Results for 'Donald Beggs'

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  1.  22
    A Small Treatise on the Great Virtues: The Uses of Philosophy in Everyday Life (review).Donald Beggs - 2003 - Philosophy and Literature 27 (2):475-477.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Literature 27.2 (2003) 475-477 [Access article in PDF] A Small Treatise on the Great Virtues: The Uses of Philosophy in Everyday Life, by André Comte-Sponville, trans. Catherine Temerson; x & 352 pp. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2001. Of two minds, I mirror the two sorts of audience this book's twenty-four translations have sought: "students" and "readers" (p. 5), those for whom the scholarly content and apparatus may (...)
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  2.  17
    Liberating Ecological Reason Through Interdisciplinarity.Donald Beggs - 1999 - Metaphilosophy 30 (3):186-208.
    The theory and practice of ecological reason have consistently suffered various shortcomings, versions of anthropocentrism and holism prominent among them. Even definitions of ecological reason that rely on philosophically informed policy studies and that explicitly take the functional and substantive moments of reason into account have not escaped these problems. An account of interdisciplinarity can shed light on how these intractable problems arise, since many of them fail to build interdisciplinarity as such sufficiently into the definition of ecological reason. Genuine (...)
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  3.  66
    The idea of group moral virtue.Donald Beggs - 2003 - Journal of Social Philosophy 34 (3):457–474.
  4.  8
    The Idea of Group Moral Virtue.Donald Beggs - 2003 - Journal of Social Philosophy 34 (3):457-474.
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  5.  86
    Rawls's political postmodernism.Donald Beggs - 1999 - Continental Philosophy Review 32 (2):123-141.
    John Rawls has recently shifted to a "freestanding" or "political" liberalism from his earlier "comprehensive" and "moral" liberalism. I argue that this move is based on several key features that make Rawlsian liberal pluralism indelibly postmodern. Two of the more obvious features are the denial of foundationalism and the rejection of a truth status for public-sphere justifications of the basic political structure. In conclusion, I suggest that a late-modern postliberalism is a viable alternative.
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  6.  16
    The Ruins Lesson: Meaning and Material in Western Culture.Donald Beggs - 2023 - British Journal of Aesthetics 63 (3):442-445.
    Susan Stewart has sculpted a book. If her poetry collection, Columbarium (2003), avowed its controlling Empedoclean element to be water, then The Ruins Lesson p.
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  7.  12
    Beyond Extensions of Liberalism.Donald Beggs - 2008 - Journal of International Political Theory 4 (1):157-166.
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  8.  10
    Book in Review.Donald Beggs - 1999 - Political Theory 27 (5):716-719.
  9. Improving Argument and Reasoning in Students of the Senior Secondary School.Donald W. Beggs - 1980
     
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  10.  60
    Identity in democracy.Donald Beggs - 2004 - Journal of Value Inquiry 38 (4):581-584.
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  11.  18
    Magnus Hörnqvist , Risk, Power and the State: After Foucault (Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 2010), ISBN: 978-0415547680.Donald Beggs - 2011 - Foucault Studies 12:223-225.
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  12.  54
    Postliberal Theory.Donald Beggs - 2009 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 12 (3):219-234.
    This paper begins with a critical part and concludes with a constructive part. First, with reference to a definition of liberalism and using immanent critique, I show deficiencies in the claims of four selfprofessed postliberals to have articulated non-liberal positions. Then, I argue that postliberal political theory consists in acknowledging that in political contexts some voluntary groups as such can be moral, not merely political, agents. Analysis of what moral autonomy is for persons as empirical (not noumenal) agents reveals that (...)
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  13.  19
    The Interdisciplinary Constraint on Ecological Reason.Donald Beggs - 1997 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 2 (3-4):140-144.
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  14.  40
    The Moral Virtue of Doublemindedness.Donald Beggs - 2013 - Philosophy 88 (3):411-432.
    The conscientious are morally conflicted when their moral dilemmas or incommensurabilities, real or apparent, have not been resolved. But such doublemindedness need not lead to ethical disintegration or moral insensitivity. For one may develop the moral virtue of doublemindedness, the settled power to deliberate and act well while morally conflicted. Such action will be accompanied by both moral loss (perhaps ) and ethical gain (salubrious agental stability). In explaining the virtue's moral psychology I show, among other things, its consistency with (...)
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  15.  11
    The Wounded Animal: J. M. Coetzee and the Difficulty of Reality in Literature and Philosophy by mulhall, stephen.Donald Beggs - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 67 (4):443-445.
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  16.  33
    Beyond Extensions of Liberalism Martha Nussbaum ,Frontiers of Justice: Disability, Nationality, Species Membership(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), 512 pp., £21.95/$35.00 cloth, £12.95/$18.95 paper. Bernard Williams ,In the Beginning Was the Deed: Realism and Moralism in Political Argument(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005), 200 pp., £18.95/$29.95 cloth, £10.95/$17.95 paper. [REVIEW]Donald Beggs - 2008 - Journal of International Political Theory 4 (1):157-166.
    Not only does a shared expertise in classical philosophy and literature inform the works of Martha Nussbaum and Bernard Williams, each has also written and spoken on contemporary social and political issues. Given such ranges of reference, it is not surprising that their two recent books, Frontiers of Justice, a treatise, and In the Beginning Was the Deed, selected essays, confidently take up fundamental political questions. Yet these books differ in their intentions, organising structures, and discursive strategies, and they have (...)
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  17. Foucault: His Thought, His Character. [REVIEW]Donald Beggs - 2011 - Foucault Studies:218-221.
     
