Results for 'philosophical activities'

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  1. Intuition Fail: Philosophical Activity and the Limits of Expertise.Wesley Buckwalter - 2016 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 92 (2):378-410.
    Experimental philosophers have empirically challenged the connection between intuition and philosophical expertise. This paper reviews these challenges alongside other research findings in cognitive science on expert performance and argues for three claims. First, evidence taken to challenge philosophical expertise may also be explained by the well-researched failures and limitations of genuine expertise. Second, studying the failures and limitations of experts across many fields provides a promising research program upon which to base a new model of philosophical expertise. (...)
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  2.  34
    Philosophical activity and war.Robert Ginsberg - 1972 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 33 (2):174-185.
    What should philosophers do about war? That question has been answered in various ways throughout the history of philosophy, and it appears to still trouble members of this distinguished profession in these times. A reason for the current uneasiness is that while philosophy in our century has largely neglected the problem of the world, it is apparent that there will soon be no world for philosophers to neglect unless an antidote for war is found. Since psychologists, statesmen, religious leaders, and (...)
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  3.  13
    Philosophical activity in Pakistan.Richard De Smet - 1961 - Lahore: Pakistan Philosophical Congress.
  4.  20
    Philosophical Activity in Pakistan.Richard V. De Smet - 1962 - International Philosophical Quarterly 2 (1):110-184.
  5.  18
    Philosophical Activity In a Revolutionary Age.Gustav Ferré - 1971 - Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 2 (1-2):219-227.
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  6.  20
    Philosophical Activity In a Revolutionary Age.Gustav Ferré - 1971 - Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 2 (1-2):219-227.
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  7.  8
    The Development of Philosophical Activities of the Academic Philosophy Cafe From Language Game to Theater Game.Wang Huiling ) - 2021 - Philosophical Practice and Counseling 11:121-141.
    In Practical Philosophy Education, besides the learning of conceptual knowledge and working with an introspective method, students are actively engaged whereby they are played in a new form as a language game. The negative attitudes and the pretending performances were revised from the exercise of answering questions to asking question, and then to continue asking. 1957 Coffee proposes the “cross-questioning” model of using knowledge to play the “game” of philosophy. This playing experience is passed down intellectually in the form of (...)
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  8.  7
    What constitutes philosophical activity in nursing? Toward a definition of nursing philosophy based on an interpretive synthesis of the recent literature.Zahra Sharifi-Heris & Miriam Bender - 2023 - Nursing Inquiry 30 (4):e12582.
    Nursing claims a significant history of engaging philosophical inquiry. To better understand the rationale for this engagement, and what nursing understands itself to achieve through philosophical inquiry, we conducted an interpretive synthesis of the recent nursing literature to identify what nurses are doing when they say they are doing philosophy. The overarching finding was that while vanishingly few articles articulated any definition of philosophy, the synthesis showed how nursing considers philosophical engagement a generative mode for asking and (...)
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  9. Nietzsche: an introduction to the understanding of his philosophical activity.Karl Jaspers - 1965 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    Nietzsche claimed to be a philosopher of the future, but he was appropriated as a philosopher of Nazism. His work inspired a long study by Martin Heidegger and essays by a host of lesser disciples attached to the Third Reich. In 1935, however, Karl Jaspers set out to "marshall against the National Socialists the world of thought of the man they had proclaimed as their own philosopher." The year after publishing Nietzsche , Jaspers was discharged from his professorship at Heidelberg (...)
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  10.  52
    Manifest activity: Thomas Reid's theory of action.Gideon Yaffe - 2004 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Manifest Activity presents and critically examines the model of human power, the will, our capacities for purposeful conduct, and the place of our agency in the natural world of one of the most important and traditionally under-appreciated philosophers of the 18th century: Thomas Reid. For Reid, contrary to the view of many of his predecessors, it is simply manifest that we are active with respect to our behaviours; it is manifest, he thinks, that our actions are not merely remote products (...)
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  11. Karl Jaspers, Nietzsche: An Introduction to the Understanding of His Philosophical Activity Reviewed by.Klaus Michael Jahn - 1999 - Philosophy in Review 19 (1):30-32.
