Search results for 'Alan Jean Nelson' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Alan Jean Nelson & Noa Shein (2005). Meaning in Spinoza's Method (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 43 (1):118-119.score: 290.0
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  2. Alan Jean Nelson (1996). The Great Arnauld and Some of His Philosophical Correspondents (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 34 (3):461-463.score: 290.0
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  3. Jiří Adámek, Alan H. Mekler, Evelyn Nelson & Jan Reiterman (1988). On the Logic of Continuous Algebras. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 29 (3):365-380.score: 140.0
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  4. Alan Nelson (2011). How Many Worlds? British Journal for the History of Philosophy 19 (6):1201 - 1212.score: 120.0
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy, Volume 19, Issue 6, Page 1201-1212, December 2011.
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  5. Alan Nelson (1997). Descartes's Ontology of Thought. Topoi 16 (2).score: 120.0
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  6. Alan Nelson (1994). How Could Scientific Facts Be Socially Constructed? Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 25 (4):535-547.score: 120.0
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  7. Lex Newman & Alan Nelson (1999). Circumventing Cartesian Circles. Noûs 33 (3):370-404.score: 120.0
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  8. Alan Nelson (1984). Some Issues Surrounding the Reduction of Macroeconomics to Microeconomics. Philosophy of Science 51 (4):573-594.score: 120.0
    This paper examines the relationship between modern theories of microeconomics and macroeconomics and, more generally, it evaluates the prospects of theoretically reducing macroeconomics to microeconomics. Many economists have shown strong interest in providing "microfoundations" for macroeconomics and much of their work is germane to the issue of theoretical reduction. Especially relevant is the work that has been done on what is called The Problem of Aggregation. On some accounts, The Problem of Aggregation just is the problem of reducing macroeconomics to (...)
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  9. Alan Nelson (1997). Book Review:The Construction of Social Reality. John R. Searle. [REVIEW] Ethics 108 (1):208-.score: 120.0
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  10. Alan Nelson, Alan Thomas & Stephen Mulhall (2005). History of Philosophy. Philosophical Books 46 (3):261-268.score: 120.0
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  11. Alan Nelson (1997). Introduction: Descartes's Ontology. Topoi 16 (2).score: 120.0
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  12. Seth Bordner & Alan Nelson (2008). The Correspondence Between Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia and René Descartes (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 46 (4):642-643.score: 120.0
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  13. Alan Nelson (1993). Book Review:Varieties of Social Explanation. Daniel Little. [REVIEW] Ethics 103 (2):404-.score: 120.0
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  14. Alan Nelson (ed.) (2005). A Companion to Rationalism. Blackwell Pub..score: 120.0
    This book is a wide-ranging examination of rationalist thought in philosophy from ancient times to the present day. Written by a superbly qualified cast of philosophers. Critically analyses the concept of rationalism. Focuses principally on the golden age of rationalism in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Also covers ancient rationalism, nineteenth-century rationalism, and rationalist themes in recent thought. Organised chronologically. Various philosophical methods and viewpoints are represented.
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  15. Alan Nelson (1993). Cartesian Actualism in the Leibniz-Arnauld Correspondence. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 23 (4):675 - 694.score: 120.0
  16. Seth Bordner Alan Nelson (2008). The Correspondence Between Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia and René Descartes (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 46 (4):pp. 642-643.score: 120.0
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  17. Alan J. Nelson (1990). Social Science and the Mental. Midwest Studies in Philosophy 15 (1):194-209.score: 120.0
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  18. Jack A. Nelson & Deni Elliott (1992). Book Review: Make-Believe Media: Reviewed by Jack A. Nelson. [REVIEW] Journal of Mass Media Ethics 7 (3):188 – 189.score: 120.0
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  19. Alan Nelson (2006). Descartes Reinvented. International Philosophical Quarterly 46 (3):378-379.score: 120.0
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  20. Alan Nelson (1986). Explanation and Justification in Political Philosophy. Ethics 97 (1):154-176.score: 120.0
  21. Alan Nelson (2013). The Structure of Cartesian Sensations. Analytic Philosophy 54 (1):107-116.score: 120.0
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  22. Alan Nelson (1995). Micro-Chaos and Idealization in Cartesian Physics. Philosophical Studies 77 (2-3):377 - 391.score: 120.0
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  23. Alan Nelson (1994). Cognitive Economy: An Inquiry Into the Economic Dimension of Knowledge. Philosophia 23 (1-4):323-331.score: 120.0
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  24. Alan Nelson (1987). Book Review:Descartes. Marjorie Grene. [REVIEW] Ethics 97 (2):489-.score: 120.0
  25. Alan Nelson (1989). Average Explanations. Erkenntnis 30 (1-2):23 - 42.score: 120.0
    Good scientific explanations sometimes appear to make use of averages. Using concrete examples from current economic theory, I argue that some confusions about how averages might work in explanations lead to both philosophical and economic problems about the interpretation of the theory. I formulate general conditions on potentially proper uses of averages to refine a notion of average explanation. I then try to show how this notion provides a means for resolving longstanding philosophical problems in economics and other quantitative social (...)
