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  1.  47
    Needs and moral necessity.Soran Reader - 2007 - New York: Routledge.
    Needs and Moral Necessity analyses ethics as a practice, explains why we have three moral theory-types, consequentialism, deontology and virtue ethics, and argues for a fourth needs-based theory.
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  2.  16
    Animal Innovation.Simon M. Reader & Kevin N. Laland (eds.) - 2003 - Oxford University Press.
    Many animals will invent new behaviour patterns, adjust established behaviours to a novel context, or respond to stresses in an appropriate and novel manner. This is the first ever book on the topic of 'animal innovation'. Bringing together leading scientific authorities on animal and human innovation, this book will put the topic of animal innovation on the map, and heighten awareness of this developing field.
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  3. The other side of agency.Soran Reader - 2007 - Philosophy 82 (4):579-604.
    In our philosophical tradition and our wider culture, we tend to think of persons as agents. This agential conception is flattering, but in this paper I will argue that it conceals a more complex truth about what persons are. In 1. I set the issues in context. In 2. I critically explore four features commonly presented as fundamental to personhood in versions of the agential conception: action, capability, choice and independence. In 3. I argue that each of these agential features (...)
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  4. Needs, moral demands and moral theory.Soran Reader & Gillian Brock - 2004 - Utilitas 16 (3):251-266.
    In this article we argue that the concept of need is as vital for moral theory as it is for moral life. In II we analyse need and its normativity in public and private moral practice. In III we describe simple cases which exemplify the moral demandingness of needs, and argue that the significance of simple cases for moral theory is obscured by the emphasis in moral philosophy on unusual cases. In IV we argue that moral theories are inadequate if (...)
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  5. The Philosophy of Need.Soran Reader (ed.) - 2006 - Cambridge University Press.
    Until recently, philosophers tended to be suspicious of the concept of need. Contributors to this volume build on recent work establishing its philosophical importance. David Wiggins, Gillian Brock and John O'Neill propose remedies for some mistakes made in ignoring or marginalising need, for example in need-free theories of rationality or justice. Christopher Rowe, Soran Reader and Sarah Miller highlight insights that emerge when the concept of need is explored through Plato, Aristotle and Kant - and others that emerge when historical (...)
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  6.  10
    The Relationship Between Referral of Touch and the Feeling of Ownership in the Rubber Hand Illusion.Arran T. Reader, Victoria S. Trifonova & H. Henrik Ehrsson - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The rubber hand illusion is one of the most commonly used paradigms to examine the sense of body ownership. Touches are synchronously applied to the real hand, hidden from view, and a false hand in an anatomically congruent position. During the illusion one may perceive that the feeling of touch arises from the false hand, and that the false hand is one's own. The relationship between referral of touch and body ownership in the illusion is unclear, and some articles average (...)
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  7.  97
    Does a basic needs approach need capabilities?Soran Reader - 2006 - Journal of Political Philosophy 14 (3):337–350.
  8.  10
    Needs and Moral Necessity.Soran Reader - 2007 - New York: Routledge.
    Needs and Moral Necessity analyses ethics as a practice, explains why we have three moral theory-types, consequentialism, deontology and virtue ethics, and argues for a fourth needs-based theory.
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  9. Animal innovation: an introduction.Kevin N. Laland & Simon M. Reader - 2003 - In Simon M. Reader & Kevin N. Laland (eds.), Animal Innovation. Oxford University Press.
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  10. Distance, Relationship and Moral Obligation.Soran Reader - 2003 - The Monist 86 (3):367-381.
    How can we justify partiality to those near to us, such as our own families, friends, neighbours and colleagues, when we could act in much more morally valuable ways by helping others who are merely distant from us? In 1972 Peter Singer used two now-famous examples, Pond and.
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  11. Needs-centered ethical theory.Gillian Brock & Soran Reader - 2002 - Journal of Value Inquiry 36 (4):425-434.
    Our aims in this paper are: (1) to indicate some of the many ways in which needs are an important part of the moral landscape, (2) to show that the dominant contemporary moral theories cannot adequately capture the moral significance of needs, indeed, that the dominant theories are inadequate to the extent that they cannot accommodate the insights which attention to needs yield, (3) to offer some sketches that should be helpful to future cartographers charting the domain of morally significant (...)
