Results for 'Beryl Rowland'

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  1.  22
    Bishop bradwardine on the artificial memory.Beryl Rowland - 1978 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 41 (1):307-312.
  2.  16
    Chaucer and the Unnatural History of Animals.Beryl Rowland - 1963 - Mediaeval Studies 25 (1):367-372.
  3.  20
    Chaucer's "Throstil Old" and Other Birds.Beryl Rowland - 1962 - Mediaeval Studies 24 (1):381-384.
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  4.  19
    " Owles and Apes" in Chaucer's Nun's Priest's Tale, 3092.Beryl Rowland - 1965 - Mediaeval Studies 27 (1):322-325.
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  5.  8
    Medieval Woman's Guide to Health: The First English Gynecological Handbook. Beryl Rowland.Edward J. Kealey - 1982 - Isis 73 (2):310-310.
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  6.  10
    Birds with Human Souls: A Guide to Bird Symbolism. Beryl Rowland.Joan Cadden - 1979 - Isis 70 (4):604-605.
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  7.  10
    Medieval Woman's Guide to Health: The First English Gynaecological Handbook. Middle English Text, with Introduction and Modern English Translation. By Beryl Rowland. Pp. xx + 193. (Croom Helm, London, 1981.) Price £10.95. [REVIEW]M. J. Swanton - 1982 - Journal of Biosocial Science 14 (4):499-501.
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  8.  8
    Birds with Human Souls: A Guide to Bird Symbolism by Beryl Rowland[REVIEW]Joan Cadden - 1979 - Isis 70:604-605.
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  9. Ethics of the rabbis.Beryl D. Cohon - 1932 - Boston,: The Chapple publishing company.
     
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  10. Moshe Mendlson.Beryl Segal - 1941 - New York:
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  11. From the Inside: Consciousness and the First‐Person Perspective.Mark Rowlands - 2008 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 (3):281 – 297.
    To adopt a first-person perspective on consciousness is typically understood as a matter of inwardly engaging one's awareness in such a way as to make one's conscious states and their properties into objects of awareness. When awareness is thus inwardly engaged, experience functions as both act and object of awareness. As objects of awareness, an experience-token and its various properties are items of which a subject is aware. As an act of awareness, an experience-token is that in virtue of which (...)
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  12. Recent Work on Gender Identity and Gender.Rach Cosker-Rowland - 2023 - Analysis 83 (4):801-820.
    Our gender identity is our sense of ourselves as a woman, a man, as genderqueer or as another gender. Trans people have a gender identity that is different from.
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  13.  5
    Reference systems and inertia.Beryl E. Clotfelter - 1970 - Ames,: Iowa State University Press.
  14. The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 15: Uncertain Paths to Freedom: Russia and China 1919-1922.Beryl Haslam & Richard A. Rempel (eds.) - 2000 - Routledge.
    The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 15 assembles Russell's writings on his experiences of visiting and reflecting on Russia and China. Having emerged from the Great War determined to prevent another armed conflict, Russell became a champion of international socialism as the antidote to the destructive forces of nationalism and capitalism. His quest for international reconstruction led to two enduring experiences, his trip first to Bolshevik Russia in 1920 and then to divided China in 1920-21. These letters describe those (...)
     
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  15. Jung's "living mystery" of creativity, symbols and the unconscious in writing.Susan Rowland - 2016 - In Kathryn Wood Madden (ed.), The unconscious roots of creativity. Asheville, North Carolina: Chiron Publications.
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  16.  14
    Piaget and knowing: studies in genetic epistemology.Beryl A. Geber (ed.) - 1977 - Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
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  17.  16
    Continuity and change: Anglo-Saxon and Norman methods of tithe-payment before and after the Conquest.Beryl Taylor - 2001 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 83 (3):27-50.
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  18. Value-First Accounts of Reasons and Fit.R. A. Rowland - 2023 - In Chris Howard & R. A. Rowland (eds.), Fittingness. OUP.
    It is tempting to think that all of normativity, such as our reasons for action, what we ought to do, and the attitudes that it is fitting for us to have, derives from what is valuable. But value-first approaches to normativity have fallen out of favour as the virtues of reasons- and fittingness-first approaches to normativity have become clear. On these views, value is not explanatorily prior to reasons and fit; rather the value of things is understood in terms of (...)
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  19.  64
    The paradox of secrecy.Beryl L. Bellman - 1979 - Human Studies 4 (1):1 - 24.
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  20.  2
    Action: Offshoring Strategies, Creative Governance, and Subnational Island Jurisdictions.Rowland Stout - 2006 - McGill-Queen's University Press.
    By focusing on the idea that agency involves causal sensitivity to reasons, Rowland Stout shows how agency is one of the most useful ways into the philosophy of mind: if one can understand what it is to be a free and rational agent, then one can understand what it is to be a conscious subject of experience. Some of the questions considered include: Is all action intentional action? Is intentional action characterized by its relation with possible justification? Do beliefs (...)
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  21. Challenging the Performance Movement: Accountability.Beryl A. Radin - forthcoming - Complexity.
     