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  26. Alan J. Nelson, Joshua Hoffman & Robert Hoffman (1979). Problem Section. Philosophia 8 (4):847-851.score: 120.0
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  27. William Nelson, Mary Ann Greene & Alan West (2010). Rural Healthcare Ethics: No Longer the Forgotten Quarter. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (04):510-517.score: 120.0
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  28. Alan Nelson (1994). Book Review:Economics--Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing Returns? Alexander Rosenberg. [REVIEW] Ethics 104 (3):637-.score: 120.0
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  29. Alan Nelson (1986). Equilibrium and Macroeconomics, Frank Hahn, Cambridge: MIT Press, 1984, Viii + 397pp. [REVIEW] Economics and Philosophy 2 (01):148-.score: 120.0
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  30. Alan Nelson (1987). Meditations on First Philosophy with Selections From the Objections and Replies. Teaching Philosophy 10 (4):353-355.score: 120.0
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  31. Alan Nelson (1986). New Individualistic Foundations for Economics. Noûs 20 (4):469-490.score: 120.0
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  32. Alan Nelson (1988). Review: Economic Rationality and Morality. [REVIEW] Philosophy and Public Affairs 17 (2):149 - 166.score: 120.0
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  33. Alan H. Nelson (1980). Mechanical Wheels of Fortune, 1100-1547. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 43:227-233.score: 120.0
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  34. Alan Nelson (1991). Book Review:The Philosophy of Economics: On the Scope of Reason in Economic Inquiry. Subroto Roy. [REVIEW] Ethics 101 (4):883-.score: 120.0
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  35. Armin Berger, Gisela Raupach-Strey, Jörg Schroth & Leonard Nelson (eds.) (2011). Leonard Nelson -- Ein Früher Denker der Analytischen Philosophie?: Ein Symposion Zum 80. Todestag des Göttinger Philosophen. Lit.score: 120.0
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  36. Alan Nelson & David Landy (2011). Qualities and Simple Ideas : Hume and His Debt to Berkeley. In Lawrence Nolan (ed.), Primary and Secondary Qualities: The Historical and Ongoing Debate. Oxford University Press.score: 120.0
  37. Lawrence Nolan & Alan Nelson (2006). Proofs for the Existence of God. In The Blackwell to Descartes’ Meditations. Blackwell Publishing.score: 120.0
    We argue that Descartes’s theistic proofs in the ’Meditations’ are much simpler and straightforward than they are traditionally taken to be. In particular, we show how the causal argument of the "Third Meditation" depends on the intuitively innocent principle that nothing comes from nothing, and not on the more controversial principle that the objective reality of an idea must have a cause with at least as much formal reality. We also demonstrate that the so-called ontological "argument" of the "Fifth Meditation" (...)
     
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  38. Lawrence Nolan & Alan Nelson (2006). The Blackwell to Descartes’ Meditations. Blackwell Publishing.score: 120.0
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  39. Pavel Tichtchenko, Jean C. Edmond, Robert M. Nelson, Ellen L. Blank, Robyn S. Shapiro & Charles Mackay (1994). Ethics Committees at Work. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 3 (04):602-.score: 120.0
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  40. Christina M. Gschwandtner (2012). Being and God: A Systematic Approach in Confrontation with Martin Heidegger, Emmanuel Levinas, and Jean-Luc Marion, by Lorenz B. Puntel, Translated by Alan White, Northwestern University Press, 2011, 427 Pp., Pb. $39.95, Hb. $89.95 ISBN-13: 9780810127708. [REVIEW] Comparative and Continental Philosophy 4 (1).score: 36.0
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  41. James Woodward (1986). Explanation in Social Theory: Comments on Alan Nelson. Ethics 97 (1):187-195.score: 36.0
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  42. Mike Gane (ed.) (2000). Jean Baudrillard. Sage.score: 21.0
    Jean Baudrillard is one of the most important and provocative writers in the contemporary era. Widely acclaimed as the prophet of postmodernism, he has famously announced the disappearance of the subject, meaning, truth, class and the notion of reality itself. Although he worked as a sociologist, his writing has enjoyed a wide interdisciplinary popularity and influence. He is read by students of sociology, cultural studies, philosophy, literature, French and geography. Organized into eight sections, the volumes provide the most complete (...)
