Results for 'Ronald Beanblossom'

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  1.  7
    Inquiry and Essays.Ronald E. Beanblossom (ed.) - 1983 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    Reid’s previously published writings are substantial, both in quantity and quality. This edition attempts to make these writings more readily available in a single volume. Based upon Hamilton’s definitive two volume 6th edition, this edition is suitable for both students and scholars. Beanblossom and Lehrer have included a wide range of topics addressed by Reid. These topics include Reid’s views on the role of common sense, scepticism, the theory of ideas, perception, memory and identity, as well as his views (...)
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  2.  23
    Kant's Quarrel with Reid: The Role of Metaphysics.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1988 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 5 (1):53 - 62.
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  3. Reid and Hume: On the Nature of Belief.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1998 - Reid Studies 1 (2):17-32.
  4.  22
    Another Note on the Ontological Argument.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1985 - Faith and Philosophy 2 (2):175-178.
  5.  64
    In Defense of Thomas Reid's Use of 'Suggestion'.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1975 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 1 (1):19-24.
    Thomas Reid, the eighteenth century Scottish philosopher, was concerned with the proper use of ordinary language. P. G. Winch would have us believe that in spite of Reid's concern for observing the ordinary meaning of terms, Reid did not know the ordinary meaning of 'suggest'. Not knowing this ordinary meaning, Reid allegedly changed it in violation of his own criteria. Against this view I argue (1) Reid uses 'suggest' in a technical sense and gives reasons for doing so; (2) contrary (...)
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  6.  4
    Thomas Reid.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 2002 - In Steven Nadler (ed.), A Companion to Early Modern Philosophy. Malden, MA, USA: Blackwell. pp. 527–542.
    This chapter contains section titled: The Ideal Theory Perception Common Sense Writings.
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  7.  7
    Another Note on the Ontological Argument.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1985 - Faith and Philosophy 2 (2):175-178.
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  8.  14
    In Defense of Thomas Reid's Use of 'Suggestion'.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1975 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 1 (1):19-24.
    Thomas Reid, the eighteenth century Scottish philosopher, was concerned with the proper use of ordinary language. P. G. Winch would have us believe that in spite of Reid's concern for observing the ordinary meaning of terms, Reid did not know the ordinary meaning of 'suggest'. Not knowing this ordinary meaning, Reid allegedly changed it in violation of his own criteria. Against this view I argue (1) Reid uses 'suggest' in a technical sense and gives reasons for doing so; (2) contrary (...)
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  9.  5
    James and Reid.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 2000 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 74 (3):471-490.
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  10.  55
    A new foundation for Humean scepticism.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1976 - Philosophical Studies 29 (3):207 - 210.
  11.  4
    Critical Notice.Ronald Beanblossom - 2004 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 2 (1):83-87.
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  12.  20
    James and Reid.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 2000 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 74 (3):471-490.
  13.  9
    James and Reid.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 2000 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 74 (3):471-490.
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  14.  40
    Russell’s Indebtedness to Reid.Ronald Beanblossom - 1978 - The Monist 61 (2):192-204.
    I have written elsewhere of Reid’s influence on a number of philosophers and philosophical movements, for example, G. E. Moore, H. H. Price, C. J. Ducasse, R.M. Chisholm, new realism, critical realism and pragmatism. One notable philosopher who is missing from this list is Bertrand Russell. Yet, when one examines Russell’s period of common sense realism it becomes apparent that he, like his friend G.E. Moore, is indebted to Thomas Reid. To establish Reid’s influence on Russell, I shall first examine (...)
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  15.  20
    Walton on rational action.Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1971 - Mind 80 (318):278-281.
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  16. Thomas Reid's Inquiry and Essays.Keith Lehrer, Ronald E. Beanblossom & Thomas Reid - 1977 - Critica 9 (26):131-132.
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  17.  5
    Thomas Reid's Inquiry and Essays.Keith Lehrer & Ronald Beanblossom (eds.) - 1863 - Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill.
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  18.  37
    Thomas Reid: Context, Influence, Significance. [REVIEW]Ronald E. Beanblossom - 2006 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 44 (1):126-128.
