Results for 'Sean Hillman'

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  1.  21
    Ethics Debriefs and Moral Distress: What are we Doing?A. Lee de Bie, Steve Abdool, Jeremy Butler, Alexandra Campbell, Maram Hassanein, Sean Hillman, Juhee Makkar, Rochelle Maurice, Jamie Robertson, Michael J. Szego & Dave Langlois - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (4):74-77.
    Our team at the Centre for Clinical Ethics has long been engaged in internal discussion about the purpose and value of ethics debriefs and their purported role in reducing moral distress (Morley an...
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  2.  25
    Teaching Towards the Post-human: The Courage to Entangle.Sean Blenkinsop - 2020 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (4):453-457.
  3.  15
    Econometric methods and Reichenbach’s principle.Seán Mfundza Muller - 2022 - Synthese 200 (3):1-21.
    Reichenbach’s ‘principle of the common cause’ is a foundational assumption of some important recent contributions to quantitative social science methodology but no similar principle appears in econometrics. Angrist et al. has argued that the principle is necessary for instrumental variables methods in econometrics, and Angrist Krueger builds a framework using it that he proposes as a means of resolving an important methodological dispute among econometricians. Through analysis of instrumental variables methods and the issue of multicollinearity, we aim to show that (...)
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  4.  22
    Self-Deception in the Classroom: Educational manifestations of Sartre’s concept of bad faith.Sean Blenkinsop & Tim Waddington - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (14):1511-1521.
    This article explores an important section of Jean-Paul Sartre’s famous early work, Being and Nothingness. In that section Sartre proposes that part of the human condition is to actively engage in a particular kind of self-deception he calls bad faith. Bad faith is recognized by the obvious inconsistency between the purported self-knowledge of an individual and ways of acting and being in the world that are demonstrably in defiance of that stated position. This article begins by exploring examples of this (...)
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  5.  19
    The Philosophical Foundations of the Late Schelling: The Turn to the Positive.Sean J. McGrath - 2021 - Edinburgh University Press.
  6.  4
    Chapter 9 Gilles Deleuze, a Reader of Gilbert Simondon.Sean Bowden - 2012 - In AshleyVE Woodward, Alex Murray & Jon Roffe (eds.), Gilbert Simondon: Being and Technology. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 135-153.
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  7.  88
    The Fables of Pity: Rousseau, Mandeville and the Animal-Fable.Sean Gaston - 2012 - Derrida Today 5 (1):21-38.
    Prompted by Derrida's work on the animal-fable in eighteenth-century debates about political power, this article examines the role played by the fiction of the animal in thinking of pity as either a natural virtue (in Rousseau's Second Discourse) or as a natural passion (in Mandeville's The Fable of the Bees). The war of fables between Rousseau and Mandeville – and their hostile reception by Samuel Johnson and Adam Smith – reinforce that the animal-fable illustrates not so much the proper of (...)
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  8.  43
    Villains, Victims, and Verisimilitudes: An Exploratory Study of Unethical Corporate Values, Bullying Experiences, Psychopathy, and Selling Professionals’ Ethical Reasoning.Sean Valentine, Gary Fleischman & Lynn Godkin - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 148 (1):135-154.
    This study assesses the relationships among unethical corporate values, bullying experiences, psychopathy, and selling professionals’ ethical evaluations of bullying. Information was collected from national/regional samples of selling professionals. Results indicated that unethical values, bullying, and psychopathy were positively interrelated. Psychopathy and unethical values were negatively associated with moral intensity, while moral intensity was positively related to ethical issue importance. Psychopathy and unethical values were negatively related to issue importance, and issue importance and moral intensity were positively related to ethical judgment. (...)
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  9.  54
    Heidegger's topology: Being, place, world.Sean Ryan - 2009 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 87 (1):169 – 171.
  10.  79
    Professional Ethical Standards, Corporate Social Responsibility, and the Perceived Role of Ethics and Social Responsibility.Sean Valentine & Gary Fleischman - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 82 (3):657-666.
    This study explored several proposed relationships among professional ethical standards, corporate social responsibility, and the perceived role of ethics and social responsibility. Data were collected from 313 business managers registered with a large professional research association with a mailed self-report questionnaire. Mediated regression analysis indicated that perceptions of corporate social responsibility partially mediated the positive relationship between perceived professional ethical standards and the believed importance of ethics and social responsibility. Perceptions of corporate social responsibility also fully mediated the negative relationship (...)
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  11.  18
    Erratum to: Shut-Up and Listen: Implications and Possibilities of Albert Memmi’s Characteristics of Colonization Upon the “Natural World”.Sean Blenkinsop, Ramsey Affifi, Laura Piersol & Michael De Danann Sitka-Sage - 2017 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 36 (3):367-367.
  12.  14
    ‘Neo’ is not enough: Theorizing and educating in a time of total renegotiation.Sean Blenkinsop - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1416-1417.
  13.  24
    From Waiting for the Bus to Storming the Bastille: From Sartrean seriality to the relationships that form classroom communities.Sean Blenkinsop, Mark E. Burbach & Kevin Lynn Flores - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (2):183-195.
    One of the tasks of Jean‐Paul Sartre's later work was to consider how an individual could live freely within a free community. This paper examines how Sartre describes the process of group formation and the implications of this discussion for education. The paper begins with his metaphor of a bus queue in order to describe a series. Then, by means of Sartre's analysis of the storming of the Bastille, the discussion expands to show how a series becomes a genuine group. (...)
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  14.  28
    The affectively embodied perspective of the subject.Sean Smith - forthcoming - Philosophical Psychology:1-30.
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  15.  38
    The Many Moral Particularisms.Sean McKeever & Michael Ridge - 2005 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 35 (1):83-106.
    What place, if any, moral principles should or do have in moral life has been a longstanding question f or moral philosophy. For some, the proposition that moral philosophy should strive to articulate moral principles has been an article of faith. At least since Aristotle, however, there has been a rieh counter-tradition that questions the possibility or value of trying to capture morality in principled terms. In recent years, philosophers who question principled approaches to morality have argued under the banner (...)
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  16.  36
    The other voice: ethics and expression in Emmanuel Levinas.Seán Hand - 1997 - History of the Human Sciences 10 (3):56-68.
    Emmanuel Levinas's Totality and Infinity (1961) is explicitly con cerned with the suppression of the voice of the Other by the synoptic totalizations of the voice of western philosophy. Levinas contests this emergence of Being and the systems of totality it indicates with the irruption of the face of the other, which signifies through contact and sensibility the presence of infinity within the human situation. Derrida's reading of this fundamental testing of western ontology rests on the accusation that western philosophy (...)
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  17.  29
    What Fairness Demands: How We Can Promote Fair Compensation in Human Infection Challenge Studies and Beyond.Seán O’Neill McPartlin & Josh Morrison - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (3):48-50.
    This commentary shall focus on the central claim made in Lynch et al.’s paper “Promoting Ethical Payment in Human Infection Challenge Studies.” According to their paper, there is a threefold...
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  18. Segregated specialists and nuclear culture.Sean F. Johnston - manuscript
    Communities of nuclear workers have evolved in distinctive contexts. During the Manhattan Project the UK, USA and Canada collectively developed the first reactors, isotope separation plants and atomic bombs and, in the process, nurtured distinct cadres of specialist workers. Their later workplaces were often inherited from wartime facilities, or built anew at isolated locations. For a decade, nuclear specialists were segregated and cossetted to gestate practical expertise. At Oak Ridge Tennessee, for example, the informal ‘Clinch College of Nuclear Knowledge’ aimed (...)
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  19. Empty Words.Sean Kelsey - 2015 - In David Ebrey (ed.), Theory and Practice in Aristotle's Natural Science. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. pp. 199-216.
  20.  31
    Toward A Technology That Allows The Beautiful To Occur.Sean McGrath - 2003 - Animus 8:11-20.
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  21.  27
    Hylomorphism in Aristotle’s Physics.Sean Kelsey - 2010 - Ancient Philosophy 30 (1):107-124.
  22.  43
    In Defense of the Human Difference.Sean J. McGrath - 2018 - Environmental Philosophy 15 (1):101-115.
    Against the prevalent trend in eco-criticism which is to deny the human difference, I summon a set of untimely tropes from metaphysics in the interest of advancing an ecological humanism: the difference in kind between human consciousness and animal sensibility; the uniquely human capacity for moral discernment; and the human being’s peculiar freedom from the material conditions of existence. While I agree with eco-critics who argue that anthropocenic nature is not only finite, but sick: sickened by our abuse and neglect, (...)
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  23.  58
    The Relevance of Phenomenology to the Philosophy of Language and Mind.Sean Kelly - 2000 - New York: Routledge.
    This work discusses philosophical problems of perceptual content, the content of deomonstrative thoughts, and the unity of proposition. By demonstrating a connection between phenomenology and analysis, Kelly suggests ways in which they can be fruitfully pursued.
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  24. On the Marxist Dialectic.Sean Sayers - 1976 - Radical Philosophy 14 (14):9-19.
    Wherever there is movement, wherever there is life, wherever anything is carried into effect in the actual world, there dialectic is at work. It is also the soul of all knowledge which is truly scientific. (Hegel, Enc. Logic, sec. 81Z, p. 148).
     
