100 entries most recently downloaded from the set: "" in "White Rose Research Online"

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  1. Kant on Doxastic Voluntarism and its Implications for Epistemic Responsibility.Alix Cohen - 2013 - Kant Yearbook 5 (1):33-50.
    This paper sets out to show that Kant’s account of cognition can be used to defend epistemic responsibility against the double threat of either being committed to implausible versions of doxastic voluntarism, or failing to account for a sufficiently robust connection between the will and belief. To support this claim, I argue that whilst we have no direct control over our beliefs, we have two forms of indirect doxastic control that are sufficient to ground epistemic responsibility: first, the capacity to (...)
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  2. Indian Buddhist Philosophy: Metaphysics as Ethics.Amber D. Carpenter - 2014 - Durham: Routledge.
    Development of Buddhist thought in India; 1. The Buddha’s suffering; 2. Practice and theory of no-self; 3. Kleśas and compassion; 4. The second Buddha’s greater vehicle; 5. Karmic questions; 6. Irresponsible selves, responsible non-selves; 7. The third turning: Yogācāra; 8. The long sixth to seventh century: epistemology as ethics; I. Perception and conception: the changing face ofultimate reality; II. Evaluating reasons: Naiyāyikas and Diṅnāga. III. Madhyamaka response to Yogācāra IV. Percepts and concepts: Apoha 1 ; V. Efficacy: Apoha 2 ; (...)
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  3. Memory, Imagination and Narrative.Dorothea Debus - unknown
  4. Eating One's Own : Exploring Conceptual Space for Moral Restraint.Amber D. Carpenter - unknown
     
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  5. Faith Without God in Nagarjuna.Amber D. Carpenter - unknown
     
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  6. "Algebraic" approaches to mathematics.Mary Leng - unknown
  7. Creation and Discovery in Mathematics.Mary Leng - 2011 - In John Polkinghorne (ed.), Meaning in Mathematics. Oxford University Press.
  8. Preaxiomatic Mathematical Reasoning : An Algebraic Approach.Mary Leng - unknown
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  9. Structuralism, Fictionalism, and Applied Mathematics.Mary Leng - 2009 - In Clark Glymour, Wei Wang & Dag Westerståhl (eds.), Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Congress. London, UK: College Publications. pp. 377-389.
  10. Social value judgements and ethical principles.Stephen Michael Holland & Hope Tony - unknown
     
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  11. Analytic philosophy and history of philosophy : the development of the idea of rational reconstruction.Michael Anthony Beaney - 2013 - In Erich H. Reck (ed.), The historical turn in analytic philosophy. New York, NY: Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  12. Logic and Metaphysics in Early Analytic Philosophy.Michael Beaney - 2012 - In Lila Haaparanta & Heikki Koskinen (eds.), Categories of Being: Essays on Metaphysics and Logic. Oxford University Press, Usa. pp. 257.
    The emergence of analytic philosophy has often been seen as inaugurating a linguistic turn in philosophy, a turn with profound anti-metaphysical implications. Metaphysics and epistemology, on this view, were replaced by logic and philosophy of language as forming the basis of philosophy. But if we look at the work of the four founders of analytic philosophy, Frege, Russell, Moore and Wittgenstein, we find metaphysical conceptions at the heart of their endeavours. Frege, for example, regarded numbers and the truth-values as logical (...)
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  13. Report on the Bioethical Issues raised by the research.Stephen Michael Holland, Thomas Raymond Baldwin & Anthony Farrant - unknown
     
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  14. On Bringing a Work into Existence.Peter Vaudreuil Lamarque - unknown
     
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  15. Metaphysical Suffering, Metaphysics as Therapy.Amber D. Carpenter - unknown
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  16. Justice and Just Action in Plato's Republic.Stephen Everson - 2011 - In Ben Morison & Katerina Ierodiakonou (eds.), Episteme, etc.: Essays in honour of Jonathan Barnes. Oxford : NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 249-276.
  17. Motivating Reasons.Stephen Everson - 2010 - In Timothy O'Connor & Constantine Sandis (eds.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Action. Oxford, UK: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 145–152.
    This chapter contains sections titled: References.
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  18. Abortion and other beginning of life issues.Stephen Michael Holland & Heather Cahill - unknown
     
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  19. Ethics of critique and the critique of health management ethics.Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
     