    Ronald E. Beanblossom - Thomas Reid: Context, Influence, Significance - Journal of the History of Philosophy 44:1 Journal of the History of Philosophy 44.1 126-128 Joseph Houston, editor. Thomas Reid: Context, Influence, Significance. Edinburgh: Dunedin Academic Press, 2004. Pp. 192. Cloth, $45.00. The impetus for this volume was a 1996 conference at Glasgow University marking the bicentennial of Reid's death. Topics addressed range from Reid's refutation of skepticism to M.A. Stewart's "Sources for Reid's Views on Personal Identity." Stewart (...)
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  19.  14
    Derek R. Brookes ,Thomas Reid; Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2002. xiv+651pp. Hardcover, £79. ISBN: 0-7486-1189-4 Paul Wood ,The Correspondence of Thomas Reid, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2002. 356pp. Hardcover, £95. ISBN: 0-7486-1163-0. [REVIEW]Ronald E. Beanblossom - 2004 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 2 (1):83-87.
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  20.  29
    Review of Derek R. Brookes: Thomas Reid; Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man; Review of Paul Wood: The Correspondence of Thomas Reid. [REVIEW]Ronald E. Beanblossom - 2004 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 2 (1):83-87.
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  21. Thomas Reid's Inquiry and Essays Edited by Keith Lehrer and Ronald E. Beanblossom; Introd. By Ronald E. Beanblossom. --.Thomas Reid, Keith ed Lehrer & Ronald E. Beanblossom - 1975 - Bobbs-Merrill.
     
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  22.  12
    Natural reason: essays in honor of Joseph Norio Uemura.Joseph Norio Uemura, Duane L. Cady & Ronald E. Beanblossom (eds.) - 1992 - St. Paul, Minn.: Hamline University.
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  23. Keith Lehrer and Ronald E. Beanblossom , "Thomas Reid's inquiry and essays".Enrique Villanueva - 1977 - Critica 9 (26):131.
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  24. Bad faith, good faith, and authenticity in Sartre's early philosophy.Ronald E. Santoni - 1995 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
    Bad Faith and Sincerity: Does Sartre's Analysis Rest on a Mistake? In this opening chapter, I intend to deal with an issue that vexed my earliest ...
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  25.  95
    Character and Environment: A Virtue-Oriented Approach to Environmental Ethics.Ronald L. Sandler (ed.) - 2007 - Columbia University Press.
    Virtue ethics is now widely recognized as an alternative to Kantian and consequentialist ethical theories. However, moral philosophers have been slow to bring virtue ethics to bear on topics in applied ethics. Moreover, environmental virtue ethics is an underdeveloped area of environmental ethics. Although environmental ethicists often employ virtue-oriented evaluation (such as respect, care, and love for nature) and appeal to role models (such as Henry Thoreau, Aldo Leopold, and Rachel Carson) for guidance, environmental ethics has not been well informed (...)
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  26.  46
    Character and Environment: A Virtue-Oriented Approach to Environmental Ethics.Ronald L. Sandler - 2007 - Cambridge University Press.
    Virtue ethics is now widely recognized as an alternative to Kantian and consequentialist ethical theories. However, moral philosophers have been slow to bring virtue ethics to bear on topics in applied ethics. Moreover, environmental virtue ethics is an underdeveloped area of environmental ethics. Although environmental ethicists often employ virtue-oriented evaluation and appeal to role models for guidance, environmental ethics has not been well informed by contemporary work on virtue ethics. With _Character and Environment_, Ronald Sandler remedies each of these (...)
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  27.  58
    Responsible conduct by life scientists in an age of terrorism.Ronald M. Atlas - 2009 - Science and Engineering Ethics 15 (3):293-301.
    The potential for dual use of research in the life sciences to be misused for harm raises a range of problems for the scientific community and policy makers. Various legal and ethical strategies are being implemented to reduce the threat of the misuse of research and knowledge in the life sciences by establishing a culture of responsible conduct.
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  28. Walton on Rational Action.R. E. Beanblossom - 1971 - Mind 80:278.
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  29. Preemption effects in visual search: Evidence for low-level grouping.Ronald A. Rensink & James T. Enns - 1995 - Psychological Review 102 (1):101-130.
    Experiments are presented showing that visual search for Mueller-Lyer (ML) stimuli is based on complete configurations, rather than component segments. Segments easily detected in isolation were difficult to detect when embedded in a configuration, indicating preemption by low-level groups. This preemption—which caused stimulus components to become inaccessible to rapid search—was an all-or-nothing effect, and so could serve as a powerful test of grouping. It is shown that these effects are unlikely to be due to blurring by simple spatial filters at (...)