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  43. Philippe De Rouilhan (2012). In Defense of Logical Universalism: Taking Issue with Jean van Heijenoort. Logica Universalis 6 (3-4):553-586.score: 18.0
    Van Heijenoort’s main contribution to history and philosophy of modern logic was his distinction between two basic views of logic, first, the absolutist, or universalist, view of the founding fathers, Frege, Peano, and Russell, which dominated the first, classical period of history of modern logic, and, second, the relativist, or model-theoretic, view, inherited from Boole, Schröder, and Löwenheim, which has dominated the second, contemporary period of that history. In my paper, I present the man Jean van Heijenoort (Sect. 1); (...)
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  44. Nikolay Milkov (2012). Karl Popper's Debt to Leonard Nelson. Grazer Philosophische Studien 86:137-56.score: 18.0
    Karl Popper has often been cast as one of the most solitary figures of twentieth-century philosophy. The received image is of a thinker who developed his scientific philosophy virtually alone and in opposition to a crowd of brilliant members of the Vienna Circle. This paper challenges the received view and undertakes to correctly situate on the map of the history of philosophy Popper’s contribution, in particular, his renowned fallibilist theory of knowledge. The motive for doing so is the conviction that (...)
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  45. Anita Burdman Feferman (2012). Jean van Heijenoort: Kaleidoscope. Logica Universalis 6 (3-4):277-291.score: 18.0
    Leitmotifs in the life of Jean van Heijenoort.
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  46. John W. Dawson Jr (2012). Jean van Heijenoort and the Gödel Editorial Project. Logica Universalis 6 (3-4):293-299.score: 18.0
    A colleague’s personal recollections of Jean van Heijenoort’s contributions to the editing of volumes I–III of Gödel’s Collected Works and of his interactions with the other editors.
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  47. Piccoli Barbara (2013). "Advice to the Medical Students in My Service": The Rediscovery of a Golden Book by Jean Hamburger, Father of Nephrology and of Medical Humanities. Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 8 (1):2-.score: 18.0
    Jean Hamburger (1909--1992) is considered the founder of the concept of medical intensive care (reanimation medicale) and the first to propose the name Nephrology for the branch of medicine dealing with kidney diseases. One of the first kidney grafts in the world (with short-term success), in 1953, and the first dialysis session in France, in 1955, were performed under his guidance. His achievements as a writer were at least comparable: Hamburger was awarded several important literary prizes, including prix Femina, (...)
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  48. Jean-Paul Sartre (2001). Jean-Paul Sartre: Basic Writings. Routledge.score: 15.0
    Jean-Paul Sartre is one of the most famous philosophers of the twentieth century. The principal founder of existentialism, a political thinker and famous novelist and dramatist, his work has exerted enormous influence in philosophy, literature, politics and cultural studies. Jean-Paul Sartre: Basic Writings is the first collection of Sartre's key philosophical writings and provides an indispensable resource for readers of his work. Stephen Priest's clear and helpful introductions make the volume an ideal companion to those coming to Sartre's (...)
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  49. Alan Donagan (1994). The Philosophical Papers of Alan Donagan. University of Chicago Press.score: 15.0
    A major voice in late twentieth-century philosophy, Alan Donagan is distinguished for his theories on the history of philosophy and the nature of morality. The Philosophical Papers of Alan Donagan, volumes 1 and 2, collect 28 of Donagan's most important and best-known essays on historical understanding and ethics from 1957 to 1991. Volume 2 addresses issues in the philosophy of action and moral theory. With papers on Kant, von Wright, Sellars, and Chisholm, this volume also covers a range (...)
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  50. Chris Rojek, Bryan S. Turner & Jean-François Lyotard (eds.) (1998). The Politics of Jean-François Lyotard. Routledge.score: 15.0
    Jean-Francois Lyotard is often considered to be the father of postmodernism. Here leading experts in the field of cultural and philosophical studies, including Barry Smart, John O' Neill and Victor J. Seidler, tackle many of the questions still being asked about this controversial figure.
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  51. Jean-Baptiste Brenet (2008). Ame Intellective, Âme Cogitative: Jean de Jandun Et la Duplex Forma Propria de L'Homme. Vivarium 46 (3):318-341.score: 15.0
    The article analyses the idea that according to the averroist Jean de Jandun, Master of Arts in Paris at the beginning of the 14th century, human beings are composed of a «double form» the separated intellect on the one hand, the cogitative soul on the other hand. After recalling several major accounts of the time, we explore Jean's reading of Averroes' major conceptions concerning the problem. Finally, we challenge the idea according to which we observe in his writings (...)
