Search results for 'Aaron S. Richmond *' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. J. B. Trapp (1973). Ovid's Tomb: The Growth of a Legend From Eusebius to Laurence Sterne, Chateaubriand and George Richmond. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 36:35-76.score: 36.0
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  2. R. J. Ling (1983). I. A. Richmond: Trajan's Army on Trajan's Column. Pp. X + 56; 24 Plates, 2 Text-Figures. London: The British School at Rome, 1982. Paper, £6.50 (U.K.), £8.50 (Overseas). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 33 (02):367-.score: 36.0
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  3. A. R. Burn (1951). I. A. Richmond and O. G. S. Crawford: The British Section of the Ravenna Cosmography. Pp. 50: 10 Plates. London: Society of Antiquaries, 1949. Paper, 10s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 1 (02):121-.score: 36.0
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  4. A. J. Sambrook (1967). Pope's Neighbours: An Early Landscape Garden at Richmond. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 30:444-446.score: 36.0
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  5. Aaron S. Richmond * & Rhoda Cummings (2004). In Support of the Cognitive‐Developmental Approach to Moral Education: A Response to David Carr. Journal of Moral Education 33 (2):197-205.score: 32.0
    David Carr (2002) has argued against the use of developmental theories as a basis for curriculum development in moral education. Although we find common ground with some aspects of Carr's arguments, we disagree with several of his criticisms of the cognitive?developmental approach to moral education. He confuses romantic ideology (as espoused by Rousseau and others) and progressive ideology (as espoused by Dewey and others); he assumes that developmental theories have no endpoint or final goal from which to structure moral education; (...)
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  6. Richmond Campbell & Lanning Snowden (eds.) (1985). Paradoxes of Rationality and Cooperation: Prisoner's Dilemma and Newcomb's Problem. University of British Columbia Press.score: 21.0
    1 Background for the Uninitiated RICHMOND CAMPBELL Paradoxes are intrinsically fascinating. They are also distinctively ...
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  7. Duncan MacIntosh (1988). Libertarian Agency and Rational Morality: Action-Theoretic Objections to Gauthier's Dispositional Soution of the Compliance Problem. Southern Journal of Philosophy 26 (4):499-525.score: 21.0
    David Gauthier thinks agents facing a prisoner's dilemma ('pd') should find it rational to dispose themselves to co-operate with those inclined to reciprocate (i.e., to acquire a constrained maximizer--'cm'--disposition), and to co-operate with other 'cmers'. Richmond Campbell argues that since dominance reasoning shows it remains to the agent's advantage to defect, his co-operation is only rational if cm "determines" him to co-operate, forcing him not to cheat. I argue that if cm "forces" the agent to co-operate, he is not (...)
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  8. S. Richmond (1990). Book Reviews : George W. Ladd, Imagination in Research: An Economist's View . Iowa State University Press, Ames, 1987. Pp. 146, $10.95. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 20 (3):414-416.score: 21.0
  9. S. Richmond (1988). Book Reviews : The Economist's View of the World: Government, Markets, & Public Policy. BY STEVEN E. RHOADS. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985. Pp. 416. U.S. $12.95. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 18 (3):424-426.score: 21.0
  10. Jessica Richmond Moeller, Teresa H. Albanese, Kimberly Garchar, Julie M. Aultman, Steven Radwany & Dean Frate (2012). Functions and Outcomes of a Clinical Medical Ethics Committee: A Review of 100 Consults. [REVIEW] HEC Forum 24 (2):99-114.score: 15.0
    Abstract Context: Established in 1997, Summa Health System’s Medical Ethics Committee (EC) serves as an educational, supportive, and consultative resource to patients/families and providers, and serves to analyze, clarify, and ameliorate dilemmas in clinical care. In 2009 the EC conducted its 100th consult. In 2002 a Palliative Care Consult Service (PCCS) was established to provide supportive services for patients/families facing advanced illness; enhance clinical decision-making during crisis; and improve pain/symptom management. How these services affect one another has thus far been (...)
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  11. Alasdair Richmond (2009). Berkeley's Principles of Human Knowledge: A Reader's Guide. Continuum.score: 15.0
    Note on the text of the principles -- Context -- Biography -- Berkeley's philosophical background -- Overview of themes -- Teading the text -- The principles : introduction -- The principles : part one -- The objects and subject of knowledge : ideas and spirit -- Unperceived existence : a nicer strain of abstraction -- Problems for materialism -- A Cartesian dream argument -- The master argument -- From the inertness of ideas to the existence of God -- Philosophical objections (...)
