Search results for 'Bj�Rn Kjos-Hanssen' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Bjørg Lien Hanssen (2001). Ethics and Landscape: Values and Choices. Ethics, Place and Environment 4 (3):246 – 252.score: 120.0
    There are certain ethical norms that seem to be influencing our choices, both in landscape evaluations and in other sections of society. The paper will give a brief discussion of different ethical theories and give examples of how these theories are found in practical solutions in dealing with landscape in planning and conservation. Ethics are fundamental parts of what we call culture, and refer first and foremost to human action in what a given society takes to be good and evil (...)
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  2. Marjorie B. Garber, Beatrice Hanssen & Rebecca L. Walkowitz (eds.) (2000). The Turn to Ethics. Routledge.score: 60.0
    What kind of turn is the turn to ethics? A Right turn? A Left turn? A wrong turn? A U-turn? Ethics is back in literary studies, philosophy, and political theory. Where critiques of universal man and the autonomous human subject had, in recent years, produced a resistance to ethics in many fields of scholarship, today these critiques have generated a crossover among disciplines and led to theories and practices that see and do ethics otherwise. The decentering of the subject, the (...)
     
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  3. Stephen Binns & Bjørn Kjos-Hanssen (2009). Finding Paths Through Narrow and Wide Trees. Journal of Symbolic Logic 74 (1):349-360.score: 49.5
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  4. Bjørn Kjos-Hanssen (2011). A Strong Law of Computationally Weak Subsets. Journal of Mathematical Logic 11 (01):1-10.score: 49.5
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  5. Bjørn Kjos-Hanssen (2003). Local Initial Segments of the Turing Degrees. Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 9 (1):26-36.score: 49.5
    Recent results on initial segments of the Turing degrees are presented, and some conjectures about initial segments that have implications for the existence of nontrivial automorphisms of the Turing degrees are indicated.
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  6. Bjørn Kjos-Hanssen & Andrée Nies (2009). Superhighness. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 50 (4):445-452.score: 49.5
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  7. Klaus Ambos-Spies, Bj�Rn Kjos-Hanssen, Steffen Lempp & Theodore A. Slaman (2004). Comparing DNR and WWKL. Journal of Symbolic Logic 69 (4):1089 - 1104.score: 49.5
    In Reverse Mathematics, the axiom system DNR, asserting the existence of diagonally nonrecursive functions, is strictly weaker than WWKL₀ (weak weak König's Lemma).
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  8. Richard A. Shore & Bjørn Kjos-Hanssen (2010). Lattice Initial Segments of the Hyperdegrees. Journal of Symbolic Logic 75 (1):103-130.score: 49.5
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  9. Stephen Binns, Bjørn Kjos-Hanssen, Manuel Lerman & Reed Solomon (2006). On a Conjecture of Dobrinen and Simpson Concerning Almost Everywhere Domination. Journal of Symbolic Logic 71 (1):119 - 136.score: 49.5
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  10. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (2004). Review of "Reflections and Replies: Essays on the Philosophy of Tyler Burge" Edited by Martin Hahn and Bjørn Ramberg. [REVIEW] Sats - Nordic Journal of Philosophy 5 (2):161-66.score: 43.5
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  11. Mary Tod Gray phd rn (2007). Freedom and Resistance: The Phenomenal Will in Addiction. Nursing Philosophy 8 (1):3–15.score: 30.0
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  12. C. S. RN (2001). Professional Advocacy: Widening the Scope of Accountability. Nursing Philosophy 2 (2):151–162.score: 30.0
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  13. Mary Tod Gray phd rn (2005). The Shifting Sands of Self: A Framework for the Experience of Self in Addiction. Nursing Philosophy 6 (2):119–130.score: 30.0
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  14. Sally E. Thorne RN PhD, Angela D. Henderson RN PhD, PhD & M. S. N. RN (2004). The Problematic Allure of the Binary in Nursing Theoretical Discourse. Nursing Philosophy 5 (3):208–215.score: 30.0
