Search results for 'Ally Ostrowski' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Ally Ostrowski (2006). Buddha Browsing: American Buddhism and the Internet. Contemporary Buddhism 7 (1):91-103.score: 120.0
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  2. Matthew C. Ally (2000). Normative Inertia, Historical Momentum and Moral Invention. Sartre Studies International 6 (1):105-115.score: 30.0
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  3. Matthew C. Ally (2003). Sartre's Wagers - Humanism, Solidarity, Liberation. Sartre Studies International 9 (2):68-76.score: 30.0
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  4. Matthew C. Ally (2011). Sartre's Integrative Method: Description, Dialectics, and Praxis. Sartre Studies International 16 (2):48-74.score: 30.0
    This essay revisits the question of Sartre's method with particular emphasis on the posthumously published Notebooks for an Ethics , Critique of Dialectical Reason ( Volume II ), and “Morale et histoire.” I argue that Sartre's method—an ever-evolving though never seamless blend of phenomenological description, dialectical analysis, and logical inference—is at once the seed and fruit of his mature ontology of praxis. Free organic praxis, what Sartre more than once calls “the human act,” is neither closed nor integral, but is (...)
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  5. Matthew C. Ally (2012). Reading Catalano's Reading Sartre. Sartre Studies International 17 (2):81-88.score: 30.0
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  6. Jan J. Ostrowski (1968). Praxiology—An Introduction to the Science of Efficient Action. By Tadeusz Kotarbinski. Translated From the Polish by Olgierd Wojtasiewicz. (Oxford, Pergamon Press; Warsaw, Polish Scientific Publishers, 1965. Pp. Ii+219. Price 50s.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 43 (166):402-.score: 30.0
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  7. Matthew C. Ally (1999). Introduction: Morality, Politics, and False Alternatives. Radical Philosophy Review 2 (1):3-9.score: 30.0
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  8. Matthew C. Ally (1999). Resistance and Resilience Beyond Rambouillet: A Sartrean Humanitarian Intervention. Radical Philosophy Review 2 (1):21-30.score: 30.0
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  9. D. Ostrowski (1988). A Source-Oriented Theory of Historical Study. Diogenes 36 (143):23-40.score: 30.0
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  10. D. Ostrowski (1985). A Typology of Historical Theories. Diogenes 33 (129):127-145.score: 30.0
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  11. Janusz Ostrowski (2010). Anioł przeszłości – nota tłumacza. Kronos (2).score: 30.0
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  12. Janusz Ostrowski (2007). Demonologia polityczna, czyli porażka ontologii Kojeve\'a. Kronos (2):243-249.score: 30.0
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  13. Janusz Ostrowski (1995). Heglowska teoria społeczna jako metafizyka polityki. Przegląd Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 13 (1):45-59.score: 30.0
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  14. Andrzej Ostrowski (2000). O potrzebie lęku. Analiza problemu w filozofii Sorena Kierkegaarda. Archiwum Historii Filozofii I Myśli Społecznej 45.score: 30.0
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  15. Janusz Ostrowski (2012). Polityka i religia w myśli Rousseau. Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 21 (4):209-223.score: 30.0
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  16. Andrzej Ostrowski (2003). Rozum w imieniu wiary – Pascal i Kierkegaard. Colloquia Communia 74 (1):369-387.score: 30.0
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  17. Janusz Ostrowski (1999). Substancja i podmiotowość w myśli młodego Hegla. Przegląd Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 32 (4):55-70.score: 30.0
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  18. Janusz Ostrowski (2005). Sartre i pokolenie Kojève'a. Przegląd Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 56 (4):187-197.score: 30.0
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  19. Jonathan Bennett, Comments On Dennett From a Cautious Ally.score: 9.0
    In these notes, unadorned page numbers under 350 refer to Dennett (1987) - The Intentional Stance, hereafter referred to as Stance - and ones over 495 refer to Dennett (1988) - mostly to material by him but occasionally to remarks of his critics. Since the notes will focus on disagreements, I should say now that I am in Dennett’s camp and am deeply in debt to his work in the philosophy of mind, which I think is wider, deeper, more various (...)
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  20. Maureen Linker (2001). Epistemic Relativism and sociAlly Responsible Realism: Why Sokal is Not an Ally in the Science Wars. Social Epistemology 15 (1):59 – 70.score: 9.0
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  21. Aldo Pardi (2009). Marx as Ally: Deleuze Outside Marxism, Adjacent Marx. Deleuze Studies 3 (suppl):53-77.score: 9.0
    Deleuze reworks Marxist concepts in order to identify those that represent discontinuity and produce a theory of revolution. Marx is important because, along with Spinoza and Nietzsche, he is a part of a project to leave behind concepts such as transcendence and univocity which underlie the totalitarianism of traditional philosophy. Deleuze is looking for concepts that might form a different theory, within which the structures of production are not organised vertically by the domination of universal concepts, such as ‘being’ or (...)