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  52. Alan Haworth (1999). Only One Cheer for Sokal and Bricmont: Or, Scientism is No Response to Relativism. Res Publica 5 (1).score: 15.0
    Macaulay was wrong: The British public in one of its periodic fits of morality may be a ridiculous spectacle but it has at least one rival in the reaction we have recently witnessed to ‘cultural relativism’, ‘postmodernism’, and suchlike phenomena. One good illustration of the point is the argument of Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont's Intellectual Impostures (1998: London, Profile Books). Sokal and Bricmont spend the greater part of their time holding various postmodernist writers up to ridicule, and (...)
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  53. Michael P. Hodges & William R. Carter (1969). Nelson on Dreaming a Pain. Philosophical Studies 20 (April):43-46.score: 15.0
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  54. Irving H. Anellis (2012). Editor's Introduction to Jean van Heijenoort, Historical Development of Modern Logic. Logica Universalis 6 (3-4):301-326.score: 15.0
    Van Heijenoort’s account of the historical development of modern logic was composed in 1974 and first published in 1992 with an introduction by his former student. What follows is a new edition with a revised and expanded introduction and additional notes.
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  55. Jean Bethke Elshtain (1997). Real Politics: At the Center of Everyday Life. Johns Hopkins University Press.score: 15.0
    One of America's foremost public intellectuals, Jean Bethke Elshtain has been on the frontlines in the most hotly contested and deeply divisive issues of our time. Now in Real Politics , Elshtain gives further proof of her willingness to speak her mind, courting disagreement and even censure from those who prefer their ideologies neat. At the center of Elshtain's work is a passionate concern with the relationship between political rhetoric and political action. For Elshtain, politics is a sphere of (...)
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  56. Roger Wertheimer (1972). Review of Nelson Goodman, Problems and Projects. [REVIEW] Commentary 54 (1):96-7.score: 15.0
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  57. John W. Bender (1988). Knotty, Knotty: Comments on Nelson's The New World Knot. In Perspectives On Mind. Dordrecht: Kluwer.score: 15.0
     
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  58. Jean Céard & Jean Dupèbe (eds.) (2008). Esculape Et Dionysos: Mélanges En l'Honneur de Jean Céard. Droz.score: 15.0
    This collection of articles illustrates the intimacy between science and literature, pleasure and sense, excess and moderation that Jean Ceard sought to understand and that he instilled in those who collaborated or studied with him.
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  59. John Knox Jr (1966). On Mr Nelson's Rejection of Sense-Data. Ratio 8 (June):90-95.score: 15.0
     
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  60. Jean Starobinski (1988). Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Transparency and Obstruction. University of Chicago Press.score: 15.0
    Jean Starobinski, one of Europe's foremost literary critics, examines the life that led Rousseau, who so passionately sought open, transparent communication with others, to accept and even foster obstacles that permitted him to withdraw into himself. First published in France in 1958, Jean-Jacques Rousseau remains Starobinski's most important achievement and, arguably, the most comprehensive book ever written on Rousseau. The text has been extensively revised for this edition and is published here along with seven essays on Rousseau that (...)
     
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  61. Andreas Wagner (2006). Jean-Luc Nancy: A Negative Politics? Philosophy and Social Criticism 32 (1):89-109.score: 12.0
    Taking his critique of totalitarianizing conceptions of community as a starting point, this text examines Jean-Luc Nancy's work of an "ontology of plural singular being" for its political implications. It argues that while at first this ontology seems to advocate a negative or an anti-politics only, it can also be read as a "theory of communicative praxis" that suggests a certain ethos - in the form of a certain use of symbols (which is expressed only inaptly by the word (...)
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  62. Frederick Neuhouser (2011). Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Origins of Autonomy. Inquiry 54 (5):478 - 493.score: 12.0
    Abstract Modern reflection on the ideal of personal autonomy has its Western origin in the philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, where autonomy, or self-legislation, involves citizens joining together to make laws for themselves that reflect their collective understanding of the common good. Four features of this conception of autonomy continue to be relevant today. First, autonomy, a type of freedom, is introduced into modern philosophy in order to make up for a perceived deficiency, or incompleteness, in merely ?negative? freedom (the (...)
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  63. Joseph S. Catalano (1980). A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre's Being and Nothingness. University of Chicago Press.score: 12.0
    "[A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre's Being and Nothingness] represents, I believe, a very important beginning of a deservingly serious effort to make the whole ...
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  64. Michael Krausz (ed.) (2010). Relativism: A Contemporary Anthology. Columbia University Press.score: 12.0
    The thirty-three essays in <I>Relativism: A Contemporary Anthology</I> grapple with one of the most intriguing, enduring, and far-reaching philosophical problems of our age. Relativism comes in many varieties. It is often defined as the belief that truth, goodness, or beauty is relative to some context or reference frame, and that no absolute standards can adjudicate between competing reference frames. Michael Krausz's anthology captures the significance and range of relativistic doctrines, rehearsing their virtues and vices and reflecting on a spectrum of (...)