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  18.  15
    Paul Veyne , Foucault: His Thought, His Character . Translated by Janet Lloyd (Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2010), ISBN: 978-0745646428. [REVIEW]Donald Beggs - 2011 - Foucault Studies 11:218-221.
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  19. Risk, Power and the State: After Foucault. [REVIEW]Donald Beggs - 2011 - Foucault Studies:223-225.
     
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  20.  19
    A Hanging Judge by Denis Dutton, 26, 224 A Small Treatise on the Great Virtues: The Uses of Philosophy in Everyday Life, by André Comte-Sponville, reviewed by Donald Beggs, 27, 475 Accidental Art: Tolstoy's Poetics of Unintentionality, by Michael Denner, 27, 284 Alford, C. Fred, Emmanuel Levinas and Iris Murdoch, 26, 24. [REVIEW]Billy Budd - 2003 - Philosophy and Literature 27:000-000.
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  21. Essays on Actions and Events: Philosophical Essays Volume 1.Donald Davidson - 1970 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
  22. How Is Weakness of the Will Possible?Donald Davidson - 1969 - In Joel Feinberg (ed.), Moral concepts. London,: Oxford University Press.
    D. In doing x an agent acts incontinently if and only if: 1) the agent does x intentionally; 2) the agent believes there is an alternative action y open to him; and 3) the agent judges that, all things considered, it would be better to do y than to do x.
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  23. Mental Events.Donald Davidson - 1970 - In Essays on Actions and Events: Philosophical Essays Volume 1. Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press. pp. 207-224.
  24. Problems of rationality.Donald Davidson (ed.) - 2004 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Problems of Rationality is the eagerly awaited fourth volume of Donald Davidson 's philosophical writings. From the 1960s until his death in August 2003 Davidson was perhaps the most influential figure in English-language philosophy, and his work has had a profound effect upon the discipline. His unified theory of the interpretation of thought, meaning, and action holds that rationality is a necessary condition for both mind and interpretation. Davidson here develops this theory to illuminate value judgements and how we (...)
  25. Paradoxes of Irrationality.Donald Davidson - 2004 - In Problems of rationality. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 169–187.
    The author believes that large‐scale rationality on the part of the interpretant is essential to his interpretability, and therefore, in his view, to her having a mind. How, then are cases of irrationality, such as akrasia or self‐deception, judged by the interpretant's own standards, possible? He proposes that, in order to resolve the apparent paradoxes, one must distinguish between accepting a contradictory proposition and accepting separately each of two contradictory propositions, which are held apart, which in turn requires to conceive (...)
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  26.  95
    Climate change ethics: navigating the perfect moral storm.Donald A. Brown - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    Part 1. Introduction -- Introduction: Navigating the Perfect Moral Storm in Light of a Thirty-Five Year Debate -- Thirty-Five Year Climate Change Policy Debate -- Part 2. Priority Ethical Issues -- Ethical Problems with Cost Arguments -- Ethics and Scientific Uncertainty Arguments -- Atmospheric Targets -- Allocating National Emissions Targets -- Climate Change Damages and Adaptation Costs -- Obligations of Sub-national Governments, Organizations, Businesses, and Individuals -- Independent Responsibility to Act -- Part 3. The Crucial Role of Ethics in Climate (...)
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  27. Many-one identity.Donald L. M. Baxter - 1988 - Philosophical Papers 17 (3):193-216.