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  22. Reyes Calderón, José Luis Álvarez-Arce & Silvia Mayoral (2009). Corporation as a Crucial Ally Against Corruption. Journal of Business Ethics 87:319 - 332.score: 9.0
    Manuscript type Empirical. Research question/issue This paper aims to contribute to an improved theoretical and empirical understanding of the role that corporation has to play in anticorruption efforts. Research findings/insights Using cross-country data from three databases (Bribe Payers Index, Corruption Perceptions Index, and Doing Business) we found that pro-bribery Investment Climate conditions in host countries are not related to the payments of bribes by multinational companies when these corporations operate abroad. Theoretical/academic implications After describing the conceptual and policy framework that (...)
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  23. Nelson Goodman (1957). Reply to an Adverse Ally. Journal of Philosophy 54 (17):531-535.score: 9.0
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  24. George Every (1979). Was Vigilius a Victim or an Ally of Justinian? Heythrop Journal 20 (3):257–266.score: 9.0
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  25. Jane Singleton (2006). Henry James--Aristotle's Ally, an Exclusive Pact? Philosophy and Literature 30 (1):61-78.score: 9.0
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  26. Jan Krasicki (2008). Filozofia Wszechjedności [A. Ostrowski, Sołowjow. Teoretyczne podstawy filozofii Wszechjednosci, Wydawnictwo UMCS, Lublin 2007, ss. 380]. [REVIEW] Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia:172-177.score: 9.0
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  27. Tadeusz Wieslaw Zawidzki (2012). Unlikely Allies: Embodied Social Cognition and the Intentional Stance. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 11 (4):487-506.score: 6.0
    I argue that proponents of embodied social cognition (ESC) can usefully supplement their views if they enlist the help of an unlikely ally: Daniel Dennett. On Dennett’s view, human social cognition involves adopting the intentional stance (IS), i.e., assuming that an interpretive target’s behavior is an optimally rational attempt to fulfill some desire relative to her beliefs. Characterized this way, proponents of ESC would reject any alliance with Dennett. However, for Dennett, to attribute mental states from the intentional stance (...)
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  28. Roy Alden Atwood (1988). “The Allied Controversy” and the Ethics of Journalism Education in the Pacific Northwest. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 3 (1):7 – 17.score: 4.0
    The perennial debate over how much influence industry should have on media education took a new twist in the Pacific Northwest recently when Allied Dailies, a regional newspaper association, launched a controversial program to evaluate area journalism schools. Cooperative schools were promised financial aid and in?kind services; uncooperative schools were threatened with ?benign neglect.?; Educators have given the program mixed reviews: they welcome improved relations between professionals and educators ? but not at the price of coercion, proscription, or loss of (...)
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  29. Thomas M. Besch (2011). Kantian Constructivism, the Issue of Scope, and Perfectionism: O'Neill on Ethical Standing. European Journal of Philosophy 19 (1):1-20.score: 3.0
    Kantian constructivists accord a constitutive, justificatory role to the issue of scope: they typically claim that first-order practical thought depends for its authority on being suitably acceptable within the right scope, or by all relevant others, and some Kantian constructivists, notably Onora O'Neill, hold that our views of the nature and criteria of practical reasoning also depend for their authority on being suitably acceptable within the right scope. The paper considers whether O'Neill-type Kantian constructivism can coherently accord this key role (...)
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  30. Shidan Lotfi (2009). Wittgenstein's Rule-Following Considerations and Moral Particularism. Theoria 75 (2):100-116.score: 3.0
    Moral particularists have seen Wittgenstein as a close ally. One of the main reasons for this is that particularists such as Jonathan Dancy and John McDowell have argued that Wittgenstein's so-called "rule-following considerations" (RFCs) provide support for their skepticism about the existence and/or role of rules and principles in ethics. In this paper, I show that while Wittgenstein's RFCs challenge the notion that competence with language, i.e., the ability to apply concepts properly, is like mechanically following a rule, he (...)
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  31. A. W. Moore (2006). Williams, Nietzsche, and the Meaninglessness of Immortality. Mind 115 (458):311-330.score: 3.0
    In this essay I consider the argument that Bernard Williams advances in ‘The Makropolus Case’ for the meaninglessness of immortality. I also consider various counter-arguments. I suggest that the more clearly these counter-arguments are targeted at the spirit of Williams's argument, rather than at its letter, the less clearly they pose a threat to it. I then turn to Nietzsche, whose views about the eternal recurrence might appear to make him an opponent of Williams. I argue that, properly interpreted, these (...)
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  32. Gürol Irzik & Teo Grünberg (1995). Carnap and Kuhn: Arch Enemies or Close Allies? British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 46 (3):285-307.score: 3.0
    We compare Carnap's and Kuhn's views on science. Although there are important differences between them, the similarities are striking. The basis for the latter is a pragmatically oriented semantic conventionalist picture of science, which suggests that the view that post-positivist philosophy of science constitutes a radical revolution which has no interesting affinities with logical positivism must be seriously mistaken.
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  33. Pablo Cobreros (2010). Paraconsistent Vagueness: A Positive Argument. Synthese 183 (2):211-227.score: 3.0
    Paraconsistent approaches have received little attention in the literature on vagueness (at least compared to other proposals). The reason seems to be that many philosophers have found the idea that a contradiction might be true (or that a sentence and its negation might both be true) hard to swallow. Even advocates of paraconsistency on vagueness do not look very convinced when they consider this fact; since they seem to have spent more time arguing that paraconsistent theories are at least as (...)