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  15. Sally Glen phd ma rn (2005). Dangerous and Severe Personality Disorder: An Ethical Concept? Nursing Philosophy 6 (2):98–105.score: 30.0
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  16. C. N. S. RN & Wonshik Chee PhD (2003). Fuzzy Logic and Nursing. Nursing Philosophy 4 (1):53–60.score: 30.0
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  17. Martin Lipscomb bsc rn (2006). Rebutting the Suggestion That Anthony Giddens's Structuration Theory Offers a Useful Framework for Sociological Nursing Research: A Critique Based Upon Margaret Archer's Realist Social Theory. Nursing Philosophy 7 (3):175–180.score: 30.0
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  18. M. A. PhD, R. N. T. RN, Wayne Spencer & Stephen Matthiesen Dipl-Phys PhD (2002). A Critical Evaluation of the Theory and Practice of Therapeutic Touch. Nursing Philosophy 3 (2):163–176.score: 30.0
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  19. Beverly J. B. Whelton RN (2002). Human Nature as a Source of Practical Truth: Aristotelian-Thomistic Realism and the Practical Science of Nursing. Nursing Philosophy 3 (1):35-46.score: 30.0
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  20. M. A. RN (2004). Integrity and Moral Residue: Nurses as Participants in a Moral Community. Nursing Philosophy 5 (2):127–134.score: 30.0
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  21. Clinton E. Betts bsc bscn med rn (2007). The Will to Health: A Nietzschean Critique. Nursing Philosophy 8 (1):37–48.score: 30.0
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  22. Bjørn K. Myskja (2008). The Categorical Imperative and the Ethics of Trust. Ethics and Information Technology 10 (4).score: 13.5
    Trust can be understood as a precondition for a well-functioning society or as a way to handle complexities of living in a risk society, but also as a fundamental aspect of human morality. Interactions on the Internet pose some new challenges to issues of trust, especially connected to disembodiedness. Mistrust may be an important obstacle to Internet use, which is problematic as the Internet becomes a significant arena for political, social and commercial activities necessary for full participation in a liberal (...)
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  23. Bjørn Hofmann (2002). On the Triad Disease, Illness and Sickness. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 27 (6):651 – 673.score: 13.5
    The point of departure for this article is a review of the discussion between Twaddle and Nordenfelt on the concepts of disease, illness, and sickness, and the objective is to investigate the fruitfulness of these concepts. It is argued that disease, illness, and sickness represent different perspectives on human ailment and that they can be applied to analyze both epistemic and normative challenges to modern medicine. In particular the analysis reveals epistemic and normative differences between the concepts. Furthermore, the article (...)
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  24. Sherri Irvin (2009). Teaching and Learning Guide For: Authors, Intentions and Literary Meaning. Philosophy Compass 4 (1):287-291.score: 13.5
    The relationship of the author's intention to the meaning of a literary work has been a persistently controversial topic in aesthetics. Anti-intentionalists Wimsatt and Beardsley, in the 1946 paper that launched the debate, accused critics who fueled their interpretative activity by poring over the author's private diaries and life story of committing the 'fallacy' of equating the work's meaning, properly determined by context and linguistic convention, with the meaning intended by the author. Hirsch responded that context and convention are not (...)
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  25. Bjørn Grinde (2005). Darwinian Happiness: Can the Evolutionary Perspective on Well-Being Help Us Improve Society? World Futures 61 (4):317 – 329.score: 13.5
    The concept of Darwinian Happiness was coined to help people take advantage of knowledge on how evolution has shaped the brain; as processes within this organ are the main contributors to well-being. Fortuitously, the concept has implications that may prove beneficial for society: Compassionate behavior offers more in terms of Darwinian Happiness than malicious behavior; and the probability of obtaining sustainable development may be improved by pointing out that consumption beyond sustenance is not important for well-being. It is difficult to (...)