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  25. Aesthetics and particularism.Sean McKeever & Michael Ridge - 2010 - In Michael Brady (ed.), New Waves in Metaethics. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
  26. Militarizing radiometry.Sean F. Johnston - 2001 - Bristol, UK: Institute of Physics Press.
    The measurement of light and colour has always been a peripheral science. Light became a 'disciplined' quantity over the period of a century, but the specialist communities that measured it did not. The quantification of visible light (photometry), colour (colorimetry), and radiant intensity (radiometry) involved distinct communities of physicists, psychologists, technicians and engineers. -/- This chapter of _Science in the Shadows_ examines how the measurement of non-visible light became the domain of post Second World War military engineers and classified development (...)
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  27.  59
    The Incentivised University: Scientific Revolutions, Policies, Consequences.Seán Mfundza Muller - 2021 - Springer.
    The core thesis of this book is that to understand the implications of incentive structures in modern higher education, we require a deeper understanding of associated issues in the philosophy of science. Significant public and philanthropic resources are directed towards various forms of research in the hope of addressing key societal problems. That view, and the associated allocation of resources, relies on the assumption that academic research will tend towards finding truth – or at least selecting the best approximations of (...)
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  28.  5
    Utility as the Norm of Law.Omer Hillman Mott - 1941 - New Scholasticism 15 (4):377-390.
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  29.  43
    Temporal Illusions -- Philosophical Considerations.Sean Enda Power - 2011 - In Argiro Vatakis, Anna Esposito, Maria Giagkou, Fred Cummins & Georgios Papadelis (eds.), Multidisciplinary Aspects of Time and Time Perception. Springer. pp. 11-35.
    Does the status of certain temporal experiences as illusory depend on one’s conception of time? Our concept of time in part determines our concept of what we hold to be real and unreal; what we hold to be real and unreal partially determines what we hold to be illusory; thus, our concept of time in part determines what we hold to be illusory. This paper argues that this dependency of illusions on the concept of time is applicable to illusions of (...)
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  30. Friendship, Perception, and Referential Opacity in Nicomachean Ethics IX.9.Sean McAleer - 2013 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 16:362-374.
    This essay reconstructs and evaluates Aristotle's argument in Nicomachean Ethics IX.9 that the happy person needs friends, in which Aristotle combines his well-known claim that friends are other selves with the claim that human perception is meta-perceptual: the perceiving subject perceives its own existence. After exploring some issues in the logic of perception, the essay argues that Aristotle's argument for the necessity of friends is invalid since perception-verbs create referentially opaque contexts in which the substitution of co-referential terms fails.
     