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  34. Marcia Baron (1995). Kantian Ethics Almost Without Apology. Cornell University Press.score: 3.0
    Introduction Many who ally themselves with Kant's ethics quietly dissent on one key matter: his emphasis on duty. Here, they suggest, he goes too far: he ...
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  35. John Bickle (2001). Understanding Neural Complexity: A Role for Reduction. Minds and Machines 11 (4):467-481.score: 3.0
    Psychoneural reduction is under attack again, only this time from a former ally: cognitive neuroscience. It has become popular to think of the brain as a complex system whose theoretically important properties emerge from dynamic, non-linear interactions between its component parts. ``Emergence'' is supposed to replace reduction: the latter is thought to be incapable of explaining the brain qua complex system. Rather than engage this issue at the level of theories of reduction versus theories of emergence, I here emphasize (...)
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  36. David Papineau, Naturalism. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 3.0
    The term ‘naturalism’ has no very precise meaning in contemporary philosophy. Its current usage derives from debates in America in the first half of the last century. The self-proclaimed ‘naturalists’ from that period included John Dewey, Ernest Nagel, Sidney Hook and Roy Wood Sellars. These philosophers aimed to ally philosophy more closely with science. They urged that reality is exhausted by nature, containing nothing ‘supernatural’, and that the scientific method should be used to investigate all areas of reality, including (...)
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  37. Don N. Page (1996). Sensible Quantum Mechanics: Are Probabilities Only in the Mind? International Journal of Modern Physics D 5:583-96.score: 3.0
    Quantum mechanics may be formulated as Sensible Quantum Mechanics (SQM) so that it contains nothing probabilistic except conscious perceptions. Sets of these perceptions can be deterministically realized with measures given by expectation values of positive-operator-valued awareness operators. Ratios of the measures for these sets of perceptions can be interpreted as frequency- type probabilities for many actually existing sets. These probabilities gener- ally cannot be given by the ordinary quantum “probabilities” for a single set of alternatives. Probabilism, or ascribing probabilities (...)
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  38. Markus Schrenk (2010). Antidotes for Dispositional Essentialism. In Anna Marmodoro (ed.), The Metaphysics of Powers: Their Grounding and Their Manifestations. Routledge.score: 3.0
    Since the mid-90s dispositionalism, the view that dispositions are irreducible, real properties, gained strength due to forceful counterexamples (finks and antidotes) that could be launched against Humean anti-dispositionalist attempts to reductively analyse dispositional predicates. -/- In the light of these anti-Humean successes, and in combination with ideas surrounding metaphysical necessity put forward by Kripke and Putnam, some dispositionalists felt encouraged to propose a strong anti-Humean view under the name of “Dispositional Essentialism”. -/- In this paper, I show that, ironically, the (...)
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  39. Janet A. Kourany (2003). A Philosophy of Science for the Twenty‐First Century. Philosophy of Science 70 (1):1-14.score: 3.0
    Two major reasons feminists are concerned with science relate to science's social effects: that science can be a powerful ally in the struggle for equality for women; and that all too frequently science has been a generator and perpetuator of inequality. This concern with the social effects of science leads feminists to a different mode of appraising science from the purely epistemic one prized by most contemporary philosophers of science. The upshot, I suggest, is a new program for philosophy (...)
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  40. Herman Cappelen & Ernie Lepore, Reply to John MacFarlane.score: 3.0
    In Insensitive Semantics (INS) and earlier work (see for example C&L (1997), (1998), (2004), (2005)) we defend a combination of two views: speech act pluralism and semantic minimalism. We're not alone advocating speech act pluralism; a modified version of it can be found in Mark Richard (1998), and we're delighted to have found a recent ally in Scott Soames (see chapter 3 of Soames (2001)1). There's less explicit support for minimalism, though we think it’s one way to interpret parts (...)
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  41. Victor Rodych (2003). Popper Versus Wittgenstein on Truth, Necessity, and Scientific Hypotheses. Journal for General Philosophy of Science 34 (2):323-336.score: 3.0
    Most philosophers of science maintain Confirmationism's central tenet, namely, that scientific theories are probabilistically confirmed by experimental successes. Against this dominant (and old) conception of experimental science, Popper's well-known, anti-inductivistic Falsificationism (’Deductivism’) has stood, virtually alone, since 1934. Indeed, it is Popper who tells us that it was he who killed Logical Positivism. It is also pretty well-known that Popper blames Wittgenstein for much that is wrong with Logical Positivism, just as he despises Wittgenstein and Wittgensteinian philosophers for abdicating philosophy's (...)
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  42. V. S. Ramachandran (2008). Phantom Penises in Transsexuals. Journal of Consciousness Studies 15 (1):5-16.score: 3.0
    How the brain constructs one's inner sense of gender iden-tity is poorly understood. On the other hand, the phenomenon of phantom sensations-- the feeling of still having a body-part after amputation--has been much studied. Around 60% of men experience a phantom penis post-penectomy. As transsexuals report a mismatch between their inner gender identity and that of their body, we won-dered what could be learnt from this regarding innate gender-specific body image. We surveyed male-to-female transsexuals regarding the incidence of phantoms post-gender (...)