     
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  12. Andreas Vrahimis (2013). "Was There a Sun Before Men Existed?": A. J. Ayer and French Philosophy in the Fifties. Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 1 (9).score: 14.0
    In contrast to many of his contemporaries, A. J. Ayer was an analytic philosopher who had sustained throughout his career some interest in developments in the work of his ‘continental’ peers. Ayer, who spoke French, held friendships with some important Parisian intellectuals, such as Camus, Bataille, Wahl and Merleau-Ponty. This paper examines the circumstances of a meeting between Ayer, Merleau-Ponty, Wahl, Ambrosino and Bataille, which took place in 1951 at some Parisian bar. The question under discussion during this meeting was (...)
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  13. Richmond Campbell & Jennifer Woodrow (2003). Why Moore's Open Question is Open: The Evolution of Moral Supervenience. Journal of Value Inquiry 37 (3):353-372.score: 12.0
  14. Alasdair Richmond (2008). Tom Baker: His Part in My Downfall. (A Philosopher's Guide to Time-Travel.). Think 7 (19):35-46.score: 12.0
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  15. Alasdair Richmond (2010). New Interpretations of Berkeley's Thought. British Journal for the History of Philosophy 18 (4):724-726.score: 12.0
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  16. Alasdair M. Richmond (2000). Plattner's Arrow: Science and Multi-Dimensional Time. Ratio 13 (3):256–274.score: 12.0
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  17. Stuart Richmond (2009). Art's Educational Value. Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (1):pp. 92-105.score: 12.0
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  18. Ann B. Hamric (2012). Empirical Research on Moral Distress: Issues, Challenges, and Opportunities. HEC Forum 24 (1):39-49.score: 12.0
    Abstract Studying a concept as complex as moral distress is an ongoing challenge for those engaged in empirical ethics research. Qualitative studies of nurses have illuminated the experience of moral distress and widened the contours of the concept, particularly in the area of root causes. This work has led to the current understanding that moral distress can arise from clinical situations, factors internal to the individual professional, and factors present in unit cultures, the institution, and the larger health care environment. (...)
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  19. Brian M. Scott (1996). Technical Notes on a Theory of Simplicity. Synthese 109 (2):281 - 289.score: 12.0
    Recently Samuel Richmond, generalizing Nelson Goodman, has proposed a measure of the simplicity of a theory that takes into account not only the polymorphicity of its models but also their internal homogeneity. By this measure a theory is simple if small subsets of its models exhibit only a few distinct (i.e., non-isomorphic) structures. Richmond shows that his measure, unlike that given by Goodman's theory of simplicity of predicates, orders the order relations in an intuitively satisfactory manner. In this (...)
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  20. Peter J. Lewis (forthcoming). The Doomsday Argument and the Simulation Argument. Synthese.score: 12.0
    The Simulation Argument and the Doomsday Argument share certain structural similarities, and hence are often discussed together (Bostrom 2003, Aranyosi 2004, Richmond 2008, Bostrom and Kulczycki 2011). Both are cases where reflecting on one’s location among a set of possibilities yields a counter-intuitive conclusion—in one case that the end of humankind is closer than you initially thought, and in the second case that it is more likely than you initially thought that you are living in a computer simulation. Indeed, (...)
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  21. S. Richmond (2008). Book Review: Bunge, Mario. 2006. Chasing Reality: Strife Over Realism. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 38 (4):545-551.score: 12.0
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  22. Richmond Campbell (1988). Review: Gauthier's Theory of Morals by Agreement. [REVIEW] Philosophical Quarterly 38 (152):343 - 364.score: 12.0
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  23. Richmond H. Thomason (1967). A Decision Procedure for Fitch's Propositional Calculus. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 8 (1-2):101-117.score: 12.0
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  24. Sheldon Richmond (1976). On the Possibility of Rationality: Some Comments on Roger Trigg's 'Reason and Commitment'. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 6 (2):155-163.score: 12.0
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  25. S. Richmond (1985). Book Reviews : Philosophy and the Human Sciences. Volume 2: The Possibility of Naturalism: A Philosophical Critique of the Contemporary Human Sciences. By Roy Bhaskar. Humanities Press: New Jersey 1979. Pp. IX + 228. $28.75. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 15 (2):235-236.score: 12.0
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  26. Charles B. Cross (2001). A Theorem Concerning Syntactical Treatments of Nonidealized Belief. Synthese 129 (3):335 - 341.score: 12.0
    In Syntactical Treatments of Modality, with Corollaries on Reflexion Principles and Finite Axiomatizability, Acta Philosophica Fennica 16 (1963), 153–167, Richard Montague shows that the use of a single syntactic predicate (with a context-independent semantic value) to represent modalities of alethic necessity and idealized knowledge leads to inconsistency. In A Note on Syntactical Treatments of Modality, Synthese 44 (1980), 391–395, Richmond Thomason obtains a similar impossibility result for idealized belief: under a syntactical treatment of belief, the assumption that idealized belief (...)