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  12. Environmental variability and primate behavioural flexibility.Simon M. Reader & Katharine MacDonald - 2003 - In Simon M. Reader & Kevin N. Laland (eds.), Animal Innovation. Oxford University Press.
     
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  13. Practically Religious: Worldly Benefits and the Common Religion of Japan (David R. Loy).I. Reader & G. J. Tanabe - 2000 - Asian Philosophy 10 (2):176-178.
     
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  14.  52
    Abortion, Killing, and Maternal Moral Authority.Soran Reader - 2008 - Hypatia 23 (1):132-149.
    A threat to women is obscured when we treat “abortion-as-evacuation” as equivalent to “abortion-as-killing.” This holds only if evacuating a fetus kills it. As technology advances, the equivalence will fail. Any feminist account of abortion that relies on the equivalence leaves moral room for women to be required to give up their fetuses to others when it fails. So an account of the justification of abortion-as-killing is needed that does not depend on the equivalence.
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  15.  21
    Safety Culture in Financial Trading: An Analysis of Trading Misconduct Investigations.Meghan P. Leaver & Tom W. Reader - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 154 (2):461-481.
    High-profile failures in financial trading have led to interest in how the culture of the industry produces risky and unethical behaviours among traders. Yet, there is no established theoretical framework for studying this: we apply safety culture theory to examine ten recent high-profile trading mishaps investigated by the UK financial regulator. The results show that the dimensions of safety culture used to understand organisational accidents in domains such as aviation also explain failures in Risk Management within financial trading organisations. This (...)
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  16. Making pacifism plausible.Soran Reader - 2000 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 17 (2):169–180.
  17.  73
    Evo-devo, modularity, and evolvability: Insights for cultural evolution.Simon M. Reader - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (4):361-362.
    Evolutionary developmental biology (“evo-devo”) may provide insights and new methods for studies of cognition and cultural evolution. For example, I propose using cultural selection and individual learning to examine constraints on cultural evolution. Modularity, the idea that traits vary independently, can facilitate evolution (increase “evolvability”), because evolution can act on one trait without disrupting another. I explore links between cognitive modularity, evolutionary modularity, and cultural evolvability. (Published Online November 9 2006).
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  18. Abortion, killing, and maternal moral authority.Soran Reader - 2008 - Hypatia 23 (1):132-149.
    : A threat to women is obscured when we treat "abortion-as-evacuation" as equivalent to "abortion-as-killing." This holds only if evacuating a fetus kills it. As technology advances, the equivalence will fail. Any feminist account of abortion that relies on the equivalence leaves moral room for women to be required to give up their fetuses to others when it fails. So an account of the justification of abortion-as-killing is needed that does not depend on the equivalence.
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  19.  9
    Agency, Patiency, and Personhood.Soran Reader - 2010 - In Timothy O'Connor & Constantine Sandis (eds.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Action. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 200–208.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Action and Passivity Capability/Incapability and Need Choice, Rationality, Freedom/Constraint Independence and Dependency References Further reading.
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  20. Editors' Introduction: Impact and Ramifications: The Aftermath of the Aum Affair in the Japanese Religious Context.Erica Baffelli & Ian Reader - 2012 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 39 (1):1-28.
  21.  2
    Theology and New Materialism: Spaces of Faithful Dissent.John Reader - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book argues that identified weaknesses in recent theological engagement with New Materialism can be successfully addressed by incorporating insights from Relational Christian Realism. Central themes are those of the relational and the apophatic as they represent different but essential strands of a materialist theology. The relational refers to the work of Deleuze and its influence upon key New Materialist thinkers such as De Landa, Bryant, and Braidotti but supplemented from Relational Christian Realism by Latour and Badiou and with reference (...)
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  22.  3
    The Ethics of Choosing Children.Simon Reader - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book takes the contentious issue of designer babies and argues against the liberal eugenic current of bioethics that commends the logic and choice regimes of selective reproduction. Against conceptions of Procreative Beneficence that trade on a disregard for the gifts of maternal bodies, it seeks to recover a thought of maternal giving and a more hospitable ethic of generational beneficence. Exploring themes of responsibility, gift and natality, the book refigures the experience of reproduction as the site of an ethical (...)
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  23.  53
    Aristotle on Necessities and Needs.Soran Reader - 2005 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 57:113-136.