    Two things become one thing, something having parts, and something becoming something else, are cases of many things being identical with one thing. This apparent contradiction introduces others concerning transitivity of identity, discernibility of identicals, existence, and vague existence. I resolve the contradictions with a theory that identity, number, and existence are relative to standards for counting. What are many on some standard are one and the same on another. The theory gives an account of the discernibility of identicals using (...)
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  28. The second person.Donald Davidson - 1992 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 17 (1):255-267.
  29. Who is Fooled.Donald Davidson - 2004 - In Problems of rationality. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Applies and extends the conclusions of the preceding chapters by examining cases of self‐deception of a puzzling sort emerging from cases of fantasizing and imagining, found in Joyce's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Flaubert's Madame Bovary. The author is particularly interested in what can be described as the ‘divided mind of self‐deception’, the mind that produces an imagination due to its realising the state of the world that motivates the fantasy construct and the possessor's eventual acquisition (...)
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  30. Philosophical Theories of Probability.Donald A. Gillies - 2000 - New York: Routledge.
    The Twentieth Century has seen a dramatic rise in the use of probability and statistics in almost all fields of research. This has stimulated many new philosophical ideas on probability. _Philosophical Theories of Probability_ is the first book to present a clear, comprehensive and systematic account of these various theories and to explain how they relate to one another. Gillies also offers a distinctive version of the propensity theory of probability, and the intersubjective interpretation, which develops the subjective theory.
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  31.  10
    Institute Notes.John C. Begg - 1952 - Philosophy 27 (100):96-.
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  32.  15
    The Status of Physical Concepts.John C. Begg - 1939 - Philosophy 14 (53):68 - 85.
    Contemplating certain residual mists, the net proceeds of a material world exploded and disintegrated by the relentless penetration of scientific intellect, the more advanced physicist has been led in recent times to co-operate with the philosopher on a common plane. Not so long ago, and not always without reason, the philosopher was regarded somewhat askance. It is the old antithesis between the practical man and the theorist, the scientific man himself having been regarded for long as a dreamer. All depends (...)
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  33. The method of truth in metaphysics.Donald Davidson - 1977 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 2 (1):244-254.
    Repr. as Essay 14 in Davidson, Donald, _Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation_, 2nd ed. Oxford, UK (Clarendon, 2001). 215-226.
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  34. The Folly of Trying to Define Truth.Donald Davidson - 2005-01-01 - In José Medina & David Wood (eds.), Truth. Blackwell.
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  35.  14
    What is Present to the Mind?Donald Davidson - 1989 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 36 (1):3-18.
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  36.  9
    By the Way.Donald Cross - 2024 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (2):405-427.
    No one who reads Derrida closely could accuse him of “technophobia.” More than any other contemporary thinker, on the contrary, he has shown the limit of attempts to protect thinking and even being itself from technē. Yet, Derrida nevertheless insists that “deconstruction” is neither a “technique” nor the technology of thinking that modern philosophy calls “method.” What allows Derrida to exclude “technique” and “method” when he himself shows, in relation to Heidegger above all, that a certain technicity and methodicity always (...)
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  37. Representation and Interpretation.Donald Davidson - 2004 - In Problems of rationality. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 13-26.
     
