hare & Lionel K. McPherson - 2006 - In Laurie Dimauro (ed.), Ethics. Greenhaven Press.
  7.  13
    Observational Studies on Human Populations.Douglas L. Weed & Robert E. McKeown - 2008 - In Ezekiel J. Emanuel (ed.), The Oxford textbook of clinical research ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 325.
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  8. Science, Decision and Value.James Leach, Robert E. Butts & Glenn Pearce - 1973 - D. Reidel.
     
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  9. The Philosophy of Right and Left: Incongruent Counterparts and the Nature of Space.James Van Cleve & Robert E. Frederick - 1994 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 54 (2):459-466.
  10.  22
    (1 other version)A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy.David Archard, Robert E. Goodin & Philip Pettit - 1995 - Philosophical Quarterly 45 (178):111.
  11.  8
    The Archaic Community of the Romans.E. T. Salmon & Robert E. A. Palmer - 1973 - American Journal of Philology 94 (4):388.
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  12.  18
    Book Review Section 3. [REVIEW]Robert M. Bjork, Robert E. Dunbar, Thomas A. Barlow, Barbara Jo Zimmer, Ron Szoke, Richard A. Brosio, Hilda Calabro, Fred S. Buchanan, George A. Finchum, Clinton B. Allison, Maurice G. Verbeke & Gavriel Salomon - 1974 - Educational Studies 5 (4):258-269.
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  13.  57
    Ecrits: A Selection.M. E. Ragland Sullivan, Jacques Lacan & Alan Sheridan - 1978 - Substance 6 (21):166.
  14.  94
    Constitutive responsibility: Taking part, being part.Robert E. Goodin - 2018 - Analysis 78 (1):40-45.
    Individuals are often causally inconsequential parts of highly consequential wholes. If each individual is causally inconsequential, and what she does makes no causal difference, we may be inclined to absolve each of causal responsibility for the consequences of what occurs as a result of the larger whole of which each is a part. But there is another form of responsibility – constitutive responsibility. Whatever the causal consequences may be, each individual constitutes part of that whole and each therefore bears responsibility (...)
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  15. Foundational Problems in the Special Sciences Edited by Robert E. Butts and Jaakko Hintikka. --.Robert E. Butts & Jaakko Hintikka - 1977 - D. Reidel.
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  16.  43
    Top Management Team Characteristics and Organizational Virtue Orientation: An Empirical Examination of IPO Firms.Robert E. Evert, G. Tyge Payne, Curt B. Moore & Michael S. McLeod - 2018 - Business Ethics Quarterly 28 (4):427-461.
    ABSTRACT:Despite extensive research on organizational virtue, our understanding about factors that promote virtue within organizations remains unclear. Drawing on upper echelon theory, we examine the relationship between five top management team characteristics and organizational virtue orientation —the integrated set of values and beliefs that support ethical traits and virtuous behaviors of an organization. Specifically, we utilize prospectuses of initial public offering firms and 10-K post-IPO filings to explore how TMT composition with respect to member age, tenure, education, functional background, and (...)
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  17. Perception, interpretation, and the signs of art.Robert E. Innis - 2001 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 15 (1):20-32.
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  18.  63
    Innovating Democracy: Democratic Theory and Practice After the Deliberative Turn.Robert E. Goodin - 2008 - Oxford University Press.
    Revisioning macro-democratic processes in light of the processes and promise of micro-deliberation, Innovating Democracy provides an integrated perspective on democratic theory and practice after the deliberative turn.
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  19.  21
    Chapter 12. Two Forms of Dialectic within Tillich’s History of Religion.Robert E. Meditz - 2017 - In Samuel Andrew Shearn & Russell Re Manning (eds.), Returning to Tillich: Theology and Legacy in Transition. De Gruyter. pp. 141-150.
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  20.  46
    Aquinas’ Third Way Modalized.Robert E. Maydole - 1998 - The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 36:147-155.
    The Third Way is the most interesting and insightful of Aquinas' five arguments for the existence of God, even though it is invalid and has some false premises. With the help of a somewhat weak modal logic, however, the Third Way can be transformed into a argument which is certainly valid and plausibly sound. Much of what Aquinas asserted in the Third Way is possibly true even if it is not actually true. Instead of assuming, for example, that things which (...)
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  21.  6
    Editorial Note.Robert E. Butts - 1982 - Philosophy of Science 49 (1):i-i.
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  22.  9
    Tractarian Dualism.Robert E. Tully - 1998 - The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 10:130-136.