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  65. Horst Pfeiffle (2008). On the Psychogenesis of the a Priori: Jean Piaget's Critique of Kant. Philosophy and Social Criticism 34 (5):487-498.score: 12.0
    The seal of the a priori is imprinted on the reception of Kant's philosophy. Piaget's epistemological argumentation seems to ascribe knowledge a more fruitful constructiveness than Kant, seeing the a priori as rooted in unvarying reason. Yet, it seems, he failed to recognize the complexity of Kant's theory, which does not always follow a quid iuris line. Moments of experience, analysis and self-observation played more than a marginal role in his discovery of the a priori. Indeed, Kant himself raises the (...)
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  66. Günter Abel (1991). Logic, Art, and Understanding in the Philosophy of Nelson Goodman. Inquiry 34 (3 & 4):311 – 321.score: 12.0
    This paper contains a reconstruction and discussion of some central subjects in Nelson Goodman's philosophical work. Goodman's creative symbol-constructional philosophy concerns fundamental aspects of human cognition and practice. It is argued that this provides us with the intellectual tools for constructing a genuine relationship between logic, knowledge, art, and understanding. This is shown by focusing on subjects ranging from the projectibility of predicates and nominalistic mereology to constructive relativity, ways of worldmaking and a general theory of symbols.
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  67. Merold Westphal (2006). Vision and Voice: Phenomenology and Theology in the Work of Jean-Luc Marion. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1/3):117 - 137.score: 12.0
    The kind of phenomenology that can be useful to theology will be a hermeneutical phenomenology, one that takes us beyond the Cartesian/Husserlian ideal of presuppositionless intuition. It will also be a phenomenology of inverse intentionality, one in which the constituting subject is constituted by the look and the voice of another. In light of these suggestions, the phenomenology of Jean-Luc Marion is defended against three critiques, namely that it compromises the boundary between phenomenology and theology, that the theology it (...)
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  68. Catherine Z. Elgin (ed.) (1997). Nelson Goodman's Theory of Symbols and its Applications. Garland Pub..score: 12.0
    A challenger of traditions and boundaries A pivotal figure in 20th-century philosophy, Nelson Goodman has made seminal contributions to metaphysics, epistemology, aesthetics, and the philosophy of language, with surprising connections that cut across traditional boundaries. In the early 1950s, Goodman, Quine, and White published a series of papers that threatened to torpedo fundamental assumptions of traditional philosophy. They advocated repudiating analyticity, necessity, and prior assumptions. Some philosophers, realizing the seismic effects repudiation would cause, argued that philosophy should retain (...)
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  69. Gualtiero Piccinini (2003). Alan Turing and the Mathematical Objection. Minds and Machines 13 (1):23-48.score: 12.0
    This paper concerns Alan Turing’s ideas about machines, mathematical methods of proof, and intelligence. By the late 1930s, Kurt Gödel and other logicians, including Turing himself, had shown that no finite set of rules could be used to generate all true mathematical statements. Yet according to Turing, there was no upper bound to the number of mathematical truths provable by intelligent human beings, for they could invent new rules and methods of proof. So, the output of a human mathematician, (...)
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  70. David Landy (2011). Descartes' Compositional Theory of Mental Representation. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 92 (2):214-231.score: 12.0
    In his, ‘Descartes' Ontology of Thought’, Alan Nelson presents, on Descartes' behalf, a compositional theory of mental representation according to which the content of any mental representation is either simple or is entirely constituted by a combination of innate simples. Here the simples are our ideas of God, thought, extension, and union. My objection will be that it is simply ludicrous to think that any four simples are adequate to the task of combining to constitute all of human (...)
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  71. Michael Potts (2001). A Requiem for Whole Brain Death: A Response to D. Alan Shewmons the Brain and Somatic Integration. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 26 (5):479 – 491.score: 12.0
    Alan Shewmons article, The brain and somatic integration: Insights into the standard biological rationale for equating brain death with death (2001), strikes at the heart of the standard justification for whole brain death criteria. The standard justification, which I call the standard paradigm, holds that the permanent loss of the functions of the entire brain marks the end of the integrative unity of the body. In my response to Shewmons article, I first offer a brief summary of the standard (...)
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  72. Ralph Wedgwood (2012). The Nature and Value of Knowledge: Three Investigations, by Duncan Pritchard, Alan Millar, and Adrian Haddock. [REVIEW] Analysis 72 (1):187-189.score: 12.0
    This is a review of "The nature and value of knowlege: Three investigations", by Duncan Pritchard, Alan Millar, and Adrian Haddock (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2011).