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  26. Bjørn Hofmann (2005). Simplified Models of the Relationship Between Health and Disease. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 26 (5):355-377.score: 13.5
    The concepts of health and disease are crucial in defining the aim and the limits of modern medicine. Accordingly it is important to understand them and their relationship. However, there appears to be a discrepancy between scholars in philosophy of medicine and health care professionals with regard to these concepts. This article investigates health care professionals’ concepts of health and disease and the relationship between them. In order to do so, four different models are described and analyzed: the ideal model, (...)
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  27. Bjørn Thomassen (2012). Reason and Religion in Rawls: Voegelin's Challenge. Philosophia 40 (2):237-252.score: 13.5
    This article argues that we must abandon the still predominant view of modernity as based upon a separation between the secular and the religious - a “separation” which is allegedly now brought into question again in “postsecularity”. It is more meaningful to start from the premise that religion and politics have always co-existed in various fields of tension and will continue to do so. The question then concerns the natures and modalities of this tension, and how one can articulate a (...)
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  28. Bjørn Jespersen (2003). Why the Tuple Theory of Structured Propositions Isn't a Theory of Structured Propositions. Philosophia 31 (1-2):171-183.score: 13.5
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  29. Bjørn Jespersen (2011). An Intensional Solution to the Bike Puzzle of Intentional Identity. Philosophia 39 (2):297-307.score: 13.5
    In a 2005 paper Ólafur Páll Jónsson presents a puzzle that turns on intentional identity and definite descriptions. He considers eight solutions and rejects them all, thus leaving the puzzle unsolved. In this paper I put forward a solution. The puzzle is this. Little Lotta wants most of all a bicycle for her birthday, but she gets none. Distracted by the gifts she does receive, she at first does not think about the bike. But when seeing her tricycle, she is (...)
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  30. Bjørn Ramberg, Richard Rorty. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 13.5
    Richard Rorty (1931–2007) developed a distinctive and controversial brand of pragmatism that expressed itself along two main axes. One is negative—a critical diagnosis of what Rorty takes to be defining projects of modern philosophy. The other is positive—an attempt to show what intellectual culture might look like, once we free ourselves from the governing metaphors of mind and knowledge in which the traditional problems of epistemology and metaphysics (and indeed, in Rorty's view, the self-conception of modern philosophy) are rooted. The (...)
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  31. Bjørn Hofmann (2010). The Encompassing Ethics of Bariatric Surgery. American Journal of Bioethics 10 (12):W1-W2.score: 13.5
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  32. Bjørn Jespersen & Massimiliano Carrara (2011). Two Conceptions of Technical Malfunction. Theoria 77 (2):117-138.score: 13.5
    The topic of this paper is the notion of technical (as opposed to biological) malfunction. It is shown how to form the property being a malfunctioning F from the property F and the property modifier malfunctioning (a mapping taking a property to a property). We present two interpretations of malfunctioning. Both interpretations agree that a malfunctioning F lacks the dispositional property of functioning as an F. However, its subsective interpretation entails that malfunctioning Fs are Fs, whereas its privative interpretation entails (...)
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  33. Bjørn Hofmann (2010). Stuck in the Middle: The Many Moral Challenges With Bariatric Surgery. American Journal of Bioethics 10 (12):3-11.score: 13.5
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  34. Bjørn Jespersen & Chris Reintges (2008). Tractarian Sätze, Egyptian Hieroglyphs, and the Very Idea of Script as Picture. Philosophical Forum 39 (1):1–19.score: 13.5
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  35. Hanne Andersen, Demarcating Misconduct From Misinterpretations and Mistakes.score: 13.5
    Within recent years, scientific misconduct has become an increasingly important topic, not only in the scientific community, but in the general public as well. Spectacular cases have been extensively covered in the news media, such as the cases of the Korean stem cell researcher Hwang, the German nanoscientist Schön, or the Norwegian cancer researcher Sudbø. In Science's latest annual "breakthrough of the year" report from December 2006, the descriptions of the year's hottest breakthroughs were accompanied by a similar description of (...)