    While Wittgenstein’s Tractatus keeps issues of metaphysics and ontology at arm’s length, the world it presents seems altogether monistic in character. In Wittgenstein’s account, it is a world of objects and facts, a world which lacks selves, values, cognitive relations, and God. I argue that the Tractarian world is nevertheless dualistic. I defend the view that the Tractatus points away from monism towards dualism and that Wittgenstein’s concepts of thought, sense, and understanding are an essential part of its structure. The (...)
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  23.  33
    The Political Theories of Choice and Dignity.Robert E. Goodin - 1981 - American Philosophical Quarterly 18 (2):91 - 100.
  24.  27
    An invariance notion in recursion theory.Robert E. Byerly - 1982 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 47 (1):48-66.
    A set of godel numbers is invariant if it is closed under automorphisms of (ω, ·), where ω is the set of all godel numbers of partial recursive functions and · is application (i.e., n · m ≃ φ n (m)). The invariant arithmetic sets are investigated, and the invariant recursively enumerable sets and partial recursive functions are partially characterized.
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  25.  56
    The Dead Past Dilemma.Robert E. Pezet - 2022 - Metaphysica 23 (1):51-72.
    A temporal levels structure for temporal metaphysics is outlined and employed to convey a dilemma threatening the temporal collapse of Growing-Block Theories to their meta-temporal level. The outline further explains how Presentism occupies a privileged position in that temporal levels structure. Moreover, that dilemma relies crucially on the acceptance of productive causation as explaining additions to the growing block, for which it is argued any reasonable growing-block theory should incorporate. The dilemma’s first horn considers growing-block theories where productive causes are (...)
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  26.  58
    Classical conditioning and brain systems: The role of awareness.Robert E. D. Clark & L. R. Squire - 1998 - Science 280:77-81.
  27.  33
    Hypothesis and explanation in kant’s philosophy of science.Robert E. Butts - 1961 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 43 (2):153-170.
  28.  22
    Necessary Truth in Whewell's Theory of Science.Robert E. Butts - 1965 - American Philosophical Quarterly 2 (3):161 - 181.
  29.  47
    (1 other version)William Whewell's Theory of Scientific Method.Robert E. Butts (ed.) - 1969 - University of Pittsburgh Press.
    William Whewell is considered one of the most important nineteenth-century British philosophers of science and a contributor to modern philosophical thought, particularly regarding the problem of induction and the logic of discovery. In this volume, Robert E. Butts offers selections from Whewell's most important writings, and analysis of counter-claims to his philosophy.
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  30.  47
    Robert B. Pippin. After the Beautiful: Hegel and the Philosophy of Pictorial Modernism.Robert E. Wood - 2014 - The Owl of Minerva 46 (1/2):153-161.
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  31. Functional analysis.Robert E. Cummins - 1975 - Journal of Philosophy 72 (November):741-64.
  32.  28
    Politics in medias res: power that precedes and exceeds in Foucault and Burke.Robert E. Watkins - 2010 - History of the Human Sciences 23 (2):1-19.
    Foucault famously claimed that in political theory the king’s head still needs to be cut off, proclaiming the imperative to move beyond a centralized and prohibitive conception of power and toward a more distributed, relational and productive understanding of power in political society. Ironically, Edmund Burke, famous for criticizing an actual revolutionary regicide in France, can be read as an ally in Foucault’s project of theoretical regicide and conceptual revolution. For although he staunchly defended existing monarchies in France and Britain, (...)
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  33.  34
    (2 other versions)Architecture: The Confluence of Art, Technology, and Nature.Robert E. Wood - 1996 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 70:79-93.
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  34.  7
    Being human: philosophical anthropology through phenomenology.Robert E. Wood - 2022 - Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press.
    Being Human is the fruit of many years teaching Philosophical Anthropology, conducting Phenomenological Workshops, and reading classic texts in the light of a reflective awareness of the field of experience. Being Human is intended to look to what is typically assumed but not examined in much of current philosophical literature.
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  35. Department of philosophy university of Dallas, texas the fugal lines of Heidegger's beitrage.Robert E. Wood - 2001 - Existentia 11:253.
     
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  36.  7
    (2 other versions)Science, Reason, and Religion.Robert E. Wood - 2011 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 85:121-134.
    With a myriad of others, Francis Crick has sought the nature of the soul in the observable functioning of the nervous system, beginning with seeing. In contrast, this paper explores the nature of the soul through the grounding of the act of seeing in the power of seeing as its “soul” and folds in the kinds of attention we pay through seeing. We begin with the eidetic characteristics of the visual field. We then explore three theoretical positions on where what (...)
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  37. (1 other version)Moral values and the Taoist Sage in the Tao de Ching.Robert E. Allinson - 1994 - Asian Philosophy 4 (2):127 – 136.