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  73. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Political Writings of Jean Jacques Rousseau, the (in 2 Vols).score: 12.0
  74. Kevin Inston (2009). Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Ernesto Laclau and the Somewhat Particular Universal. Philosophy and Social Criticism 35 (5):555-587.score: 12.0
    Rousseau's general will is mostly interpreted as promoting social unity at the expense of plurality. Conversely, this article argues that the general will depends on, and preserves, plurality for its formation and legitimacy. The general and the particular are not fixed opposites, for Rousseau, but are interdependent and contextually defined. The Rousseauian universal anticipates Laclau's notion of universality. The absence of any natural foundations for society deprives the universal of any pre-given identity. Likewise, the Laclauian universal names the lack of (...)
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  75. Deryck Beyleveld (1991). The Dialectical Necessity of Morality: An Analysis and Defense of Alan Gewirth's Argument to the Principle of Generic Consistency. University of Chicago Press.score: 12.0
    Alan Gewirth's Reason and Morality , in which he set forth the Principle of Generic Consistency, is a major work of modern ethical theory that, though much debated and highly respected, has yet to gain full acceptance. Deryck Beyleveld contends that this resistance stems from misunderstanding of the method and logical operations of Gewirth's central argument. In this book Beyleveld seeks to remedy this deficiency. His rigorous reconstruction of Gewirth's argument gives its various parts their most compelling formulation and (...)
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  76. Alexander Miller (2009). Moral Realism and Program Explanation: A Very Short Symposium 1: Reply to Nelson. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 87 (2):337-341.score: 12.0
    In chapter 8 of Miller 2003, I argued against the idea that Jackson and Pettit's notion of program explanation might help Sturgeon's non-reductive naturalist version of moral realism respond to the explanatory challenge posed by Harman. In a recent paper in the AJP[Nelson 2006, Mark Nelson has attempted to defend the idea that program explanation might prove useful to Sturgeon in replying to Harman. In this note, I suggest that Nelson's argument fails.
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  77. Christopher Bertram (forthcoming). Jean Jacques Rousseau. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 12.0
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau remains an important figure in the history of philosophy, both because of his contributions to political philosophy and moral psychology and because of his influence on later thinkers. Rousseau's own view of philosophy and philosophers was firmly negative, seeing philosophers as the post-hoc rationalizers of self-interest, as apologists for various forms of tyranny, and as playing a role in the alienation of the modern individual from humanity's natural impulse to compassion. The concern that dominates Rousseau's work is (...)
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  78. Paul Cortois (1996). The Structure of Mathematical Experience According to Jean Cavaillèst. Philosophia Mathematica 4 (1):18-41.score: 12.0
    In this expository article one of the contributions of Jean Cavailles to the philosophy of mathematics is presented: the analysis of ‘mathematical experience’. The place of Cavailles on the logico-philosophical scene of the 30s and 40s is sketched. I propose a partial interpretation of Cavailles's epistemological program of so-called ‘conceptual dialectics’: mathematical holism, duality principles, the notion of formal contents, and the specific temporal structure of conceptual dynamics. The structure of mathematical abstraction is analysed in terms of its complementary (...)
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  79. St Iwan (2000). On the Untenability of Nelson's Predicativism. Erkenntnis 53 (1-2):147-154.score: 12.0
    By combining some technical results from metamathematicalinvestigations of systems of Bounded Arithmetic, I will givean argument for the untenability of Nelson's finitistic program,encapsulated in his book Predicative Arithmetic.
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  80. Richard J. Lane (2009). Jean Baudrillard. Routledge.score: 12.0
    Jean Baudrillard is one of the most famous and controversial of writers on postmodernism. But what are his key ideas? Where did they come from and why are they important? This book offers a beginner's guide to Baudrillard's thought, including his views on technology, primitivism, reworking Marxism, simulation and the hyperreal, and America and postmodernism. Richard Lane places Baudrillard's ideas in the contexts of the French and postmodern thought and examines the ongoing impact of his work. Concluding with an (...)
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  81. L. E. E. Patrick & Germain Grisez (2010). Total Brain Death: A Reply to Alan Shewmon. Bioethics 26 (5):275-284.score: 12.0
    D. Alan Shewmon has advanced a well-documented challenge to the widely accepted total brain death criterion for death of the human being. We show that Shewmon's argument against this criterion is unsound, though he does refute the standard argument for that criterion. We advance a distinct argument for the total brain death criterion and answer likely objections. Since human beings are rational animals – sentient organisms of a specific type – the loss of the radical capacity for sentience (the (...)
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  82. Garrett Pendergraft (2011). Nelson Pike's Contribution to the Philosophy of Religion. Philosophia 39 (3):409-431.score: 12.0
    In this paper I attempt to capture the essence of Nelson Pike’s contribution to the philosophy of religion. My summary of his insights will revolve around three general topics: omniscience (and in particular its relation to human freedom), omnipotence (and in particular its relation to the existence of human suffering), and mysticism (with a focus on the question of whether and in what sense mystic visions can be sources of knowledge). Although the details vary in interesting ways, his work (...)