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  30.  92
    15 Scientific cognition as distributed cognition.Ronald Giere - 2002 - In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Stich & Michael Siegal (eds.), The Cognitive Basis of Science. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 285.
  31.  97
    Being a university.Ronald Barnett - 2011 - New York: Routledge.
    Ronald Barnett pursues this quest through an exploration of pairs of contending concepts that speak to the idea of the university such as space and time; being ...
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  32.  83
    Toward a Theory of Stakeholder Salience in Family Firms.Ronald K. Mitchell, Bradley R. Agle, James J. Chrisman & Laura J. Spence - 2011 - Business Ethics Quarterly 21 (2):235-255.
    ABSTRACT:The notion of stakeholder salience based on attributes (e.g., power, legitimacy, urgency) is applied in the family business setting. We argue that where principal institutions intersect (i.e., family and business); managerial perceptions of stakeholder salience will be different and more complex than where institutions are based on a single dominant logic. We propose that (1) whereas utilitarian power is more likely in the general business case, normative power is more typical in family business stakeholder salience; (2) whereas in a general (...)
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  33.  34
    The very idea of academic culture: What academy? What culture?Ronald Barnett - 2014 - Human Affairs 24 (1):7-19.
    In what senses can the academy be said to be a site of culture? Does that very idea bear much weight today? Perhaps the negative proposition has more substance, namely that the academy is no longer (if indeed it ever was) a place of culture. After all, we live in dark times-of unbridled power, tyranny, domination and manipulation. Some say that we have entered an age of the posthuman or even the inhuman. It just may be, however, that in such (...)
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  34. Perspectival Pluralism.Ronald Giere - 2006 - In ¸ Itekellersetal:Sp. pp. 26--41.
    In this paper I explore the extent to which a perspectival understanding of scientific knowledge supports forms of “scientific pluralism.” I will not initially attempt to formulate a general characterization of either perspectivism or scientific pluralism. I assume only that both are opposed to two extreme views. The one extreme is a (monistic) metaphysical realism according to which there is in principle one true and complete theory of everything. The other extreme is a constructivist relativism according to which scientific claims (...)
     
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  35. Deleuze on cinema.Ronald Bogue - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    Gilles Deleuze has produced some of the most important--and most formidable--theory on cinema to appear in the last half-century. Deleuze on Cinema provides a thorough and reliable guide to Deleuze's thought on the art of film, elucidating in clear language the shape and thrust of Deleuze's arguments found in his influential books on cinema.
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  36.  4
    Charles Taylor et l'interprétation de l'identité moderne.Ronald Beiner, Philippe de Lara & Centre Culturel International de Cerisy-la-Salle - 1998 - Presses Université Laval.
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  37.  4
    Ŭiryo munje ŭi yullijŏk sŏngchʻal.Ronald Munson - 2001 - Sŏul-si: Tanʼguk Taehakkyo Chʻulpʻanbu. Edited by Sŏk-kŏn Pak.
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  38.  39
    Mondiale democratie en de plicht tot onderlinge hulpverlening.Ronald Tinnevelt - 2007 - Krisis 8 (1):47-51.
  39.  2
    Mutter Natur oder Menschenwelt?: kopernikanische Wenden und Ersatzreligion.Ronald Wiegand - 2002 - Giessen: Psychosozial-Verlag.
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  40.  20
    Toward a Theory of Stakeholder Salience in Family Firms.Ronald K. Mitchell, Bradley R. Agle, James J. Chrisman & Laura J. Spence - 2011 - Business Ethics Quarterly 21 (2):235-255.
    ABSTRACT:The notion of stakeholder salience based on attributes (e.g., power, legitimacy, urgency) is applied in the family business setting. We argue that where principal institutions intersect (i.e., family and business); managerial perceptions of stakeholder salience will be different and more complex than where institutions are based on a single dominant logic. We propose that (1) whereas utilitarian power is more likely in the general business case, normative power is more typical in family business stakeholder salience; (2) whereas in a general (...)
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  41.  11
    XVII—David Pole.Ronald Ashby - 1977 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 77 (1):271-272.