    The theme of this paper is that while there are four seemingly contradictory classes of statements in the Tao de Ching regarding moral values and the Taoist sage, these statements can be interpreted to be consistent with each other. There are statements which seemingly state or imply that nothing at all can be said about the Tao; there are statements which seemingly state or imply that all value judgements are relative; there are statements which appear to attribute moral behaviour to (...)
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  38.  4
    The Authority of Preferences.Robert E. Goodin - 2003 - In Reflective Democracy. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This is the second of two chapters on preference democracy. It points out that theories of liberal democracy necessarily require systematic responsiveness to popular wishes, in ways that make them fundamentally ‘preference‐respecting’, but that there are many different kinds of preferences and correspondingly many different ways of respecting them. Different models of democracy are better at providing certain sorts of respect for certain sorts of preferences than others, and which model of democracy liberal democrats want to adopt therefore depends on (...)
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  39.  19
    Entre o pragmatismo e a animal linguístico.Robert E. Innis - 2018 - Cognitio 19 (1):133-147.
    Este artigo compara e contrapõe a abordagem naturalista pragmatista para a peculiaridade da linguagem, exemplificada, principalmente, mas, não exclusivamente, por John Dewey, com a extensa abordagem de Charles Taylor em seu O animal linguístico. Taylor, inspirado pelas obras de Hamann, Herder, e Humboldt, conta com recursos filosóficos e conceituais diferentes para o delineamento do que ele denomina de ‘a forma’ da capacidade linguística humana. Porém, Dewey e Taylor chegam a posições que se sobrepõem sem se identificar: a linguagem é a (...)
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  40. The Christian After Death.Robert E. Hough & A. E. Taylor - 1947
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  41. Kant and the Double Government Methodology.Robert E. Butts - 1986 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 37 (3):371-375.
     
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  42.  13
    A paradigm for reasoning by analogy.Robert E. Kling - 1971 - Artificial Intelligence 2 (2):147-178.
  43.  45
    Stimulus encoding and memory.Robert E. Warren - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 94 (1):90.
  44.  20
    WASPs and Other Endangered Species.Robert E. Streeter - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 3 (4):725-739.
    After all, ever since the abandonment of the classical curriculum in the mid-nineteenth century, the courses of studies in American colleges have been characterized by ever-increasing diversity, responses to highly particular social and individual demands, spin-offs from traditional disciplines, specializations breeding subspecializations, and the like. Stringent counterrevolutions, such as the one undertaken in the College of the University of Chicago some thirty years ago, have been infrequent and brief. What, then, is so special about the present seductive disarray in literary (...)
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  45.  29
    A Generalist’s Vision.Robert E. Kohler - 2005 - Isis 96 (2):224-229.
    Many of the recent advances in the history of science have come from local microstudies, but with the unintended by‐product of a typically “postmodern” fragmentation of knowledge. The question for us post‐postmodernists is how to write a broader “general” history of science—a history for all of us specialists—without losing the advantages of case study. One way, this essay suggests, is to structure case studies around the activities or issues that are common to knowledge production generally: for example, issues of common (...)
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  46.  56
    On settling.Robert E. Goodin - 2012 - Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
    Introduction -- Modes of settling: settling down, settling in, settling up, settling for, settling one's affairs, settling on -- The value of settling: settling as an aid to planning and agency, settling, commitment, trust, and confidence, settling the social fabric -- What settling is not: settling is not just compromising, settling is not just conservatism, settling is not just resignation -- Settling in aid of striving: settling in order to strive, what strivings require settling, and why, when to switch between (...)
  47.  8
    VII. Whewell on Newton's Rules of Philosophizing.Robert E. Butts - 1971 - In John W. Davis & Robert E. Butts (eds.), The Methodological Heritage of Newton. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 132-149.
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  48.  68
    The doctrine of the knowledge of God in the early writings of Barlaam the Calabrian.Robert E. Sinkewicz - 1982 - Mediaeval Studies 44 (1):181-242.
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  49.  28
    Setting Health-Care Priorities: A Reply to Tännsjö.Robert E. Goodin - 2020 - Diametros 18 (68):1-9.
    This paper firstly distinguishes between principles of “global justice” that apply the same anywhere and everywhere – Tännsjö’s utilitarianism, egalitarianism, prioritarianism and such like – and principles of “local justice” that apply within the specific sphere of health-care. Sometimes the latter might just be a special case of the former – but not always. Secondly, it discusses reasons, many psychological in nature, why physicians might devote excessive resources to prolonging life pointlessly, showing once again that those reasons might themselves be (...)
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  50. Technics and the bias of perception.Robert E. Innis - 1984 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 10 (1):67-89.
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