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  43. Kathy Behrendt (2010). Scraping Down the Past: Memory and Amnesia in W. G. Sebald's Anti-Narrative. Philosophy and Literature 34 (2):394-408.score: 3.0
    Vanguard anti-narrativist Galen Strawson declares personal memory unimportant for self-constitution. But what if lapses of personal memory are sustained by a morally reprehensible amnesia about historical events, as happens in the work of W.G. Sebald? The importance of memory cannot be downplayed in such cases. Nevertheless, contrary to expectations, a concern for memory needn’t ally one with the narrativist position. Recovery of historical and personal memory results in self-dissolution and not self-unity or understanding in Sebald’s characters. In the end, (...)
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  44. Jane Heal (2000). The Inaugural Address: Other Minds, Rationality and Analogy. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 74 (1):1–19.score: 3.0
    Some see the co-cognitive view of how we arrive at judgements about others' thoughts as a version of the analogy approach, where I reason from how I find things to be with me to how they will be for others. These thinkers think it a virtue of the view that it need not accept any linkage between thought and rationality. This paper will, however, defend the view that a co-cognitive view is a natural ally of theories which link thought (...)
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  45. Jonathan Bennett, Thoughtful Brutes.score: 3.0
    I am interested in what main differences there are between Homo sapiens and other known terrestrial species, or (for short) between man and beast. We have a sense that we differ vastly from all the rest in some respect that is mental rather than grossly physical, but we are not agreed on what respect it is. This is my topic today. I shall bring in some work done in recent years by ethologists and animal psychologists. It is relevant less because (...)
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  46. John Collins, On Not Knowing a Language: Chomsky's Review of Skinner Reconsidered.score: 3.0
    "It as little occurs to me to get involved in the philosophical quarrels and arguments of my times as to go down an ally and take part in a scuffle when I see the mob fighting there." — Arthur Schopenhauer, 1828-30, Adversaria' in Manuscript Remains, Vol. 3: Berlin Manuscripts (1818-1830). Oxford: Berg Publishers.
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  47. Lars Albinus (2009). Radical Orthodoxy and Post-Structuralism: An Unholy Alliance. Neue Zeitschrift für Systematische Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 51 (3).score: 3.0
    The article points to similarities between Radical Orthodoxy and the Post-Structuralist critique of rationalistic secularism together with a shared appraisal of aesthecism. However, although the people of Radical Orthodoxy are sympathetic to the modern experience of immanence, they criticize the flattened immanence which seems to result from a post-structuralist perspective, and claim instead that immanence has to be appreciated as creational (and therefore participating in the divine) in order to withstand the threat of nihilism. Thus, Post-Structuralism is only an (...) up until the point where it tends to undermine the foot-hold in pre-modern tradition and the commitment to revealed truth. Yet, the way in which Radical Orthodoxy appeals to the better myth (contrary to the ontology of difference pertaining to Post-Structuralism) still carries with it traits of postmodernism and thereby risks the relativism it strives to avoid. (shrink)
     
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  48. Padmasiri de Silva (2011). Thinking and Feeling: A Buddhist Perspective. Sophia 50 (2):253-263.score: 3.0
    The work ‘Thinking and Feeling’ edited by Robert C. Solomon may be considered as a landmark in the history of the philosophy of the emotions. The work also has assembled together some of the best minds in the Anglo American Traditions. The central focus in this work is to mediate between the physiological arousal theories of emotions and the cognitive appraisal theories of emotions. My article is an attempt to mediate from my Asian background and in specific terms using the (...)
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  49. Henry Staten (2008). Derrida, Dennett, and the Ethico-Political Project of Naturalism. Derrida Today 5 (1):19-41.score: 3.0
    Does Derrida's radicalization of the science-respecting Enlightenment tradition redefine it in such a way that the concept of nature is no longer relevant? But where is the tradition of Copernicus, Darwin, Nietzsche, Marx, without nature? Must there not be a post-deconstructive sense of nature that preserves the connection with the ethico-political project of naturalism? Derrida consistently defines deconstruction in naturalistic terms, specifically in terms of a commitment to the concept of materiality, and this commitment is essential to the ethico-political project (...)
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  50. Peter Godfrey-Smith, Dewey and the Subject-Matter of Science.score: 3.0
    In 1939 John Dewey was the first person to be the subject of a "Library of Living Philosophers" volume (Schilpp and Hahn, 1939). The result includes meetings between Dewey and critics representing a range of philosophical schools and styles. There is a sometimes prickly exchange between Dewey and Bertrand Russell, and another with Hans Reichenbach. Reichenbach is sometimes classified as a logical positivist. This understates the originality of his views, though he was certainly an ally of the logical positivist (...)
     
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  51. Herbert Fingarette (1950). Unconscious Behavior and Allied Concepts: A New Approach to Their Empirical Interpretation. Journal of Philosophy 47 (August):509-519.score: 3.0
  52. Noel S. Adams (2011). Søren Kierkegaard and Carl Ullmann: Two Allies in the War Against Speculative Philosophy. British Journal for the History of Philosophy 18 (5):875-898.score: 3.0
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  53. G. L. Cawkwell (1993). Sparta and Her Allies in the Sixth Century. The Classical Quarterly 43 (02):364-.score: 3.0
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  54. R. Stern (2005). Peirce on Hegel: Nominalist or Realist. Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 41 (1):65-99.score: 3.0
    My aim in this paper is to consider one of Peirce's criticisms of Hegel, namely, that Hegel was a nominalist. Of the various criticisms of Hegel that Peirce offers, this has been little discussed, perhaps because it is puzzling to find Peirce making it at all. For, Peirce also criticises Hegel for his overzealous enthusiasm for Thirdness, where it is then hard to see how Hegel can have both faults: how can anyone who acknowledges the significance of Thirdness in Peirce's (...)