    Ronald Ashby; XVII—David Pole, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 77, Issue 1, 1 June 1977, Pages 271–272, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristotelian/77.
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  42.  20
    Realizing the university in an age of supercomplexity.Ronald Barnett - 2000 - Philadelphia, PA: Society for Research into Higher Education & Open University Press.
    The university has lost its way. The world needs the university more than ever but for new reasons. If we are to clarify its new role in the world, we need to find a new vocabulary and a new sense of purpose. The university is faced with supercomplexity, in which our very frames of understanding, action and self-identity are all continually challenged. In such a world, the university has explicitly to take on a dual role: firstly, of compounding supercomplexity, so (...)
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  43.  15
    Naturalized Epistemology and the Law of Evidence Revisited.Ronald J. Allen - unknown
    We revisit Naturalized Epistemology and the Law of Evidence, published twenty years ago. The evolution of the relative plausibility theory of juridical proof is offered as evidence of the advantage of a naturalized approach to the study of the field and law evidence. Various alternative explanations of aspects of juridical proof from other disciplines are examined and their shortcomings described. These competing explanations are similar in their reductive, a priori approaches that are at odds with an empirically oriented naturalized approach. (...)
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  44.  36
    Higher education: a critical business.Ronald Barnett - 1997 - Bristol, PA: Open University Press.
    Criticism of Shakespeare's comedies has shifted from stressing their light-hearted and festive qualities to giving a stronger sense of their dark aspects and their social resonances. This volume introduces the key critical debates under five headings: genre, history and politics, gender and sexuality, language and performance.
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  45.  12
    Now is the Winter of Our Discontent: Contentious Issues in Research Ethics: AREC conference, London, November 2008.Ronald Atkinson - 2009 - Research Ethics 5 (1):40-41.
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  46.  98
    Deleuze on literature.Ronald Bogue - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    This is the first comprehensive introduction to Deleuze's work on literature. It provides thorough treatments of Deleuze's early book on Proust and his seminal volume on Kafka and minor literature. Deleuze on Literature situates those studies and many other scattered writings within a general project that extends throughout Deleuze's career-that of conceiving of literature as a form of health and the writer as a cultural physician.
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  47. Multiple Realizability.Ronald P. Endicott - 2006 - In Donald M. Borchert (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2nd edition. vol. 3. Thomson Gale.
    Multiple realizability has been at the heart of debates about whether the mind reduces to the brain, or whether the items of a special science reduce to the items of a physical science. I analyze the two central notions implied by the concept of multiple realizability: "multiplicity," otherwise known as property variability, and "realizability." Beginning with the latter, I distinguish three broad conceptual traditions. The Mathematical Tradition equates realization with a form of mapping between objects. Generally speaking, x realizes (or (...)
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  48. Integration and Reaction.Ronald R. Sundstrom - 2023 - Dialogue 62 (1):77-83.
    D. C. Matthew argues that although integration offers blacks social and economic benefits, it also creates the conditions for phenotypic devaluation that leads to harm against black self-worth and servile behavior. Therefore, he advises against integration because the resulting self-worth harms outweigh the benefits of integration. I argue that Matthew’s cost-benefit calculation against integration lacks the requisite evidence, and amounts to a luxury belief that will result in more harm. Moreover, his interpretation of behavior — which he construes as being (...)
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  49. Autonomy and the demented self.Ronald Dworkin - 2006 - In Stephen A. Green & Sidney Bloch (eds.), An anthology of psychiatric ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 293--6.
     
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  50. Naturalizing phenomenology? Dretske on qualia.Ronald McIntyre - 1999 - In Jean Petitot, Francisco Varela, Bernard Pachoud & Jean-Michel Roy (eds.), Naturalizing Phenomenology: Contemporary Phenomenology and Cognitive Science. Stanford University Press. pp. 429--439.
    First, I briefly characterize Dretske’s particular naturalization project, emphasizing his naturalistic reconstruction of the notion of representation. Second, I note some apparent similarities between his notion of representation and Husserl’s notion of intentionality, but I find even more important differences. Whereas Husserl takes intentionality to be an intrinsic, phenomenological feature of thought and experience, Dretske advocates an “externalist” account of mental representation. Third, I consider Dretske’s treatment of qualia, because he takes it to show that his representational account of mind (...)
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