  12.  42
    The Indispensability of Tradition in the Philosophical Activity of Socrates.Jessy E. G. Jordan - 2010 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 84:223-237.
    In this paper I argue that narratives concerning Periclean Athens have mistakenly imposed modern conceptions of enlightenment onto the Greek world,and have therefore been blinded to crucial aspects of Socrates’s practice of moral reason giving. In contrast to the Kantian conception of enlightenment, which puts forth an image of the ideally enlightened person as an autonomous reasoner, one who refuses to be guided by another and who has the courage to throw off the chains of tradition and “think for oneself,” (...)
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  13. Atividade filosófica na EJA: um relato de práticas interdisciplinares // Philosophical activity in EJA: a report of interdisciplinary practices.Wanderley da Silva - 2014 - Conjectura: Filosofia E Educação 19 (3):50-68.
    O presente texto tem como objetivo a defesa das práticas interdisciplinares para o ensino de filosofia na educação de jovens e adultos . Para sustentar a defesa da interdisciplinaridade, é apresentado um breve panorama histórico da filosofia e da educação de jovens e adultos no Brasil. Considerando que a EJA e a filosofia sempre estiveram presentes no cenário da educação brasileira, o texto destaca alguns aspectos das políticas educacionais, que ajudaram a estabelecer uma situação marginal no currículo da educação básica (...)
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  14. Nietzsche: An Introduction to the Understanding of his Philosophical Activity. [REVIEW]D. C. - 1966 - Review of Metaphysics 20 (1):154-154.
    Can Nietzsche be this great? Yes, in a special sense; and whatever the faults and difficulties of this book, it must be said that someone had to do it. It stands as a classic: as a thorough reading of Nietzsche, to be sure, and possibly also as an introduction to Jaspers' own thought. The translators have performed commendably.—C. D.
     
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  15.  37
    Philosophical Perspectives on Gender in Sport and Physical Activity.Lisa Edwards - 2010 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 4 (3):355-359.
  16.  13
    Professional Activities of Practical Psychologists: Philosophical Counseling in the Context of Postmodernism.Yana Chaika, Oksana Patlaichuk, Olga Stupak, Alla Lazareva, Oksana Voitsekhovska & Liudmyla Shkil - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (4):69-83.
    The current state of Ukrainian society is characterized by socio-economic instability, there are dynamic, unique processes in which each person is involved. In this connection, there are increasing demands on the professionalism of specialists in the field of practical psychology, their philosophical counseling in the context of postmodernism, aimed at helping people become the subject of their life, work, social and value relationships, to teach them to find meanings and maximize self-actualization. This is represented in the change of priorities (...)
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  17.  79
    Philosophizing with children as a playful activity: Purposiveness without purpose.Stylianos Gadris - 2022 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 1 (9):68 - 83.
    While trying to preserve the autonomy of their playful activity consisting in a game of ‘questioning and answering’, the Gymnosophists defy Alexander the Great and, more importantly, go against their own chances of survival (since giving a wrong answer to the king’s question amounts to losing their life). Thankfully, we do not need to face such dilemmas when philosophising with children. Nevertheless, the Gymnosophists’ example helps construct a notion of philosophy for/with children as an autonomous playful activity that albeit (implicitly) (...)
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  18.  6
    Psychological-philosophical Approach to the Reflection in Altered States of Consciousness in the Research Activity of Andrey Rossokhin.Ivelina Peneva - 2022 - Filosofiya-Philosophy 31 (3):282-291.
    The article summarized the results of the research activity of Andrey Rossokhin, which is devoted to studying the dynamics of reflection in the altered states of consciousness in the course of psychoanalytic process. These states of consciousness are characterized by transformation of the semantic space of the subject and changing forms of categorization with a transition from socially normed to new ways of rationalizing internal experience and experiences take place. By theoretical and empirical analyses, A. Rossokhin concluded that through means (...)
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  19. Technological activity and philosophical thought.Q. Zou - 1990 - Chinese Studies in Philosophy 21 (2):32-48.