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  55. Klaus Fischer (1992). Die Wissenschaftstheorie Galileis — Oder: Contra Feyerabend. Journal for General Philosophy of Science 23 (1):165 - 197.score: 3.0
    Galileo's Philosophy of Science - or: Contra Feyerabend. In analyzing Galileo's methodology, philosophers of science were using, misusing, and abusing his ideas rather unashamedly to suit their own purposes. Like so many others before him, Paul Feyerabend had come to the conclusion that his methodological ideas might gain momentum by demonstrating their compatibility with those of Galileo. The reinterpretation of Galileo as a true, though disguised, anarchist, was considered by Feyerabend as the most forceful, and indeed conclusive, case against rationalism (...)
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  56. Pierre Poirier, Structured Thoughts: The Spatial-Motor View.score: 3.0
    Is thinking necessarily linguistic? Do we think with words, to use Bermudez’s (2003) phrase? Or does thinking occur in some other, yet to be determined, representational format? Or again do we think in various formats, switching from one to the other as tasks demand? In virtue perhaps of the ambiguous na- ture of first-person introspective data on the matter, philosophers have tradition- ally disagreed on this question, some thinking that thought had to be pictorial, other insisting that it could (...)
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  57. E. Carlassare (2000). Socialist and Cultural Ecofeminism Allies in Resistance. Ethics and the Environment 5 (1):89-106.score: 3.0
  58. Benoit Hardy-Vallée & Pierre Poirier (2005). Structured Thoughts: The Spatial-Motor View. In E. Machery, M. Werning & G. Schurz (eds.), The Compositionality of Meaning and Content Volume Ii: Applications to Linguistics, Psychology and Neuroscience. Ontos Verlag.score: 3.0
    Is thinking necessarily linguistic? Do we _think with words_, to use Bermudez’s (2003) phrase? Or does thinking occur in some other, yet to be determined, representational format? Or again do we think in various formats, switching from one to the other as tasks demand? In virtue perhaps of the ambiguous na- ture of first-person introspective data on the matter, philosophers have tradition- ally disagreed on this question, some thinking that thought had to be pictorial, other insisting that it could (...)
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  59. Sonya Charles (2011). Obstetricians and Violence Against Women. American Journal of Bioethics 11 (12):51-56.score: 3.0
    I argue that the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), as an organization and through its individual members, can and should be a far greater ally in the prevention of violence against women. Specifically, I argue that we need to pay attention to obstetrical practices that inadvertently contribute to the problem of violence against women. While intimate partner violence is a complex phenomenon, I focus on the coercive control of women and adherence to oppressive gender norms. Using physician (...)
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  60. Dorothea Olkowski (1997). Materiality and Language: Butler's Interrogation of the History of Philosophy. Philosophy and Social Criticism 23 (3):37-53.score: 3.0
    Judith Butler reflects upon the relationship between women and materiality in the context of the history of philosophy. She points to the presumption of the material irreducibility of sex as the ground of feminist epistemology and ethics and analyses of gender. She also finds a similarity between Aristotle's principles of formativity and intelligibility and Foucault's discussion of how discourse materializes bodies. While Butler's analysis reveals much about the history of philosophy with regard to the discourse on matter and women, nonetheless, (...)
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  61. David C. Yates (2005). The Archaic Treaties Between the Spartans and Their Allies. The Classical Quarterly 55 (01):65-76.score: 3.0
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  62. Debra B. Bergoffen (2004). Engaging Nietzsche's Women: Ofelia Schutte and the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo. Hypatia 19 (3):157-168.score: 3.0
    : Ofelia Schutte's relationship to Nietzsche is contentious. Sometimes she identifies him as an ally. Sometimes she calls him an enemy. Appealing to Nietzsche's abolition of the appearance reality distinction and to his discussions of women as skeptics, I turn to Ofelia's discussions of the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo to suggest that their protests can be understood as a Nietzschean politics of transvaluation where the myth of the mother and the materialities of women's bodies become the ground (...)
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  63. Ernest Gellner (1979). Words and Things: An Examination of, and an Attack on, Linguistic Philosophy. Routledge & Kegan Paul.score: 3.0
    Finding a powerful ally in Bertrand Russell, who provided the foreword for this book, Gellner embarked on the project that was to put him on the intellectual ...
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  64. Ernest Gellner (1959/1960). Words and Things. Boston, Beacon Press.score: 3.0
    Finding a powerful ally in Bertrand Russell, who provided the foreword for this book, Gellner embarked on the project that was to put him on the intellectual ...