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  83. Tim Jordan (1995). The Philosophical Politics of Jean-Franqois Lyotard. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 25 (3):267-285.score: 12.0
    The systematic philosophical foundation for Jean-François Lyotard's postmodern and post-Marxist politics is described. The central principle of the right to create different "phrases" is uncovered and examined. The political consequences of this philosophical system are explored, leading to the conclusion that Lyotard's commitment to difference leads to political indifference. The philosophical roots of this indifference are detailed in Lyotard's Cartesian starting point and his analysis of Holocaust revisionism. This analysis reveals an idealist basis to Lyotard's philosophy of difference. Lyotard's (...)
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  84. Jacques Derrida (2005). On Touching, Jean-Luc Nancy. Stanford University Press.score: 12.0
    Using the philosophy of Jean-Luc Nancy as an anchoring point, Jacques Derrida in this book conducts a profound review of the philosophy of the sense of touch, from Plato and Aristotle to Jean-Luc Nancy, whose ground-breaking book Corpus he discusses in detail. Emmanuel Levinas, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Edmund Husserl, Didier Franck, Martin Heidegger, Francoise Dastur, and Jean-Louis Chre;tien are discussed, as are Rene; Descartes, Diderot, Maine de Biran, Fe;lix Ravaisson, Immanuel Kant, Sigmund Freud, and others. The scope of (...)
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  85. Justin Leiber (2001). Turing and the Fragility and Insubstantiality of Evolutionary Explanations: A Puzzle About the Unity of Alan Turing's Work with Some Larger Implications. Philosophical Psychology 14 (1):83-94.score: 12.0
    As is well known, Alan Turing drew a line, embodied in the "Turing test," between intellectual and physical abilities, and hence between cognitive and natural sciences. Less familiarly, he proposed that one way to produce a "passer" would be to educate a "child machine," equating the experimenter's improvements in the initial structure of the child machine with genetic mutations, while supposing that the experimenter might achieve improvements more expeditiously than natural selection. On the other hand, in his foundational "On (...)
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  86. Jean-Philippe Pierron (2010). Paul RicœUr, Lecteur de Jean Nabert. Revue Philosophique De Louvain 108 (2):335-359.score: 12.0
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  87. Alan W. Richardson & Thomas E. Uebel (2005). Alan W. Richardson. 'The Tenacious, Malleable, Indefatigable, and yet, Eternally Modifiable Will': Hans Reichenbach's Knowing Subject. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 79 (1):73–87.score: 12.0
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  88. Hunter Mcewan (2011). A Portrait of the Teacher as Friend and Artist: The Example of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (5):508-520.score: 12.0
    The following is a reflection on the possibility of teaching by example, and especially as the idea of teaching by example is developed in the work of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. My thesis is that Rousseau created a literary version of himself in his writings as an embodiment of his philosophy, rather in the same way and with the same purpose that Plato created a version of Socrates. This figure of Rousseau—a sort of philosophical portrait of the man of nature—is represented (...)
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  89. Anthony F. Beavers, Alan Turing: Mathematical Mechanist.score: 12.0
    I live just off of Bell Road outside of Newburgh, Indiana, a small town of 3,000 people. A mile down the street Bell Road intersects with Telephone Road not as a modern reminder of a technology belonging to bygone days, but as testimony that this technology, now more than a century and a quarter old, is still with us. In an age that prides itself on its digital devices and in which the computer now equals the telephone as a medium (...)
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  90. Rex Butler (1999). Jean Baudrillard: The Defence of the Real. Sage.score: 12.0
    `The first and only book to explore, at once, the field of my work and its limits, with both the intimacy and distance required: doubling and shadowing. It gives me great pleasure to find something that, beyond commentary, sees what I see and at the same time what I am unable to see' - Jean Baudrillard Baudrillard is a controversial figure. His work tends to fascinate and infuriate readers in equal numbers. Yet there is no doubting his importance to (...)
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  91. McQuillan Martin (2009). Toucher II: Keep Your Hands to Yourself, Jean-Luc Nancy. Derrida Today 2 (1):84-108.score: 12.0
    This text begins by considering the phrase ‘digital haptology’ as suggested by the closing pages of Derrida's Le Toucher. It suggests that this moment in telecommunications presents a model of ‘tele-haptology’. The text goes on to consider Jean-Luc Nancy's ‘Noli me tangere’ as a response to Le Toucher. In particular it is concerned with Nancy's hypothesis on Modern literature and art as having an essential link to the gospel parables. Through a reading of Nancy's text and the gospels, this (...)