    Aristotle’s account of human needs is valuable because it describes the connections between logical, metaphysical, physical, human and ethical necessities. But Aristotle does not fully draw out the implications of the account of necessity for needs and virtue. The proper Aristotelian conclusion is that, far from being an inferior activity fit only for slaves, meeting needs is the first part of Aristotelian virtue.
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  24.  81
    Ethical Necessities.Soran Reader - 2011 - Philosophy 86 (4):589-607.
    In this paper I introduce my work in ethics, inviting others to draw on my approach to address the ethical issues that concern them. I set up the Centre for Ethical Philosophy at Durham University in 2007 to plug a puzzling gap in philosophical work to help us help the world. In 1. I set out ethical philosophy. In 2. I consider some implications, for example, that to do good we must pay much more attention to the beings around us, (...)
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  25.  22
    Intellectuals and the Left in France Since 1968.Andre J. M. Prevos & Keith A. Reader - 1988 - Substance 17 (2):116.
  26.  60
    Principle Ethics, Particularism and Another Possibility.Soran Reader - 1997 - Philosophy 72 (280):269 - 292.
    One of the most striking contributions of particularism to moral philosophy has been its emphasis on the relative opacity of the moral scene to the tools of rational analysis traditionally used by philosophers. Particularism changes the place of the philosopher in relation to the moral life, pointing up the limits to what philosophy can do here. The modern moral philosopher who takes particularism seriously no longer has the luxury, endemic in our tradition, of imagining that moral philosophy can be done (...)
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  27.  55
    Causes of Individual Differences in Animal Exploration and Search.Simon M. Reader - 2015 - Topics in Cognitive Science 7 (3):451-468.
    Numerous studies have documented individual differences in exploratory tendencies and other phenomena related to search, and these differences have been linked to fitness. Here, I discuss the origins of these differences, focusing on how experience shapes animal search and exploration. The origin of individual differences will also depend upon the alternatives to exploration that are available. Given that search and exploration frequently carry significant costs, we might expect individuals to utilize cues indicating the potential net payoffs of exploration versus the (...)
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  28.  8
    Video stimuli reduce object-directed imitation accuracy: a novel two-person motion-tracking approach.Arran T. Reader & Nicholas P. Holmes - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  29. The State They're in: Bourdieu, Debray, and the Revival of Engagement.Keith Reader - 2000 - Substance 29 (3):43-52.
  30.  12
    Back to the future: Images of nostalgia and renewal in a Japanese religious context.Ian Reader - 1987 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 14 (4):287-303.
  31.  21
    Experiential effects on mirror systems and social learning: Implications for social intelligence.Simon M. Reader - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (2):217-218.
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  32.  17
    Editors' introduction: Pilgrimage in the Japanese religious tradition.Ian Reader & Paul L. Swanson - 1997 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 24 (3/4):225-270.
  33.  18
    Letters to the gods: The form and meaning of ema.Ian Reader - 1991 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 18 (1):24-50.
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  34.  15
    The rise of a Japanese" New New Religion": Themes in the development of Agonshū.Ian Reader - 1988 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 15 (4):235-261.
  35. The politics of avoidance: On the contours of ambiguity.Mark Reader - 1967 - Ethics 77 (4):268-284.
  36.  46
    The limits of chimpanzee-human comparisons for understanding human cognition.Simon M. Reader & Steven M. Hrotic - 2012 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 35 (4):238-239.
    Evolutionary questions require specialized approaches, part of which are comparisons between close relatives. However, to understand the origins of human tool behavior, comparisons with solely chimpanzees are insufficient, lacking the power to identify derived traits. Moreover, tool use is unlikely a unitary phenomenon. Large-scale comparative analyses provide an alternative and suggest that tool use co-evolves with a suite of cognitive traits.
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  37.  30
    Impact and Ramifications: The Aftermath of the Aum Affair in the Japanese Religious Context.Erica Baffelli & Ian Reader - 2012 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 39 (1):1-28.
  38. The Earth Beneath.Ian Ball, Margaret Goodall, Clare Palmer & John Reader (eds.) - 1992 - SPCK.
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  39.  21
    Science and Corporate Strategy: Du Pont R & D, 1902-1980David A. Hounshell John Kenly Smith, Jr.Robert Bud & W. J. Reader - 1989 - Isis 80 (4):732-734.
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  40.  28
    Does all teaching rest on evolved traits?Laura Chouinard-Thuly & Simon M. Reader - 2015 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38.