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  65. M. V. Dougherty (2004). Moral Dilemmas and Moral Luck. Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 78:233-246.score: 3.0
    In recent years, Alasdair MacIntyre and others have observed an increasing interest on the part of contemporary ethicists regarding the question of whetherinnocent agents ever find themselves in moral dilemmas. This present-day support for the existence of moral dilemmas for innocent agents has spawned a re-reading of canonical ethical texts in the history of philosophy. The point of departure for the present paper is one particularly contentious battleground of this ongoing historical retrieval, namely, the ethical writings of Thomas Aquinas. I (...)
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  66. Maura Tumulty (2006). Davidson's Fear of the Subjective. Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (3):509-532.score: 3.0
    According to Donald Davidson, any philosophy of mind that appeals to propositional content is doomed to become an account of the mind as a private theater. But Davidson’s own work on thought-attribution can be used to make propositional content safe. This paper uses Davidson’s negative reaction to Gareth Evans’s works on perceptually based demonstrative thought to tease out a way of talking about propositional content that doesn’t slide into subjectivism. It also explains why Davidson saw Evans as a mentalist enemy (...)
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  67. Henrik Friberg-Fernros (2011). Allies in Tension: Identifying and Bridging the Rift Between R2p and Just War. Journal of Military Ethics 10 (3):160-173.score: 3.0
    Abstract It has become almost commonplace to regard the concepts of Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and Just War as not only compatible but rather closely connected. Contrary to this position I argue here that some Just War criteria are in significant tension with R2P. This tension results from the fact that Just War only makes war permitted while R2P prescribes an obligation. But R2P and Just War not only are in significant tension, but also suffer from inverted weaknesses: R2P is (...)
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  68. Denise Kleinrichert (2008). Ethics, Power and Communities: Corporate Social Responsibility Revisited. Journal of Business Ethics 78 (3):475 - 485.score: 3.0
    Ally-building can be an ethical pursuit in developing sources of power for the business manager. The commitment to social responsibility is a source of power, as well as an ethical practice for corporate endeavors. Pfeffer promotes a business manager's ability to develop effectiveness with ties to powerful others in an intra-organizational environment. This paper advances an analysis about how individuals in corporations may use an inter-organizational approach to developing sources of power through a notion of corporate social responsibility. As (...)
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  69. C. D. Broad (1951). Hägerström's Account of Sense of Duty and Certain Allied Experiences. Philosophy 26 (97):99-.score: 3.0
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  70. Ted Fleming (2012). Fromm and Habermas: Allies for Adult Education and Democracy. Studies in Philosophy and Education 31 (2):123-136.score: 3.0
    The legacy of the Frankfurt Institute for Social Research has been a powerful force for critically understanding social reality. Erich Fromm was one of the early and best known members of the Institute. Fromm emphasised the centrality of culture and interpersonal relations in the contruction of the psyche. The unconscious was not only the location for buried repressed matter but also for the imaginative potential of the human person. He is a forgotten and neglected contributor to the story of the (...)
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  71. Luis Ramírez-Trejo & Linda Speybroecvank (2010). Epigenetics: A Survey on Unorthodox InheritanceEpigeneticsC. David Allis , Thomas Jenuwein , Danny Reinberg , Eds Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2007 (X+502 Pp; $158.00; ISBN-13: 978-0-87969-724-2)EpigeneticsJörg Tost , Ed Norfolk, UK: Caister Academic Press, 2008 (Xi+404+A3 Pp; $300.00; ISBN 978-1-0044555-23-3). [REVIEW] Biological Theory 5 (1):96-99.score: 3.0
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  72. Richard Fox Young (2006). The 'Scotch Metaphysics' in 19th Century Benares. Journal of Scottish Philosophy 4 (2):139-157.score: 3.0
    That India once had a sustained ‘dialogue’ with Scottish Philosophy is not gener- ally known, or that the exchange occurred in the medium of Sanskrit, not English. The essay explores an important cross-cultural encounter in the colonial context of mid 19th-century Benares where two Scots, John Muir and James Ballantyne, served as principals of a Sanskrit college established by the East India Company. Educated toward the end of the Scottish Enlightenment, they endeavoured to translate such distinctive concepts of ‘Scotch (...)
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  73. Diane Perpich (2005). Corpus Meum: Disintegrating Bodies and the Ideal of Integrity. Hypatia 20 (3):75 - 91.score: 3.0
    This essay shows that Jean-Luc Nancy's reconceptualization of corporeality in such texts as L'Intrus and Corpus can be an important ally to feminist theories of body. I introduce Nancy's ontology and argue that his rejection of the unified, integrated body of humanist discourses in favor of dis-integrated bodies constituted by multiple alterities and his consequent reinterpretation of body as a "being-exscribed" begin the task of thinking bodies beyond traditional dualisms and their ahistorical and rationalist frameworks. I then address three (...)
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  74. Ernest Gellner (1968/1960). Words and Things. [Harmondsworth, Eng.]Penguin Books.score: 3.0
    Finding a powerful ally in Bertrand Russell, who provided the foreword for this book, Gellner embarked on the project that was to put him on the intellectual ...
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  75. Robert Kirkman (1997). Why Ecology Cannot Be All Things to All People: The “Adaptive Radiation” of Scientific Concepts. Environmental Ethics 19 (4):375-390.score: 3.0
    On the basis of a model of the development of scientific concepts as analogous to the “adaptive radiation” of organisms, I raise questions concerning the speculative project of many environmental philosophers, especially insofar as that project reflects on the relationship between ecology (the science) and ecologism (the worldview or ideology). This relationship is often understood in terms of anopposition to the “modern” worldview, which leads to the identification of ecology as an ally or as a foe of environmental philosophy (...)