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  20. Public health ethics : what it is and how to do it.Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
    This chapter provides a useful framework for thinking about public health ethical problems. It defines public health ethics as primarily concerned about the relationship between government, the individual and the community and how benefit and harm are distributed between individuals and the community. It suggests that public health ethics is part of medical ethics and bioethics and criticises the rights-based approach.
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  21. Theories, principles, and types of arguments.Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
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  22. Scalability in Linda-like Coordination Systems.R. Menezes, R. Tolksdorf & A. M. Wood - unknown
     
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  23. Judging Strives to be Knowing.Amber D. Carpenter - unknown
     
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  24. Persons Keeping Their Karma Together.Amber D. Carpenter - 2015 - In Koji Tanaka, Yasuo Deguchi, Jay L. Garfield & Graham Priest (eds.), The Moon Points Back. Oxford University Press USA.
    This chapter aims to reconstruct the philosophical motivation for the pudgalavāda or “Personalist” Buddhist view that the person is ultimately real. It argues that the ultraminimalism of the Abhidharma is too minimal to account for crucial features of personhood—especially its capacity to construct unities out of pluralities. The Buddhist Personalist insists that the individuation of person-constituting continua must be an ultimately real fact, not something we project onto or construct out of ultimate reality. That certain ultimate particulars really do belong (...)
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  25. Berkeley's Principles of Human Knowledge.Tom Stoneham - unknown
     
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  26. On Plato's Lack of Consciousness.Amber D. Carpenter - unknown
  27. Questioning Krishna's Kantianism.Amber D. Carpenter - unknown
     
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  28. What is Peculiar in Aristotle's and Plato's Psychologies? What is Common to Them Both?Amber D. Carpenter - unknown
  29. Transparency, Sense and Self-Knowledge.Tom Stoneham - 1995 - In Petr Kotatko & John Biro (eds.), Frege: Sense and Reference One Hundred Years Later. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 103--112.
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  30. Review : The Red and the Real, by J. Cohen (OUP).Keith Malcolm Allen - unknown
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  31. Experiencing the Past and Thinking about the Past : Why Understanding the Concept of the Past Depends on Recollective Memories of Particular Past Events.Dorothea Debus - unknown
     
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  32. Taking it Easy: A Response to Colyvan.Mary Leng - 2012 - Mind 121 (484):983-995.
    This discussion note responds to Mark Colyvan’s claim that there is no easy road to nominalism. While Colyvan is right to note that the existence of mathematical explanations presents a more serious challenge to nominalists than is often thought, it is argued that nominalist accounts do have the resources to account for the existence of mathematical explanations whose explanatory role resides elsewhere than in their nominalistic content.
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  33. Emergent Causation and Property Causation.Paul Noordhof - 2010 - In Cynthia Macdonald & Graham Macdonald (eds.), Emergence in Mind. Oxford University Press.
  34. Review Essay : Primary & Secondary Qualities: The Historical and Ongoing Debate, edited by L. Nolan (OUP).Keith Malcolm Allen - unknown
  35. Review of The Quest for Reality, by Barry Stroud. [REVIEW]Keith Malcolm Allen - unknown
     
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  36. Child versus Childmaker: Future Persons and Present Duties in Ethics and the Law, by Melinda A. Roberts. Law and Human Genetics: Regulating a Revolution, (eds.) Roger Brownsword, W.R. Cornish, and Margaret Llewelyn. [REVIEW]Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
     
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  37. Pragmatic Bioethics (ed.) Glen MGee.Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
     
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  38. The Early Life Of Russell’s Notion Of A Propositional Function.Michael Beaney - 2008 - The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication 4:200.
    In this paper I describe the birth of Russell’s notion of a propositional function on 3 May 1902 and its immediate context and implications. In particular, I consider its significance in relation to the development of his views on analysis.
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  39. John P. Lizza : Persons, Humanity, and the Definition of Death.Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
     
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  40. Furthering the sceptical case against virtue ethics in nursing ethics.Stephen Holland - 2012 - Nursing Philosophy 13 (4):266-275.
    In a recent article in this journal I presented a sceptical argument about the current prominence of virtue ethics in nursing ethics. Daniel Putman has responded with a defence of the relevance of virtue in nursing. The present article continues this discussion by clarifying, defending, and expanding the sceptical argument. I start by emphasizing some features of the sceptical case, including assumptions about the nature of sceptical arguments, and about the character of both virtue ethics and nursing ethics. Then I (...)
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  41. Kant on Anthropology, Alienology and Physiognomy : The Opacity of Human Motivation and its Anthropological Implications.Alix Aurelia Cohen - unknown
  42. Books Forum : What do Bioethicists Read?Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
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  43. Recent work : Bioethics.Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
     