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  27. S. Richmond (1985). Book Reviews : Language, Counter-Memory, Practice. By Michel Foucault. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1980. Pp. 240. $5.95. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 15 (3):369-371.score: 12.0
  28. Richmond Campbell (1971). Margins of Precision: Essays in Logic and Language. By Max Black. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1970. Pp. 277. $7.50 U.S. [REVIEW] Dialogue 10 (04):805-808.score: 12.0
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  29. Edward S. Forster (1949). The Odes of Pindar. Translated by Richmond Lattimore. Pp. Xii+170. Chicago: University Press (London: Cambridge University Press), 1947. Cloth, 15s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 63 (01):33-.score: 12.0
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  30. Chris Fox & Shalom Lappin, Briefly Noted.score: 12.0
    Intensional logic (IL) and its application to natural language, which the present monograph addresses, was first developed by Richard Montague in the late 1960s (e.g., Montague 1970a, 1970b). Through the efforts of (especially) Barbara Partee (e.g., Partee 1975, 1976), and Richmond Thomason, who edited the posthumous collection of Montague’s works (Thomason 1974), this became the main framework for those who aspired to a formal semantic theory for natural language, and these included computational linguists as early as Jerry Hobbs in (...)
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  31. Sheldon Richmond (1979). On Making Sense: Some Comments on Polanyi's and Prosch's Meaning. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 9 (2):209-219.score: 12.0
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  32. S. Richmond & S. C. Jansen (1979). Book Reviews : The Way of Discovery, An Introduction to the Thought of Michael Polanyi. By Richard Gelwick. New York: Oxford University Press, 1977. Pp. Xix + 181. $14.95 (Cloth), $3.95 (Paper. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 9 (3):390-395.score: 12.0
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  33. Frank Devoy (2011). The Spirituality of Relationships: The Power of Both [Book Review]. Australasian Catholic Record, The 88 (3):377.score: 12.0
    Devoy, Frank Review(s) of: The spirituality of relationships: The power of both, by John E. Ryan (Richmond, Victoria: Spectrum Publications, 2007), pp.232, $24.95.
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  34. J. A. Richmond (1979). ΧΡΣΗ ΑΦΡΟΔΙΤΗ A. S. Hollis: Ovid, Ars Amatoria Book I, Edited with an Introduction and Commentary. Pp. Xxiv + 171; 4 Plates, 1 Map. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1977. Cloth, £5. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 29 (01):41-42.score: 12.0
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  35. S. Richmond (1982). A Rational Animal and Other Philosophical Essays on the Nature of Man. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 12 (4):448-452.score: 12.0
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  36. J. A. Richmond (1969). Charon's Boat. The Classical Quarterly 19 (02):388-.score: 12.0
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  37. Sarah Richmond (2010). Magic in Sartre's Early Philosophy. In Jonathan Webber (ed.), Reading Sartre: On Phenomenology and Existentialism. Routledge.score: 12.0
     
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  38. J. A. Richmond (1976). 'Nemo Sine Vitiis …' John A. Barsby: Ovid's Amores Book One. Edited with Translation and Running Commentary. Pp. Ix + 180. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973. Paper, £2·50. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 26 (01):38-.score: 12.0
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  39. O. L. Richmond (1941). Ware Surviving From Early Rome Inez Scott Ryberg: An Archaeological Record of Rome From the Seventh to the Second Century B.C. Part I: Pp. Xiv+222. Part II: Map, 54 Plates, and Pp. 223–247 (General Index). (Studies and Documents, Edited by K. And S. Lake, XIII.) London: Christophers (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press), 1940. Cloth, 35s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 55 (02):95-96.score: 12.0
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  40. D. S. Robertson (1944). Richmond Lattimore: Some Odes of Pindar, in New English Versions. Pp. 30. Norfolk, Connecticut: New Directions (James Laughlin), 1942. Cloth, $1 (Paper, 50 C.). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 58 (01):32-.score: 12.0
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  41. S. Richmond (1997). Book Reviews : Raphael Sassower, Cultural Collisions: Postmodern Technoscience. Routledge Kegan Paul, New York, 1995. $52.95 (Cloth), $16.95 (Paper. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 27 (4):545-551.score: 12.0
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  42. Sarah Richmond (2007). Sartre and Bergson: A Disagreement About Nothingness. International Journal of Philosophical Studies 15 (1):77 – 95.score: 6.0
    Henri Bergson's philosophy, which Sartre studied as a student, had a profound but largely neglected influence on his thinking. In this paper I focus on the new light that recognition of this influence throws on Sartre's central argument about the relationship between negation and nothingness in his Being and Nothingness. Sartre's argument is in part a response to Bergson's dismissive, eliminativist account of nothingness in Creative Evolution (1907): the objections to the concept of nothingness with which Sartre engages are precisely (...)