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  76. Warren Schmaus, Ullica Segerstrale & Douglas Jesseph (1992). Words of Welcome to Our New Allies. Social Epistemology 6 (3):315 – 320.score: 3.0
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  77. J. Richard Udry (1999). How to Alienate Your Natural Allies and Attract Your Enemies. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (5):911-911.score: 3.0
    Rose erroneously believes that the sciences of human behavior are being swept with a wave of genetic determinism. Actually, sociologists and psychologists remain predominantly hostile to any genetic influence on behavior. They will love Rose. The few behavior geneticists and sociobiologists in these disciplines are marginalized and looking for a little respect. Rose impugns their motives and ridicules their science.
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  78. Christopher Fox (2007). The Apotheosis of Apotheosis: Levinas's on Escape, Hegel's Unhappy Consciousness, and Us. Epoché 12 (1):185-204.score: 3.0
    The recent translation of Emmanuel Levinas’s essay On Escape complicates our view of his relationship to Hegel, and reopens the ontological question of escape. The impetus for Levinas’s essay was National Socialism’s effort to reduce subjectivity to being qua biologistic. To resist this, Levinas enlists idealism as an ally. He affirms the idealist subject’s effort to escape being, but denies that it makes good its escape. I challenge this denial by comparing Levinas’s phenomenology of escape with Hegel’s phenomenology of (...)
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  79. Giuliano Giustarini (2012). The Role of Fear (Bhaya) in the Nikāyas and in the Abhidhamma. Journal of Indian Philosophy 40 (5):511-531.score: 3.0
    According to Buddhist soteriology, fear is a direct cause of suffering and one of the main obstacles in the path to liberation. Pāli Suttas and Abhidhamma present a number of sophisticated strategies to deal with fear and to overcome it. Nevertheless, in the Nikāyas and in the Abhidhamma there are also consistent instructions about implementing fear in meditative practices and considering it as a valuable ally in the pursuit of nibbāna By means of a lexicographical study of selected passages (...)
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  80. Boris Gubman (1997). Nietzschean Foundations of Soviet Culture: Beyond Good and Evil. British Journal for the History of Philosophy 5 (1):175 – 179.score: 3.0
    Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal (Ed.): Nietzsche and Soviet Culture: Ally and Adversary. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1994. Pp. xvi + 421. ISBN 0-521-45281-3.
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  81. Nelson Maldonado-Torres (2005). Decolonization and the New Identitarian Logics After September 11. Radical Philosophy Review 8 (1):35-67.score: 3.0
    This essay examines the relationship between Americanism, the distinctive ideology of the U.S. American empire, and the predominant discourse in the age of its war on terror, and Eurocentrism, its competing ideology but nonetheless also its ally in defending the West against different "barbarian" threats. It characterizes them as two different forms of hegemonic identity politics: one based in the idea of the particularity of culture, and the other on the idea of universality. A different form of discourse based (...)
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  82. Louise E. Matthaei (1907). On the Classification of Roman Allies. The Classical Quarterly 1 (2-3):182-.score: 3.0
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  83. Pinit Ratanakul (2002). Buddhism and Science: Allies or Enemies? Zygon 37 (1):115-120.score: 3.0
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  84. Plinio Junqueira Smith (2008). La Critique de la raison pure face aux scepticismes cartésien, baylien et humien. Dialogue 47 (3-4):463-.score: 3.0
    RÉSUMÉ : Afin de circonscrire lescepticisme qui lui paraît miner l'entreprise métaphysique des Lumières, il est apparu nécessaire au Kant de la période critique de répondre à trois formes de scepticisme : au scepticisme baylien, qui s'interroge sur la capacité de la raison à parvenir à définir une vérité en rapport avec les idées de cette même raison; au scepticisme humien, ce qui le conduit à distinguer la question soulevée par Hume de son scepticisme pour parvenir à dégager la possibilité (...)
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  85. Bindu Arya & Jane E. Salk (2006). Cross-Sector Alliance Learning and Effectiveness of Voluntary Codes of Corporate Social Responsibility. Business Ethics Quarterly 16 (2):211-234.score: 3.0
    Abstract: Firms and industries increasingly subscribe to voluntary codes of conduct. These self-regulatory governance systems can be effective in establishing a more sustainable and inclusive global economy. However, these codes can also be largely symbolic, reactive measures to quell public criticism. Cross-sector alliances (between for-profit and nonprofit actors) present a learning platform for infusing participants with greater incentives to be socially responsible. They can provide multinationals new capabilities that allow them to more closely ally social responsibility with economic performance. (...)
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  86. Dave Billinge & Tom Addis (2008). Seeking Allies: Modelling How Listeners Choose Their Musical Friends. Foundations of Science 13 (1).score: 3.0
    In this paper we describe in some detail a formal computer model of inferential discourse based on a belief system. The key issue is that a logical model in a computer, based on rational sets, can usefully model a human situation based on irrational sets. The background of this work is explained elsewhere, as is the issue of rational and irrational sets (Billinge and Addis, in: Magnani and Dossena (eds.), Computing, philosophy and cognition, 2004; Stepney et al., Journey: Non-classical philosophy—socially (...)