     
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  20.  9
    Philosophical Compassion and Active Hesitation : A Non-Critical Approach to Understanding.Nicole des Bouvrie - 2023 - In Synne Myrebøe, Valgerður Pálmadóttir & Johanna Sjöstedt (eds.), Feminist Philosophy: Time, History and the Transformation of Thought. Södertörn University. pp. 339-357.
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  21.  8
    Philosophical faith and its role in the activities of parenting.Seamus Carey - 2006 - Philosophical Practice 2 (2):87-98.
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  22. The philosophical starting points of the relation of time and human activity with Marx and in hegels phenomenology of spirit.J. Pesek - 1982 - Filosoficky Casopis 30 (1):88-102.
     
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  23. Philosophical Trends and Activities in Twentieth-Century India.P. T. Raju - 1956 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 10 (37):266-284.
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  24.  80
    Philosophical Perspectives on Gender in Sport and Phyiscal Activity.Paul Davis & Charlene Weaving (eds.) - 2009 - Routledge.
    A useful resource for students as well as a thought-provoking source of debate, this collection is the first of its kind.
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  25.  16
    Philosophical and sociocultural dimensions of personality psychological security.O. Y. Blynova, L. S. Holovkova & O. V. Sheviakov - 2018 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 14:73-83.
    Purpose. The dynamics and pace of social and economic transformations that are characteristic of modern society, lead to an increase in tension and the destruction of habitual stereotypes – ideals, values, norms, patterns of behaviour that unite people. These moments encourage us to rethink the understanding of "security" essence, in particular, psychological, which emphasizes the urgency of its study in the philosophical and sociocultural coordinates. Theoretical basis of the research is based on the philosophical methodology of K. Jaspers, (...)
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  26. Noetic activity in Aristotle thought man, God and ultimate reality and meaning-a philosophers view.H. W. Baillie - 1982 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 5 (3):230-249.
  27.  7
    The Philosophical Life: An Activity and an Attitude.Robert M. Baird - 1983 - University Press of Amer.
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  28.  3
    The Philosopher as Teacher: Articles, Comments, Correspondence: Philosophy as an Activity and the Activity of Teaching.Karl F. Hein - 2007 - Metaphilosophy 3 (2):174-186.
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  29.  22
    The philosopher as teacher: Articles, comments, correspondence. Philosophy as an activity and the activity of teaching.Karl F. Hein - 1972 - Metaphilosophy 3 (2):174–186.
  30. A philosophical approach to the concept of handedness: The phenomenology of lived experience in left- and right-handers.Peter Westmoreland - 2017 - Laterality 22 (2):233-255.
    This paper provides a philosophical evaluation of the concept of handedness prevalent but largely unspoken in the scientific literature. This literature defines handedness as the preference or ability to use one hand rather than the other across a range of common activities. Using the philosophical discipline of phenomenology, I articulate and critique this conceptualization of handedness. Phenomenology shows defining a concept of handedness by focusing on hand use leads to a right hand biased concept. I argue further (...)
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  31.  16
    Kant on the Philosopher’s Proper Activity.Samuel A. Stoner - 2019 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 24 (1):95-113.
    This essay investigates Kant’s understanding of the philosopher’s proper activity. It begins by examining Kant’s well-known claim in the Critique of Pure Reason that the philosopher is the legislator of human reason. Subsequently, it explicates Kant’s oft-overlooked description of the transcendental philosopher as an admirer of nature’s logical purposiveness, in the ‘First Introduction’ to the Critique of the Power of Judgment. These two accounts suggest very different ways of thinking about the philosopher’s character and concerns. For, while Kant’s philosopher-legislator pursues (...)
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  32.  69
    Re-thinking the active-passive distinction in attention from a philosophical viewpoint.Carolyn Dicey Jennings & Takeo Watanabe - 2010 - Journal of Vision 10 (218).
    Whether active and passive, top-down and bottom-up, or endogenous and exogenous, attention is typically divided into two types. To show the relationship between attention and other functions (sleep, memory, learning), one needs to show whether the type of attention in question is of the active or passive variety. However, the division between active and passive is not sharp in any area of consciousness research. In phenomenology, the experience of voluntariness is taken to indicate activity, but this experience is often confused (...)