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  38.  22
    Complexity, communication between cells, and identifying the functional components of living systems: Some observations.Donald C. Mikulecky - 1996 - Acta Biotheoretica 44 (3-4):179-208.
    The concept of complexity has become very important in theoretical biology. It is a many faceted concept and too new and ill defined to have a universally accepted meaning. This review examines the development of this concept from the point of view of its usefulness as a criteria for the study of living systems to see what it has to offer as a new approach. In particular, one definition of complexity has been put forth which has the necessary precision and (...)
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  39.  10
    Research involving those at risk for impaired decision-making capacity.Donald L. Rosenstein & Franklin G. Miller - 2008 - In Ezekiel J. Emanuel (ed.), The Oxford textbook of clinical research ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 437--445.
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  40.  11
    Truth and Meaning.Donald Davidson - 2005-01-01 - In José Medina & David Wood (eds.), Truth. Blackwell. pp. 69–79.
    This chapter contains section titled: Notes.
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  41.  70
    A History of Animal Welfare Science.Donald M. Broom - 2011 - Acta Biotheoretica 59 (2):121-137.
    Human attitudes to animals have changed as non-humans have become more widely incorporated in the category of moral agents who deserve some respect. Parallels between the functioning of humans and non-humans have been made for thousands of years but the idea that the animals that we keep can suffer has spread recently. An improved understanding of motivation, cognition and the complexity of social behaviour in animals has led in the last 30 years to the rapid development of animal welfare science. (...)
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  42. Introduction to the life/work of Ninian Smart.Donald Wiebe - 1999 - In Ninian Smart (ed.), World philosophies. New York: Routledge.
     
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  43.  64
    The case against reality: why evolution hid the truth from our eyes.Donald David Hoffman - 2019 - New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Independent Publishers since 1923.
    Mystery: the scalpel that split consciousness -- Beauty: sirens of the gene -- Reality: capers of the unseen sun -- Sensory: fitness beats truth -- Illusory: the bluff of a desktop -- Gravity: spacetime is doomed -- Virtuality: inflating a holoworld -- Polychromy: mutations of an interface -- Scrutiny: you get what you need, in both life and business -- Community: the network of conscious agents -- Precisely: the right to be wrong.
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  44. What is present to the mind?Donald Davidson - 1986 - In Abraham Zvie Bar-On (ed.), Grazer Philosophische Studien. Distributed in the U.S.A. By Humanities Press. pp. 197-213.
  45. How Is Weakness of the Will Possible?Donald Davidson - 1969 - In Joel Feinberg (ed.), Moral concepts. London,: Oxford University Press.
     
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  46. Incoherence and irrationality.Donald Davidson - 2004 - In Problems of rationality. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 189–198.
     
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  47.  4
    Metaphysics and the modern world.Donald Phillip Verene - 2016 - Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
    Metaphysics and the Modern World makes the abiding questions of the nature of the self, world, and God available for the modern reader. Donald Phillip Verene presents these questions in both their systematic and historical dimensions, beginning with Aristotle's claim in his Metaphysics that philosophy begins in wonder. The first three chapters concern the origin of metaphysics as the transformation of the conception of reality in ancient Greek mythology, the ontological argument as the basis of Christian metaphysics, and the (...)
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  48.  6
    Phenomenology: a basic introduction in the light of Jesus Christ.Donald Wallenfang - 2019 - Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
    What is phenomenology? That is precisely the question this book seeks to answer. In an age of information overload, complex topics must be simplified to make them accessible to a wider audience. Phenomenology: A Basic Introduction in the Light of Jesus Christ not only presents the basic building blocks of phenomenology, it also gives body to voice by putting abstract ideas in contact with the Word made flesh, Jesus of Nazareth. In five manageable chapters, Donald Wallenfang introduces major themes (...)
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  49.  5
    Engaging Eriugena, Eckhart and Cusanus.Donald F. Duclow - 2023 - London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group,: Routledge.
    Engaging Eriugena, Eckhart and Cusanus contains two new essays and nine others published between 2005 and 2019. The essays explore Eriugena, Eckhart and Cusanus as bold thinkers deeply engaged with their times and culture. John Scottus Eriugena, Meister Eckhart and Nicholas of Cusa are key figures in the medieval Christian Neoplatonic tradition. This book focuses on their engagement with practical, experiential issues and controversies. Eriugena revises Genesis' Adam and Eve narrative and makes sexual difference and overcoming it central to his (...)
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  50. Norma Turbulenta: "Stormin' Norman".Donald T. Williams - 2016 - In Terry L. Miethe & Norman L. Geisler (eds.), I am put here for the defense of the Gospel: Dr. Norman L. Geisler: a festschrift in his honor. Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications, an imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers.
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