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  43. Victor Kumar & Richmond Campbell (2012). On the Normative Significance of Experimental Moral Psychology. Philosophical Psychology 25 (3):311-330.score: 6.0
    Experimental research in moral psychology can be used to generate debunking arguments in ethics. Specifically, research can indicate that we draw a moral distinction on the basis of a morally irrelevant difference. We develop this naturalistic approach by examining a recent debate between Joshua Greene and Selim Berker. We argue that Greene's research, if accurate, undermines attempts to reconcile opposing judgments about trolley cases, but that his attempt to debunk deontology fails. We then draw some general lessons about the possibility (...)
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  44. Alasdair M. Richmond (2008). Doomsday, Bishop Ussher and Simulated Worlds. Ratio 21 (2):201–217.score: 6.0
    This paper attempts three tasks in relation to Carter and Leslie's Doomsday Argument. First, it criticises Timothy Chambers' 'Ussherian Corollary', a striking but unsuccessful objection to standard Doomsday arguments. Second, it reformulates the Ussherian Corollary as an objection to Bradley Monton's variant Doomsday and Nick Bostrom's Simulation Argument. Finally, it tries to diagnose the epistemic/metaphysical problems facing Doomsday-related arguments.1.
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  45. Robert C. Stalnaker & Richmond H. Thomason (1968). Abstraction in First-Order Modal Logic. Theoria 34 (3):203-207.score: 6.0
    The first amounts, roughly, to "It is necessarily the case that any President of the U.S. is a citizen of the U.S." But the second says, "the person who in fact is the President of the U.S, has the property of necessarily being a citizen of the U.S," Thus, while (2) is clearly true, it would be reasonable to consider (3) false.
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  46. Kelly Richmond Pope (2005). Measuring the Ethical Propensities of Accounting Students: Mach IV Versus DIT. Journal of Academic Ethics 3 (2-4).score: 6.0
    This study responds to Bay and Greenberg's (Bay, D.D. and Greenberg, R.R. (2001). The relationship of the DIT and behavior: A replication. Issues in Accounting Education 10(3): 367–380) call to investigate alternative psychometric instruments to measure ethical behavior other than the heavily relied upon Defining Issues Test. The Mach IV scale (Christie, 1970) has been cited in more than 500 published psychological studies; however, it has not been used extensively in the accounting ethics research. This study provides some preliminary evidence (...)
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  47. Richmond Campbell (1996). Can Biology Make Ethics Objective? Biology and Philosophy 11 (1):21-31.score: 6.0
    A familiar position regarding the evolution of ethics is that biology can explain the origin of morals but that in doing so it removes the possibility of their having objective justification. This position is set fourth in detail in the writings of Michael Ruse (1986, 1987, 1989, 1990a, 1990b) but it is also taken by many others, notably, Jeffrie Murphy (1982), Andrew Oldenquist (1990), and Allan Gibbard (1990), I argue the contrary view that biology provides a justification of the (...)
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  48. Sarah Richmond, Psychoanalysis and Feminism: Anorexia, the Social World, and the Internal World.score: 6.0
    This paper discusses the different explanatory approaches taken by feminists and (Kleinian) psychoanalysts to women's psychological illness. In particular, anorexia nervosa (a condition that has attracted much feminist attention) is used as an example. Examination of some Kleinian accounts of work with anorexic patients reveals the great disparity between the terms and focus of psychoanalytical explanation and those invoked in feminist discussions. Can the two perspectives be combined? It is argued that, despite its individualist methodology, psychoanalysis stands to gain from (...)