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  33.  45
    Incorporating the Activity of Philosophy into Social Studies: A Seven-Part Philosophical Inquiry Process.Amber Makaiau - 2013 - Questions 13:15-17.
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  34.  79
    Understanding endogenously active mechanisms: A scientific and philosophical challenge. [REVIEW]William Bechtel - 2012 - European Journal for Philosophy of Science 2 (2):233-248.
    Abstract Although noting the importance of organization in mechanisms, the new mechanistic philosophers of science have followed most biologists in focusing primarily on only the simplest mode of organization in which operations are envisaged as occurring sequentially. Increasingly, though, biologists are recognizing that the mechanisms they confront are non-sequential and the operations nonlinear. To understand how such mechanisms function through time, they are turning to computational models and tools of dynamical systems theory. Recent research on circadian rhythms addressing both intracellular (...)
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  35.  45
    The Philosophical Life: An Activity and an Attitude. [REVIEW]Garth Kemerling - 1984 - Teaching Philosophy 7 (3):271-272.
  36.  29
    Take a Stand!: Classroom Activities That Explore Philosophical Arguments That Matter to Teens.Sharon M. Kaye - 2020 - Waco, TX, USA: Prufrock Press.
    Take a Stand! (grades 9-12) helps teens develop critical thinking skills by examining debates on issues directly relevant to their lives (that you won't find in most classroom materials). Each chapter: -/- Covers an important topic relating to electronics, sex, mental health, and relationships. Presents a question for debate, such as "Should kids choose their own religion?" and "Is it possible to love more than one person?" Shows how each issue might arise in an ordinary teen conversation. Presents and explores (...)
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  37. On the Soul: A Philosophical Exploration of the Active Intellect in Averroes, Aristotle, and Aquinas.Ruth Reyna - 1972 - The Thomist 36 (1):131-149.
  38.  6
    Immanent thinking and the activity of philosophizing in Fichte's 1804 Wissenschaftslehre.Angelica Nuzzo - 2024 - In Benjamin D. Crowe & Gabriel Gottlieb (eds.), Fichte's 1804 Wissenschaftslehre: essays on the "Science of knowing". Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. 215-233.
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  39.  4
    Education and Teaching Related Activities of the Croatian Philosophical Society.Bruno Ćurko - 2008 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 28 (3):665-695.
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  40. Sensemaking in economics: economic activity from a social-philosophical perspective.Ekaterina Svetlova - 2010 - Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 3 (1):136.
  41.  23
    Experience and Conceptual Activity: A Philosophical Essay Based Upon the Writings of A. N. Whitehead.Wolfe Mays & J. M. Burgers - 1967 - Philosophical Quarterly 17 (68):271.
  42.  12
    Perfectibility and self-activity. Tetens’ reflections on a basic force of the soul in the Eleventh Philosophical Essay.Gideon Stiening - 2018 - Astérion 18.
    La question de savoir si, compte tenu du nombre de ses facultés théoriques et pratiques, l’âme humaine possède une seule force fondamentale qui les unit ou les combine, plusieurs, ou aucune, a appartenu au champ de controverse le plus influent de l’Europe philosophique entre Leibniz et Kant. Johann Nikolaus Tetens a présenté une solution personnelle à ce problème. Sa manière de prouver que l’âme est dotée d’un pouvoir fondamental qui consiste en une parfaite spontanéité propre est aussi éloignée du dogmatisme (...)
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  43.  8
    Philosophy, Not-Philosophy, Non-Philosophy: Dōgen’s Religio-Philosophical Zen.George Wrisley - 2023 - In Ralf Müller & George Wrisley (eds.), Dōgen’s Texts: Manifesting Religion and/as Philosophy? Springer Verlag. pp. 145-164.
    Beginning with the assumption that the normative conception of Zen that Dōgen expounded and practiced constitutes at its heart a religio-philosophical practice, I focus on Dōgen’s zazen-only as its primary locus. Specifying the nature of zazen-only on and off the cushion, I seek to foreground the ways in which the transformation of apparent dualities into non-dual dualities is key to understanding Dōgen’s Zen as a religio-philosophical practice. Since this activity implicates more than experience, e.g., valuations, desires, goals, actions, (...)