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  31. The psychophysics of order and anisotropy: Comment on Riemer.Sean Enda Power - 2015 - Consciousness and Cognition 38:198-204.
    Riemer’s recent paper on the perception of time discusses a neglected yet important topic in the psychological literature: the consequences for psychology (and psychophysics) from the ‘anisotropy’ of time. The paper presents an argument that there are unique kinds of challenges for psychophysics from such temporal anisotropy: (a) Challenges because the psychological experience of time has temporal anisotropy and the physical concept of time does not have temporal anisotropy. (b) Challenges for experimental research which are unique to temporal anisotropy. -/- (...)
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  32. A Philosophical Introduction to the Experience of Time.Sean Enda Power - 2009 - Neuroquantology 7 (1):16-29.
    In this introduction to contemporary conceptions of time and change, I investigate what our experience of time, that is, our experience of change, seems to be and ask whether or not we can say that how it seems could match the reality. My conclusion is that more recent contemporary conceptions of time can do this but that more intuitive or traditional conceptions cannot. Thus, the more contemporary conceptions are preferable for research into time consciousness.
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  33. When a Lie Ain't Just a Lie.Sean McAleer - 2013 - In David Bzdak Joanna Crosby & Seth Vannatta (eds.), The Wire and Philosophy. Open Court. pp. 59-69.
    The chapter argues that an agent's motive contributes to the rightness (wrongness) of an action by considering lies told by three different characters in the television series The Wire (McNulty, Sobotka, Templeton).
     
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  34. Cicero and the golden age tradition.Sean McConnell - 2021 - In Pierre Destrée, Jan Opsomer & Geert Roskam (eds.), Utopias in Ancient Thought. de Gruyter. pp. 213–230.
    This paper examines Cicero’s engagement with the golden age tradition of utopian thinking, which is prominent not only in Greek literature but also in Plato and the Peripatetic and Stoic philosophical traditions. It makes the case that in De re publica and later philosophical works such as the Tusculan Disputations Cicero draws on philosophical accounts of the golden age—most significantly that of the Peripatetic Dicaearchus of Messana (c.350–c.285 BC)—in his analysis of the Roman res publica and the nature of Roman (...)
     