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  49. Richmond Campbell & Jason Scott Robert (2005). The Structure of Evolution by Natural Selection. Biology and Philosophy 20 (4):673-696.score: 6.0
    We attempt a conclusive resolution of the debate over whether the principle of natural selection (PNS), especially conceived as the `principle' of the `survival of the fittest', is a tautology. This debate has been largely ignored for the past 15 years but not, we think, because it has actually been settled. We begin by describing the tautology objection, and situating the problem in the philosophical and biology literature. We then demonstrate the inadequacy of six prima facie plausible reasons for believing (...)
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  50. Richmond Campbell & Andy Clark, (Moral Epistemology Naturalized.score: 6.0
    Like those famous nations divided by a single tongue, my paper (this volume) and Professor P.M. Churchland's deep and engaging reply offer different spins on a common heritage. The common heritage is, of course, a connectionist vision of the inner neural economy- a vision which depicts that economy in terms of supra-sentential state spaces, vector-to-vector transformations, and the kinds of skillful pattern-recognition routine we share with the bulk of terrestrial intelligent life-forms. That which divides us is, as ever, much harder (...)
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  51. Samuel A. Richmond (1996). A Simplification of the Theory of Simplicity. Synthese 107 (3):373 - 393.score: 6.0
    Nelson Goodman has constructed two theories of simplicity: one of predicates; one of hypotheses. I offer a simpler theory by generalization and abstraction from his. Generalization comes by dropping special conditions Goodman imposes on which unexcluded extensions count as complicating and which excluded extensions count as simplifying. Abstraction is achieved by counting only nonisomorphic models and subinterpretations. The new theory takes into account all the hypotheses of a theory in assessing its complexity, whether they were projected prior to, or result (...)
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  52. Richmond H. Thomason, Logical Semantics for Causal Constructions.score: 6.0
    Montague’s framework for semantic interpretation has always been less well adapted to the interpretation of words than of syntactic constructions. In the late 1970s, David Dowty addressed this problem, concentrating on the interpretation of tense, aspect, inchoatives, and causatives in an extension of Montague’s Intensional Logic. In this paper I will try to revive this project, conceiving it as part of a larger task aiming at the interpretation of derivational morphology. I will try to identity some obstacles arising in Dowty’s (...)
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  53. Garrath Williams (2004). Two Approaches to Moral Responsibility : Part One. Richmond Journal of Philosophy 6:14-19.score: 6.0
    In this first part of the article, I want to sketch two things. First, I will say something about the idea of free will. The paradoxes involved in this idea often occur to people even before they come to philosophy, and these difficulties will be central to Kant’s account. But second, before turning to Kant, I would like to tackle Aristotle’s broad approach, and show that, before free will was invented by Christian philosophers, there was a quite different way of (...)
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  54. Horacio Arló-Costa & Richmond H. Thomason (2001). Iterative Probability Kinematics. Journal of Philosophical Logic 30 (5):479-524.score: 6.0
    Following the pioneer work of Bruno De Finetti [12], conditional probability spaces (allowing for conditioning with events of measure zero) have been studied since (at least) the 1950's. Perhaps the most salient axiomatizations are Karl Popper's in [31], and Alfred Renyi's in [33]. Nonstandard probability spaces [34] are a well know alternative to this approach. Vann McGee proposed in [30] a result relating both approaches by showing that the standard values of infinitesimal probability functions are representable as Popper functions, and (...)
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  55. C. Richmond (1997). Preserving the Identity Crisis: Autonomy, System and Sovereignty in European Law. Law and Philosophy 16 (4):377-420.score: 6.0
    This article uses Hans Kelsen's theory of a legal system to take a fresh look at European Community law, and the relationship between the European Community, its Member States, and international law. It argues that the basis of the Community's legal legitimacy is indeterminate, and offers a model to accommodate that indeterminacy. This model is founded on a constructivist approach suggested to be particularly useful in the EC context. Using this approach, it is argued that the concepts of system, autonomy (...)
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  56. Horacio Arlo-Costa & Richmond H. Thomason (2001). Iterative Probability Kinematics. Journal of Philosophical Logic 30 (5):479-524.score: 6.0
    Following the pioneer work of Bruno De Finetti, conditional probability spaces (allowing for conditioning with events of measure zero) have been studied since (at least) the 1950's.
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