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  87. Noam Chomsky, Middle East Diplomacy: Continuities and Changes.score: 3.0
    The answer to the first question is clear enough. The Bush administration desperately needs a foreign policy success to obscure the outcome of its war in the Gulf: hundreds of thousands killed and the toll mounting as a long-term consequence of the devastating attack on the civilian society; the Gulf tyrannies safeguarded from any democratic pressures; Saddam Hussein firmly in power, having demolished popular rebellions with tacit US support. US government interests and goals are hardly concealed. Washington seeks "the (...)
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  88. Noam Chomsky, The Colombia Plan: April 2000.score: 3.0
    We can often learn from systematic patterns, so let us focus for a moment on the previous champion, Turkey. As a major U.S. military ally and strategic outpost, Turkey has received substantial military aid from the origins of the Cold War. But arms deliveries began to increase sharply in 1984 with no Cold War connection at all. Rather, that was the year when Turkey initiated a large-scale counterinsurgency campaign in the Kurdish southeast, which also is the site of major (...)
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  89. Drew M. Dalton (2006). Strange Bedfellows. Idealistic Studies 36 (1):13-26.score: 3.0
    Much has been made within certain philosophic circles of Emmanuel Levinas’s interaction with and critique of Western philosophy in general and German Idealism in particular. What is little recognized, however, is that J. G. Fichte is often the hidden target of this salvo. Indeed, Fichte appears within Levinas’s work as one of the major foils against whom he attempts to define his own insights. Whenexamined in light of Levinas’s attack, however, Fichte’s work actually appears to be in remarkable contiguity with (...)
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  90. Clare Delany, Merle Spriggs, Craig L. Fry & Lynn Gillam (2010). The Unique Nature of Clinical Ethics in Allied Health Pediatrics: Implications for Ethics Education. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (04):471-480.score: 3.0
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  91. James W. Ely (2004). Property Rights and Free Speech: Allies or Enemies? Social Philosophy and Policy 21 (2):177-194.score: 3.0
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  92. Christopher B. Kulp (1992). The End of Epistemology: Dewey and His Current Allies on the Spectator Theory of Knowledge. Greenwood Press.score: 3.0
  93. Zoë Sofia (2000). Container Technologies. Hypatia 15 (2):181-201.score: 3.0
    : This paper goes beyond critiques of western philosophical notions of space as passive, feminine, and unintelligent by reconfiguring containment as an (inter-)active process. The author draws on work in the history of technology, on a cybernetic epistemology that emphasizes the interdependence of organism and environment, and on intersubjectivist psychoanalytic theories of the maternal provision. A more unexpected ally is found in Heidegger, whose writings on holding and supply are read in ways that contribute to the development of an (...)
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  94. F. L. Wells (1928). Psychogenic Factors in Emergentism and Allied Views. Journal of Philosophy 25 (3):71-75.score: 3.0
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  95. Francis Wormald (1943). The Fitzwarin Psalter and its Allies. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 6:71-79.score: 3.0
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  96. Jonathan Barnes (1993). Albert A. Bell Jr, Jr., James B. Allis: Resources in Ancient Philosophy: An Annotated Bibliography of Scholarship in English, 1965–1989. Pp. Xvii + 799. Metuchen, N.J./London: The Scarecrow Press/Shelwing, 1991. £59.65. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (01):189-.score: 3.0
  97. K. Bielecka (2012). Biosemiotics and Constructivism: Strong Allies. Review of “Essential Readings in Biosemiotics” Edited by Donald Favareau. Constructivist Foundations 7 (3):228-230.score: 3.0
    Upshot: The reader presents a unique collection of the most important works in biosemiotics. It spans 880 pages, describing classical and modern theories, with excerpts from the most significant papers on the topic of biosemiotics, as well as suggesting further reading on the topic.
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  98. B. Clarke (2012). From Information to Cognition: The Systems Counterculture, Heinz von Foerster's Pedagogy, and Second-Order Cybernetics. Constructivist Foundations 7 (3):196-207.score: 3.0
    Context: In this empirical and conceptual paper on the historical, philosophical, and epistemological backgrounds of second-order cybernetics, the emergence of a significant pedagogical component to Heinz von Foerster’s work during the last years of the Biological Computer Laboratory is placed against the backdrop of social and intellectual movements on the American landscape. Problem: Previous discussion in this regard has focused largely on the student radicalism of the later 1960s. A wider-angled view of the American intellectual counterculture is needed. However, this (...)
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  99. Elliott Felken (1922). Book Review:Allied Shipping Control: An Experiment in International Administration. J. A. Salter. [REVIEW] Ethics 32 (2):218-.score: 3.0
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  100. Irene Grote (2004). Self-Experimentation and Self-Management: Allies in Combination Therapies. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (2):266-267.score: 3.0
    Self-experimentation is a valuable companion to self-management in the benefit of pharmaco-cognitive-behavior combination therapies. However, data on individuals participating as active therapeutic agents are sparse. Smoking cessation therapy is an example. Roberts' self-experimentation suggests trying more diversity in research to generate new ideas. This may inform current approaches to the cessation of smoking.
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