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  44. Topic for debate.B. Brecher, G. Gardener, M. Velepic, A. Walsh, C. Belshaw & S. Holland - 2011 - Nursing Ethics 18 (1):122-125.
  45. High-spin yrast states in the gamma-soft nuclei Pr-135 and Ce-134.E. S. Paul, C. Fox, A. J. Boston, H. J. Chantler, C. J. Chiara, R. M. Clark, M. Cromaz, M. Descovich, P. Fallon, D. B. Fossan, A. A. Hecht, T. Koike, I. Y. Lee, A. O. Macchiavelli, P. J. Nolan, K. Starosta, R. Wadsworth, I. Ragnarsson & Bob Wadsworth - unknown
    High-spin states have been studied in Pr-135(59), populated through the Cd-116(Na-23,4n) reaction at 115 MeV, using the Gammasphere gamma-ray spectrometer. The negative-parity yrast band has been significantly extended to spin similar to 45 (h) over bar and excitation energy 21.5 MeV, showing evidence for several rotational alignments. The positive-parity yrast band of Ce-135(58), populated through the p4n channel of this reaction, was also populated to spin similar to 38 (h) over bar and excitation energy 18 MeV. Cranking calculations indicate that (...)
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  46. Medium- and high-spin band structure of the chiral-candidate nucleus Pr-134.J. Timar, K. Starosta, I. Kuti, D. Sohler, D. B. Fossan, T. Koike, E. S. Paul, A. J. Boston, H. J. Chantler, M. Descovich, R. M. Clark, M. Cromaz, P. Fallon, I. Y. Lee, A. O. Macchiavelli, C. J. Chiara, R. Wadsworth, A. A. Hecht, D. Almehed, S. Frauendorf & Bob Wadsworth - unknown
    Medium- and high-spin states of Pr-134 were populated using the Cd-116(Na-23, 5n) reaction and studied with the GAMMASPHERE spectrometer. Several new bands have been found in this nucleus, one of them being linked to the previously observed chiral-candidate twin-band structure. The ground state of Pr-134 could be determined through establishing a level structure that connects the two previously known long-lived isomeric states. Unambiguous spin-parity assignments for the excited states could be performed based on the known 2(-) spin-parity of the ground (...)
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  47. Excitation dynamics of micro-structured atmospheric pressure plasma arrays.H. Boettner, J. Waskoenig, D. O'Connell, T. L. Kim, P. A. Tchertchian, J. Winter & V. Schulz-von der Gathen - unknown
    The spatial dynamics of the optical emission from an array of 50 times 50 individual microcavity plasma devices is investigated. The array is operated in argon and argon-neon mixtures close to atmospheric pressure with an ac voltage. The optical emission is analysed with phase and space resolution. It has been found that the emission is not continuous over the entire ac period, but occurs once per half period. Each of the observed emission phases shows a self-pulsing of the discharge, with (...)
     
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  48. Isospin and deformation studies in the odd-odd N = Z nucleus Co-54.D. Rudolph, L. -L. Andersson, R. Bengtsson, J. Ekman, O. Erten, C. Fahlander, E. K. Johansson, I. Ragnarsson, C. Andreoiu, M. A. Bentley, M. P. Carpenter, R. J. Charity, R. M. Clark, P. Fallon, A. O. Macchiavelli, W. Reviol, D. G. Sarantites, D. Seweryniak, C. E. Svensson & S. J. Williams - unknown
    High-spin states in the odd-odd N = Z nucleus Co-54 have been investigated by the fusion-evaporation reaction Si-28(S-32,1 alpha 1p1n)Co-54. Gamma-ray information gathered with the Ge detector array Gammasphere was correlated with evaporated particles detected in the charged particle detector system Microball and a 1 pi neutron detector array. A significantly extended excitation scheme of Co-54 is presented, which includes a candidate for the isospin T = 1, 6(+) state of the 1f(7/2)(-2) multiplet. The results are compared to large-scale shell-model (...)
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  49. Rotational bands in the semi-magic nucleus Ni-57(28)29.D. Rudolph, I. Ragnarsson, W. Reviol, C. Andreoiu, M. A. Bentley, M. P. Carpenter, R. J. Charity, R. M. Clark, M. Cromaz, J. Ekman, C. Fahlander, P. Fallon, E. Ideguchi, A. O. Macchiavelli, M. N. Mineva, D. G. Sarantites, D. Seweryniak & S. J. Williams - unknown
    Two rotational bands have been identified and characterized in the proton-magic N = Z + 1 nucleus Ni-57. These bands complete the systematics of well-and superdeformed rotational bands in the light nickel isotopes starting from doubly magic Ni-56 to Ni-60. High-spin states in Ni-57 have been produced in the fusion-evaporation reaction Si-28(S-32, 2p1n)Ni-57 and studied with the gamma-ray detection array GAMMASPHERE operated in conjunction with detectors for evaporated light charged particles and neutrons. The features of the rotational bands in Ni-57 (...)
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  50. Prolegomena to any Future Philosophy of Literature.Peter Vaudreuil Lamarque - unknown
     