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  41.  4
    The Papin Sisters.Rachel Edwards & Keith Reader - 2001 - Oxford University Press UK.
    France's 'murder of the century' remains also the most violent non-war crime by women against women on record. The Papin sisters' killing and mutilation of their mistresses in 1933 has provoked reproduction and speculation ever since, by such prominent cultural figures as Simone de Beauvoir, Jacques Lacan, and Claude Chabrol. This book offers an overview of these reproductions and draws some provocative conclusions from them.
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  42.  11
    Causal and Corrective Organisational Culture: A Systematic Review of Case Studies of Institutional Failure.E. Julie Hald, Alex Gillespie & Tom W. Reader - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 174 (2):457-483.
    Organisational culture is assumed to be a key factor in large-scale and avoidable institutional failures. Whilst models such as “ethical culture” and “safety culture” have been used to explain such failures, minimal research has investigated their ability to do so, and a single and unified model of the role of culture in institutional failures is lacking. To address this, we systematically identified case study articles investigating the relationship between culture and institutional failures relating to ethics and risk management. A content (...)
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  43.  25
    ‘Creating an Ecological Citizenship’: Philosophical and Theological Perspectives on The Role of Contemporary Environmental Education.Timothy Howles, John Reader & Martin J. Hodson - 2018 - Heythrop Journal 59 (6):997-1008.
    In its concern to evoke in its readership an appropriate response to the challenge posed by the contemporary environmental crisis, the recent papal encyclical Laudato Si': On Care for our Common Home differentiates between the task of human education, on the one hand, and the deeper and more abstract task of motivating the human will for change and action, on the other. What must take place, it asserts, is the creation of nothing less than an ‘ecological citizenship’. To describe how (...)
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  44.  12
    Walking the Plank: An Experimental Paradigm to Investigate Safety Voice.Mark C. Noort, Tom W. Reader & Alex Gillespie - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  45.  58
    An ethical "blind spot": Problems of Anonymous letters to the editor.Bill Reader - 2005 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 20 (1):62 – 76.
    This study investigates the ethical implications of American newspaper policies that call for the automatic rejection of anonymous submissions to "letters to the editor" forums. The investigation is a qualitative analysis of more than 30 practitioner essays printed in journalism trade journals in the mid-to-late 20th century and interviews conducted with editors from 16 U.S. newspapers. The analysis found that contemporary American editors exhibited a blind spot toward anonymous commentary that seems to be in contention with certain tenets of codes (...)
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  46.  6
    A philosophy of need.Soran Reader (ed.) - 2006 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    Appeals to need abound in everyday discussion. People make claims about their own needs all the time, and they do so in a way that suggests these should have a certain moral force. Needs also play an important role in contemporary popular discourse about social justice, climate change, obligations to future generations, dealing fairly with refugees, treating animals humanely, and critiques of consumerist lifestyles - to name just a few of the many examples. The idea of need is present in (...)
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  47.  25
    Buddhism in Crisis? Institutional Decline in Modern Japan.Ian Reader - 2012 - Buddhist Studies Review 28 (2):233-263.
    Concerns that established temple Buddhism in Japan is in a state of crisis have been voiced by priests in various sectarian organizations in recent years. This article shows that there is a very real crisis facing Buddhism in modern Japan, with temples closing because of a lack of support and of priests to run them, and with a general turn away from Buddhism among the Japanese population. In rural areas falling populations have led to many temple closures, while in the (...)
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  48. Biology, law, and human social behavior.An Interdisdplinary Reader - 1992 - Human Nature 3 (4).
     
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  49. Cosmopolitan pacifism.Soran Reader - 2007 - Journal of Global Ethics 3 (1):87 – 103.
    In this paper I argue that cosmopolitanism prohibits war and requires a global approach to criminal justice. My argument proceeds by drawing out some implications of the core cosmopolitan intuition that every human being has a moral status which constrains how they may be treated. In the first part of this paper, I describe cosmopolitanism. In the second part, Cosmopolitanism and War, I analyse violence, consider the standards cosmopolitanism sets for its justification, and argue that war fails to meet them. (...)
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  50.  43
    Essays for David Wiggins: Identity, truth and value by Sabina Lovibond and S. G. Williams (eds) oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1996.Soran Reader - 2003 - Philosophy 78 (4):553-555.
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