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  44.  42
    Active learning as destituent potential: Agambenian philosophy of education and moderate steps towards the coming politics.Michael P. A. Murphy - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (1):66-78.
    Beginning in earnest in the late 1990s, educational researchers devoted increasing attention to the study of “active learning,” leading to a robust literature on the topic in the scholarship of teaching and learning. Meanwhile, during largely the same period, political theorists discovered the radical philosophy of Giorgio Agamben, which soon after began to ripple through more radical forms of philosophy of education. While both the SoTL works on active learning and writings of “Agambenian” philosophers of education have offered new insights (...)
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  45. Mortality of the Soul and Immortality of the Active Mind (ΝΟΥΣ ΠΟΊΗΤΊΚÓΣ) in Aristotle. Some hints. Kronos : philosophical journal, 7:132-140. Kopieren.Rafael Ferber - 2018 - Kronos : Philosophical Journal 7:132-140.
    The paper gives (I) a short introduction to Aristotle’s theory of the soul in distinction to Plato’s and tries again (II) to answer the question of whether the individual or the general active mind of human beings is immortal by interpreting “When separated (χωρισθεìς)” (de An. III, 5, 430a22) as the decisive argument for the latter view. This strategy of limiting the question has the advantage of avoiding the probably undecidable question of whether this active νοῦς is human or divine. (...)
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  46. Active inference, enactivism and the hermeneutics of social cognition.Shaun Gallagher & Micah Allen - 2018 - Synthese 195 (6):2627-2648.
    We distinguish between three philosophical views on the neuroscience of predictive models: predictive coding, predictive processing and predictive engagement. We examine the concept of active inference under each model and then ask how this concept informs discussions of social cognition. In this context we consider Frith and Friston’s proposal for a neural hermeneutics, and we explore the alternative model of enactivist hermeneutics.
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  47.  55
    The Activity of Being: An Essay on Aristotle’s Ontology.Aryeh Kosman - 2013 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard.
    Understanding “what something is” has long occupied philosophers, and no Western thinker has had more influence on the nature of being than Aristotle. Focusing on a reinterpretation of the concept of energeia as “activity,” Aryeh Kosman reexamines Aristotle’s ontology and some of our most basic assumptions about the great philosopher’s thought.
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  48. Activity and Passivity in Reflective Agency 1.Paul Katsafanas - 2011 - Oxford Studies in Metaethics 6:219.
    Many philosophers maintain that there is a distinction between acts that the agent plays an active role in producing, and acts that issue from the agent in a more passive fashion. According to the standard account, we can make sense of this distinction by maintaining that reflective or deliberative acts are paradigmatic cases of an agent’s playing an active role in the production of action. This chapter argues that this standard account is mistaken. Reflective or deliberative actions will seem to (...)
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  49. Activities of kinding in scientific practice.Catherine Kendig - 2016 - In C. Kendig (ed.), Natural Kinds and Classification in Scientific Practice. Routledge.
    Discussions over whether these natural kinds exist, what is the nature of their existence, and whether natural kinds are themselves natural kinds aim to not only characterize the kinds of things that exist in the world, but also what can knowledge of these categories provide. Although philosophically critical, much of the past discussions of natural kinds have often answered these questions in a way that is unresponsive to, or has actively avoided, discussions of the empirical use of natural kinds and (...)
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  50. Is the Life of a Mediocre Philosopher Better Than the Life of an Excellent Cobbler? Aristotle On the Value of Activity in Nicomachean Ethics X.4-8.David Machek - 2021 - Journal of Value Inquiry (1):1-17.
    Insofar as living well is, for Aristotle, the ultimate end of human life, and insofar as our life comprises different activities (energeiai), the key prerequisite for living well is to rank and choose different activities according to their value. The objective of this article is to identify and discuss different considerations that determine the value of an activity in Aristotle's ethics. Focusing on selected passages from Nicomachean Ethics X, I argue that the structure of an activity's value displays (...)
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