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  51. Perception and Basic Beliefs: Zombies, Modules, and the Problem of the External World.Keith Allen - unknown
  52. Human Enhancement.Stephen Michael Holland - unknown
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  53. Conifer leader browsing by roe deer in English upland forests : Effects of deer density and understorey vegetation.Alastair I. Ward, Piran C. L. White, Neil J. Walker & Charles H. Critchley - unknown
    At moderate to high densities ungulates can impact negatively on forest crops and these may be managed by lethal control. In production forestry an understanding of the relationship between ungulate density, habitat-related factors and the incidence of tree damage may promote more efficient ungulate damage management than by lethal control alone. In plantation forests in the north cast of England, the incidence of conifer leader browsing by roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) was positively associated with an index of deer density (at (...)
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  54. Interdisciplinary approaches for the management of existing and emerging human-wildlife conflicts.Piran C. L. White & Alastair I. Ward - unknown
    Human-wildlife conflicts are increasing throughout the world, principally due to a combination of human population growth, increased pressure on land and natural resources and climate change. Many human-wildlife conflicts stem from differences in objectives between various stakeholder groups, especially where the wildlife in question is a resource that can be exploited for economic or cultural benefit, or where the conservation of wildlife is at odds with human population growth or development pressure. Conflicts can be exacerbated by an incomplete understanding of (...)
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  55. The Cambridge Companion to Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding.Keith Allen - unknown
     
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  56. Self-Consciousness.Dorothea Debus - unknown
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  57. Practical Reality. [REVIEW]Christian Piller - 2003 - Philosophy 78 (3):414-425.
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  58. The Aesthetics of Everyday Life (review).Jeffrey Petts - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 42 (1):116-121.
    The review examines different essays from the context set by the idea of 'everyday aesthetics'. Confronted with the notion of "everyday aesthetics," one is immediately faced with some problems of definition. Such problems potentially threaten the viability of the everyday aesthetics project to extend the scope of philosophical aesthetics, so that, as Jonathan Smith suggests in his introduction to this collection of essays, "nothing in the everyday world (or at least very little) can be supposed devoid of the power to (...)
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  59. Morality and human embryo research Introduction to the Talking Point on morality and human embryo research.Thomas Baldwin - unknown
     
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  60. Morality and language - Warnock,gj.T. Baldwin - unknown
     
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  61. Moore's rejection of ethical naturalism.Thomas Baldwin - 2006 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 3 (3):291-311.
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  62. Sets whose members might not exist + essentialism possible worlds.T. Baldwin - unknown
  63. Paradoxes - a study in form and predication - Cargile,j.T. Baldwin - unknown
  64. Sartre - Caws,p.T. Baldwin - unknown
     
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  65. Understanding the opposition.Thomas Baldwin - unknown
    Current debates about sex selection start from a paradox: on the one hand, the 'liberal' argument in favour of sex selection is often thought to be sound; but on the other hand there is widespread public opposition to sex selection. So it is worth spending some time examining the arguments against sex selection. Four different types of argument are identified: (i) religious arguments; (ii) consequentialist arguments, mainly concerning disturbance to the sex ratio; (iii) arguments to the effect that sex selection (...)
     
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  66. Doing what is best (Humeanism, desire, practical reasons).C. Piller - unknown
     
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  67. Beyond aesthetics: Philosophical essays. [REVIEW]Peter Lamarque - 2004 - Mind 113 (450):323-326.
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  68. “Let the Occult Quality Go”: Interpreting Berkley's Metaphysics of Science.Tom Stoneham & Angelo Cei - 2009 - European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 5 (1):73 - 91.
  69. Embodying Intelligence: Animals and Us in Plato’s Timaeus.Amber Carpenter - 2008 - In Marie-Élise Zovko & John Dillon (eds.), Platonism and Forms of Intelligence. Akademie Verlag. pp. 39-58.
  70. Nevertheless: The Philosophical Significance of the Questions Posed at Philebus 15b.Amber Carpenter - 2009 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 12 (1):103-129.
  71. On Denoting 1905-2005.Michael Beaney - unknown
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  72. Russell and Wittgenstein on the Nature of Judgement.Michael Beaney - unknown
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  73. The philosophy of Gottlob Frege.Michael Beaney - unknown
     