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  22.  34
    Facial expression megamix: Tests of dimensional and category accounts of emotion recognition.Andrew W. Young, Duncan Rowland, Andrew J. Calder, Nancy L. Etcoff, Anil Seth & David I. Perrett - 1997 - Cognition 63 (3):271-313.
  23.  5
    Beyond Perestroika: The future of Gorbachev's USSR.Beryl Williams - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (4):463-463.
  24.  5
    Between tsar and people. Educated society and the quest for public identity in late imperial Russia.Beryl J. Williams - 1992 - History of European Ideas 14 (5):746-747.
  25.  2
    Lenin and the problem of nationalities.Beryl Williams - 1992 - History of European Ideas 15 (4-6):611-617.
  26.  32
    The Russian revolution of 1905.Beryl Williams - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):203-208.
  27.  5
    Running with the pack.Mark Rowlands - 2013 - London: Granta.
    Most of the serious thinking I have done over the past twenty years has been done while running.'Mark Rowlands has run for most of his life. He has also been a professional philosopher. And for him the two - running and philosophising - are inextricably connected. In Running with the Pack he tells us about the most significant runs of his life - from the entire day he spent running as a boy in Wales, to the runs along French beaches (...)
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  28.  33
    Ethical Theories and Controversial Intuitions.Rach Cosker-Rowland - 2023 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 31 (3):318-345.
    We have controversial intuitions about the rightness of retributive punishment, keeping promises for its own sake, and pushing the heavy man off of the bridge in the footbridge trolley case. How do these intuitions relate to ethical theories? Should ethical theories aim to fit with and explain them? Or are only uncontroversial intuitions relevant to explanatory ethical theorising? I argue against several views that we might hold about the relationship between controversial intuitions and ethical theories. I then propose and defend (...)
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  29. The Category of Occurrent Continuants.Rowland Stout - 2016 - Mind 125 (497):41-62.
    Arguing first that the best way to understand what a continuant is is as something that primarily has its properties at a time rather than atemporally, the paper then defends the idea that there are occurrent continuants. These are things that were, are, or will be happening—like the ongoing process of someone reading or my writing this paper, for instance. A recently popular philosophical view of process is as something that is referred to with mass nouns and not count nouns. (...)
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  30.  6
    Individualism, an American Way of Life.Beryl Harold Levy - 1934 - Philosophical Review 43:96.
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  31.  11
    I. reformers and counter-reformers.Tracey Rowland - 2013 - In Nicholas Adams, George Pattison & Graham Ward (eds.), The Oxford handbook of theology and modern European thought. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 277.
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  32. Tradition.Tracey Rowland - 2013 - In Nicholas Adams, George Pattison & Graham Ward (eds.), The Oxford handbook of theology and modern European thought. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
     