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  92. A. Norris (2011). Jean-Luc Nancy on the Political After Heidegger and Schmitt. Philosophy and Social Criticism 37 (8):899-913.score: 12.0
    It is commonly recognized that Jean-Luc Nancy’s efforts to elaborate a conception of ‘the political’ are based upon Heidegger’s thinking of die Tecknik , even as they seek to overcome the difficulties that beset Heidegger’s own politics. But few have noted that Nancy also seeks to critically engage Carl Schmitt’s conception of das Politische , according to which there is a metaphysical and practical need for a sovereign decision on friends and enemies if effective political community and law are (...)
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  93. Hillel Steiner, “Land, Labor, and Property” Jean-Guillaume-César-Alexandre-Hippolyte de Colins.score: 12.0
    Jean-Guillaume-César-Alexandre-Hippolyte de Colins (1783-1859), a Belgian baron who lived mainly in Paris, sought to develop a position—rational socialism—intermediate between the extremes of full capitalism (with only private property) and full communism (with only collective property). All persons fully own themselves and the artifactual wealth that they produce, and they are entitled to an equal share of the natural resources and of the assets inherited from previous generations. Gifts and bequests are to be subject to heavy taxation (although at less (...)
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  94. Ian Craib (1976). Existentialism and Sociology: A Study of Jean-Paul Sartre. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    A study of the work of Jean-Paul Sartre and of its relevance for contemporary sociology.
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  95. Simon Lumsden (2005). Reason and the Restlessness of the Speculative: Jean-Luc Nancy's Reading of Hegel. Critical Horizons 6 (1):205-224.score: 12.0
    This paper examines Jean-Luc Nancy's interpretation of Hegel, focusing in particular on The Restlessness of the Negative. It is argued that Nancy's reading represents a significant break with other post-structuralist readings of Hegel by taking his thought to be non-metaphysical. The paper focuses in particular on the role Nancy gives to the negative in Hegel's thought. Ultimately Nancy's reading is limited as an interpretation of Hegel, since he gives no sustained explanation of the self-correcting function of reason.
     
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  96. Alan Sokal & Jean Bricmont, Postmodernism, Poststructuralism, Etc.score: 12.0
    My favorite poststructuralist is Gilles Deleuze (with or without Guattari). I like to think that he was really writing an elaborate series of works of science fiction, in a non-fictional format (much as Stanislaw Lem did in Imaginary Magnitude and A Perfect Vacuum ), only without letting anyone in on the joke. Partly this is because there are moments where what he says is almost right (such as the definition of "relation" he gives in his interview with Claire Parnet, where (...)
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  97. Peter Joseph Fritz (forthcoming). On the V(I)Erge: Jean‐Luc Nancy, Christianity, and Incompletion. Heythrop Journal.score: 12.0
    This article explores how Jean-Luc Nancy attempts to gain critical traction on Christianity by proscribing thinking of completion. First, it describes Nancy's deconstruction of Christianity as stemming from his aesthetic redirection of Heidegger's thinking of finitude. Second, it further details Nancy's noetic declension of Heidegger via Kant and Lyotard, where the imagination and aesthetic communication are deemed impossible. Third, it examines Nancy's treatment of paintings of the Virgin Mary who, for Nancy, exemplifies his brand of incompletion. Nancy's work on (...)
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  98. Panu Raatikainen, Alan Turing.score: 12.0
    Englantilaisen yleisneron Alan Turingin kuoleman yllä lepää salaperäisyyden verho. On hyvin mahdollista, ettei kenenkään muun nykyajan ajattelijan kuolemaan liity yhtä paljon legendoja ja spekulaatioita. Kiistattomat tosiasiat ovat lyhykäisyydessään seuraavat: siivooja löysi Turingin kotoaan kuolleena 8. kesäkuuta 1954. Turingin todettiin kuolleen edellisenä iltana syanidimyrkytykseen, ja hänen viereltään löytyi puoliksi syöty omena. Hän oli kuollessaan 41-vuotias. Loppu on enemmän tai vähemmän arvailujen varassa.
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  99. D. Alan Shewmon (2009). D. Alan Shewmon Replies. Hastings Center Report 39 (5):6-7.score: 12.0
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  100. Kathryn T. Gines (2012). "The Man Who Lived Underground": Jean-Paul Sartre And the Philosophical Legacy of Richard Wright. Sartre Studies International 17 (2):42-59.score: 12.0
    Is Jean-Paul Sartre to be credited for Richard Wright's existentialist leanings? This essay argues that while there have been noteworthy philosophical exchanges between Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, and Richard Wright, we can find evidence of Wright's philosophical and existential leanings before his interactions with Sartre and Beauvoir. In particular, Wright's short story "The Man Who Lived Underground" is analyzed as an existential, or Black existential, project that is published before Wright met Sartre and/or read his scholarship. Existentialist (...)
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