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  74. Health economics of asthma: assessing the value of asthma interventions.J. D. Campbell, D. E. Spackman & S. D. Sullivan - unknown
    The aim of this systematic review was to summarize and assess the quality of asthma intervention health economic studies from 2002 to 2007, compare the study findings with clinical management guidelines, and suggest avenues for future improvement of asthma health economic studies. Forty of the 177 studies met our inclusion criteria. We assessed the quality of studies using The Quality of Health Economic Studies validated instrument (total score range: 0-100). Six studies (15%) had quality category 2, 26 studies (65%) achieved (...)
     
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  75. The costs and consequences of omalizumab in uncontrolled asthma from a USA payer perspective.J. D. Campbell, D. E. Spackman & S. D. Sullivan - unknown
    Background: Omalizumab, an anti-immunoglobulin E antibody, reduces exacerbations and symptoms in uncontrolled allergic asthma. The study objective was to estimate the costs and consequences of omalizumab compared to usual care from a US payer perspective. Methods: We estimated payer costs, quality-adjusted survival (QALYs), and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of omalizumab compared to usual care using a state-transition simulation model that included sensitivity analyses. Every 2 weeks, patients could transition between chronic asthma and exacerbation health states. The best available evidence (...)
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  76. Function-Argument Analysis in Early Analytic Philosophy.Michael Beaney - unknown
     
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  77. In Defence of Ungrounded Desires: Against Raz's Classical Account of Agency.Stephen Everson - 2004 - European Journal of Philosophy 12 (3):283-303.
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  78. The de somno and Aristotle's explanation of sleep.Stephen Everson - 2007 - Classical Quarterly 57 (2):502-520.
  79. Believe what you want.P. Nordhoff - unknown
    The Uncontrollability Thesis is that it is metaphysically impossible consciously to believe that p at will. I review the standard ways in which this might be explained. They focus on the aim or purpose of belief being truth. I argue that these don't work. They either explain the aim in a way which makes it implausible that the Uncontrollability Thesis is true, or they fail to justify their claim that beliefs should be understood as aimed at the truth. I further (...)
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  80. Our Survival.Andrew Ward - 2006 - Res Cogitans 3 (1).
    [First paragraphs] Reductionists about personal identity contend that there is nothing more to our survival than a series of causally related experiences and/or bodily continuities. Our belief in a separately existing self or subject of experiences is held to be unjustified, and we are recommended to reduce the conception of our own identity over time by jettisoning this belief. The particular form of reductionism that places the true view of our identity in a series of causally related experiences is usually (...)
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  81. Phileban Gods.Amber Carpenter - 2003 - Ancient Philosophy 23 (1):93-112.
    In the Philebus, Plato reinterprets the traditional Olympian pantheon in terms of a nationalistic account of the cosmos which grounds the alternative to hedonism which Socrates defends. From the metaphysics of the Philebus, we can grasp 'Zeus' as a formal characteristic of the cosmos, required by any teleological account, and internal to the intelligible order of the universe, rather than standing outside of it. The universe is at once rationally ordered and good in virtue of the relation of reason to (...)
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  82. Berkeley's "Esse Is Percipi" and Collier's "Simple" Argument.Tom Stoneham - 2006 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 23 (3):211-224.
  83. Ewing's Problem.Christian Piller - 2007 - European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 3 (1):0-0.
    Two plausible claims seem to be inconsistent with each other. One is the idea that if one reasonably believes that one ought to fi, then indeed, on pain of acting irrationally, one ought to fi. The other is the view that we are fallible with respect to our beliefs about what we ought to do. Ewing’s Problem is how to react to this apparent inconsistency. I reject two easy ways out. One is Ewing’s own solution to his problem, which is (...)
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  84. The Role of Transcendental Idealism in Kant's Dialectic of Aesthetic Judgment.Andrew Ward - unknown
    A defence of the view that the introduction of transendental idealism, in the Dialectic of Aesthetic Judgment, plays a central role in resolving the antinomy which, as Kant contends, exists in our pure judgments of taste. It is further argued that the link that he holds to exist between the realms of nature and morality (or freedom) can only be successfully made out if transcendental idealism is accepted as underpinning our judgments concerning the beauties of nature.
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