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  35.  31
    Demetrius of Laconia and the debate between the Stoics and the Epicureans on the nature of parental love.Sean McConnell - 2017 - Classical Quarterly 67 (1):149-162.
    Epicurus denies that human beings have natural parental love for their children, and his account of the development of justice and human political community does not involve any natural affinity between human beings in general but rather a form of social contract. The Stoics to the contrary assert that parental love is natural; and, moreover, they maintain that natural parental love is the first principle of social οἰκείωσις, which provides the basis for the naturalness of justice and human political community. (...)
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  36. The Narrative Style of the Priestly Writer.Sean Mcevenue - 1971
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  37.  33
    In Defense of the Human Difference.Sean J. McGrath - 2018 - Environmental Philosophy 15 (1):101-115.
    Against the prevalent trend in eco-criticism which is to deny the human difference, I summon a set of untimely tropes from metaphysics in the interest of advancing an ecological humanism: the difference in kind between human consciousness and animal sensibility; the uniquely human capacity for moral discernment; and the human being’s peculiar freedom from the material conditions of existence. While I agree with eco-critics who argue that anthropocenic nature is not only finite, but sick: sickened by our abuse and neglect, (...)
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  38.  50
    Schelling and the History of the Dissociative Self.Sean J. McGrath - 2015 - Symposium 19 (1):52-66.
    This paper explores the possible therapeutical applications of Schellingian psychological principles. A Schellingian analysis would enable us to retrieve the largely forgotten heritage of Romantic psychiatry, in particular the dissociationist model of the psyche, which was strategically rejected by Freud and somewhat clumsily revised by Jung, but which has its own intelligibility and applicability. Schellingian analysis would be dissociationist rather than repressivist, and would depart from Freud and Jung in being both a metaphysical and a moral therapy. But the open-ended (...)
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  39.  21
    Book ReviewsRichard Joyce,. The Myth of Morality.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Pp. xiii+249. $60.00.Sean D. McKeever - 2003 - Ethics 114 (1):182-184.
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  40. Marcel Gauchet's political anthropology : originary social division and the 'processual' autonomy of a community.Sean McMorrow - 2022 - In Natalie Doyle & Sean McMorrow (eds.), Marcel Gauchet and the Crisis of Democratic Politics. New York: Routledge.
     
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  41.  41
    A Prelude to (Lonergan’s) Economics.Sean McNelis - 2010 - The Lonergan Review 2 (1):107-120.
  42.  47
    Metonymies of Mind: Ralph Waldo Emerson, William James, and the Rhetoric of Liberal Education.Sean Ross Meehan - 2016 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 49 (3):277-299.
    Critics in both philosophy and literary studies have rightly emphasized a “poetics of transition” relating the thought of Ralph Waldo Emerson to that of William James. However, less attention has been given to the ways that Emerson's philosophy of rhetoric correlates with James's rhetorical perspectives on psychology and philosophy. Fundamentally rhetorical interests in the contiguous circumstances and contingent reception of thinking link James to Emerson beyond matters of poetics and style. This article correlates Emerson's understanding of a rhetoric of metonymy (...)
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  43. “The Second Discovery of the New World”: Foreign Perspectives on Early Nineteenth-Century Mexico.Sean Nikos Messarra - forthcoming - Quaestio.
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  44. A brief history.Sean Sayers - unknown
    Radical Philosophy was born in the aftermath of the student movement of the 1960s. At that time, philosophy in British universities was very conservative and traditional. Ordinary language philosophy, the analytical approach, and the empiricist tradition were absolutely dominant. However, the student movement of the 1960s had opened young people's minds to a whole new range of radical ideas and issues. These were dismissed as not worthy of study, and excluded from discussion in philosophy departments.
     
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  45.  26
    Analytical Marxism and Morality.Sean Sayers - 1990 - The Bulletin of Nihon Fukushi University 19 (81-2):127-157.
  46. Analyzing Marxism: New Essays on Analytical Marxism.Sean Sayers - 1989 - In Kai Nielsen & Robert Ware (eds.). University of Calgary Press. pp. 66-85.
     
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  47.  14
    Contradiction and Dialectic in the Development of Science.Sean Sayers - 1981 - Science and Society 45 (4):409 - 436.
  48. DIALECTIC: a bibliography.Sean Sayers - 1976 - Radical Philosophy 14:20.
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  49. Dialectic and Social Criticism.Sean Sayers - 2007 - Spartacus 9 (89):86-90.
    other approaches. The first of these is `material thinking' (das materielles Denken): `a contingent consciousness that is absorbed only in material stuff', a form of thought which is rooted in existing conditions and cannot see beyond them. At the `opposite extreme' is the transcendent critical method of `argumentation' (das Räsonieren), which involves `freedom from all content and a sense of vanity towards it'. The dialectical method, Hegel maintains, must `give up this freedom'. It refuses `to intrude into the immanent rhythm (...)
     
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  50.  17
    Equal Opportunity.Sean Sayers - 1990 - Philosophical Books 31 (3):176-177.
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