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  33.  75
    Things that happen because they should: a teleological approach to action.Rowland Stout - 1996 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Rowland Stout presents a new philosophical account of human action which is radically and controversially different from all rival theories. He argues that intentional actions are unique among natural phenomena in that they happen because they should happen, and that they are to be explained in terms of objective facts rather than beliefs and intentions.
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  34. The case against the marriage of natural law and natural rights.Tracey Rowland - 2022 - In Tom P. S. Angier, Iain T. Benson & Mark Retter (eds.), The Cambridge handbook of natural law and human rights. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  35. The case against the marriage of natural law and natural rights.Tracey Rowland - 2022 - In Tom P. S. Angier, Iain T. Benson & Mark Retter (eds.), The Cambridge handbook of natural law and human rights. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
  36.  15
    The bible and eternity: John wyclif's dilemma.Beryl Smalley - 1964 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 27 (1):73-89.
  37.  20
    Ethics in a time of crisis: editorial introduction to special focus.Rowland Curtis, Stefano Harney & Campbell Jones - 2012 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 22 (1):64-67.
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  38.  12
    Ethics in a time of crisis: editorial introduction to special focus.Rowland Curtis, Stefano Harney & Campbell Jones - 2012 - Business Ethics: A European Review 22 (1):64-67.
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  39.  48
    Commodified Enchantment: Children and Consumer Capitalism.Beryl Langer - 2002 - Thesis Eleven 69 (1):67-81.
    Within capitalist modernity, `children' and `culture' were ideologically positioned as `sacred' in opposition to the `profane' sphere of commerce and industry. In the last quarter of the 20th century, this romantic construction of childhood as a time of enchantment was appropriated by the `children's culture industry' and re-inscribed as a marketing strategy. Capitalist childhood was reconstituted as a time of consumption. In invoking the myth of the `sacred child', however, capital also elicits ambivalence about the `profanity' of commercial intrusion into (...)
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  40.  14
    Decima Langworthy Douie: 1901-1977.Beryl Smalley - 1978 - Franciscan Studies 38 (1):3-9.
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  41.  25
    The Lombard’s Commentary on Isaias and Other Fragments.Beryl Smalley & George Lacombe - 1931 - New Scholasticism 5 (2):123-162.
  42.  5
    Lost Historian of Alexander ‘Descended from Alexander’, and Read by Julian?Rowland B. E. Smith - 2007 - História 56 (3):356-380.
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  43.  3
    Animal rights.Mark Rowlands - 2013 - London: Hodder & Stoughton.
    In recent years the ways in which humans treat animals has come to hold a central place in contemporary ethics, encapsulating, as it does, our increasingly strained relationship with our environment as well as overlapping with other global issues such as overpopulation and hunger. Animal Rights: All That Matters is a compelling account of some of the often bitterly contentious debates surrounding animal ethics. Starting from the key argument that - ethically speaking - there is far less difference between humans (...)
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  44. Fittingness.Christopher Howard & Richard Rowland (eds.) - 2022 - Oxford University Press.
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  45. Seeing the anger in someone's face.Rowland Stout - 2010 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 84 (1):29-43.
    Starting from the assumption that one can literally perceive someone's anger in their face, I argue that this would not be possible if what is perceived is a static facial signature of their anger. There is a product–process distinction in talk of facial expression, and I argue that one can see anger in someone's facial expression only if this is understood to be a process rather than a product.
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  46.  88
    Process, Action, and Experience.Rowland Stout (ed.) - 2018 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Process, Action, and Experience offers a radical new approach to the philosophy of mind and action, taking processes to be the central subject matter. An international team of contributors consider what kinds of things processes are, and explore the progressive nature of action and conscious experience.
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  47.  21
    Writing gender history: What does feminism have to do with it?Beryl Satter - 2006 - History and Theory 45 (3):436–447.
  48.  23
    Baudelaire: Liberte, Libertinage and Modernity.Beryl Schlossman - 1993 - Substance 22 (1):67.
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  49. Action.Rowland Stout - 2005 - Routledge.
    The traditional focus of debate in philosophy of action has been the causal theory of action and metaphysical questions about the nature of actions as events. In this lucid and lively introduction to philosophy of action, Rowland Stout shows how these issues are subsidiary to more central ones that concern the freedom of the will, practical rationality and moral psychology. When seen in these terms, agency becomes one of the most exciting areas in philosophy and one of the most (...)
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  50.  4
    Anglo-American Philosophy of Law: An Introduction to Its Development and Outcome.Beryl Harold Levy - 1991 - Transaction.
    An account of successive legal theories in England and America against a background of the varieties of natural law in the ancient, medieval and modern worlds. The outcome in Legal Realism provides insight into contemporary issues in law and the judicial process and their relation to moral philosophy. As Levy shows, legal theory has always been inspired by forces outside the law in philosophy and politics. In England the philosophy of Utilitarianism as expounded by Bentham and Austin brought legal positivism (...)
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