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  36. Bjørn Hofmann, Jan Helge Solbakk & Søren Holm (2006). Analogical Reasoning in Handling Emerging Technologies: The Case of Umbilical Cord Blood Biobanking. American Journal of Bioethics 6 (6):49 – 57.score: 13.5
    How are we individually and as a society to handle new and emerging technologies? This challenging question underlies much of the bioethical debates of modern times. To address this question we need suitable conceptions of the new technology and ways of identifying its proper management and regulation. To establish conceptions and to find ways to handle emerging technologies we tend to use analogies extensively. The aim of this article is to investigate the role that analogies play or may play in (...)
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  37. Bjørn Hofmann (2007). That's Not Science! The Role of Moral Philosophy in the Science/Non-Science Divide. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 28 (3):243-256.score: 13.5
    The science/non-science distinction has become increasingly blurred. This paper investigates whether recent cases of fraud in science can shed light on the distinction. First, it investigates whether there is an absolute distinction between science and non-science with respect to fraud, and in particular with regards to manipulation and fabrication of data. Finding that it is very hard to make such a distinction leads to the second step: scrutinizing whether there is a normative distinction between science and non-science. This is done (...)
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  38. Bjørn Hofmann, Anne Myhr & Søren Holm (2013). Scientific Dishonesty—a Nationwide Survey of Doctoral Students in Norway. BMC Medical Ethics 14 (1):1-9.score: 13.5
    BackgroundThe knowledge of scientific dishonesty is scarce and heterogeneous. Therefore this study investigates the experiences with and the attitudes towards various forms of scientific dishonesty among PhD-students at the medical faculties of all Norwegian universities.MethodAnonymous questionnaire distributed to all post graduate students attending introductory PhD-courses at all medical faculties in Norway in 2010/2011. Descriptive statistics.Results189 of 262 questionnaires were returned (72.1%). 65% of the respondents had not, during the last year, heard or read about researchers who committed scientific dishonesty. One (...)
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  39. Bjørn Jespersen & Massimiliano Carrara (forthcoming). A New Logic of Technical Malfunction. Studia Logica.score: 13.5
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  40. Bjørn K. Myskja (2006). “The Moral Difference Between Intragenic and Transgenic Modification of Plants”. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 19 (3).score: 13.5
    Public policy on the development and use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) has mainly been concerned with defining proper strategies of risk management. However, surveys and focus group interviews show that although lay people are concerned with risks, they also emphasize that genetic modification is ethically questionable in itself. Many people feel that this technology “tampers with nature” in an unacceptable manner. This is often identified as an objection to the crossing of species borders in producing transgenic organisms. Most scientists (...)
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  41. Bjørn T. Ramberg (1993). Interpreting Davidson. Dialogue 32 (03):565-.score: 13.5
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  42. Bjørn Ramberg (1988). Charity and Ideology: The Field Linguist as Social Critic. Dialogue 27 (04):637-.score: 13.5
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  43. Bjørn Grinde (2011). God in the Hands of Future Science. World Futures 66 (5):351-362.score: 13.5
    There is reasonable evidence suggesting that humans have an innate tendency toward being religious. Consequently, religion is unlikely to disappear; the question then is how this feature will impact on future society. Three scenarios are discussed: One, science will dominate; two, religion will dominate; and three, the present conflict between the two is resolved. The latter scenario may happen through a realization that religion has the potential for doing more good than bad, in terms of individual quality of life and (...)
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  44. Bjørn Hofmann, Jan Helge Solbakk & Søren Holm (2006). Teaching Old Dogs New Tricks: The Role of Analogies in Bioethical Analysis and Argumentation Concerning New Technologies. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 27 (5):397-413.score: 13.5
    New medical technologies provide us with new possibilities in health care and health care research. Depending on their degree of novelty, they may as well present us with a whole range of unforeseen normative challenges. Partly, this is due to a lack of appropriate norms to perceive and handle new technologies. This article investigates our ways of establishing such norms. We argue that in this respect analogies have at least two normative functions: they inform both our understanding and our conduct. (...)
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  45. Bjørn Hofmann (2003). Technological Paternalism: On How Medicine has Reformed Ethics and How Technology Can Refine Moral Theory. Science and Engineering Ethics 9 (3):343-352.score: 13.5
    The objective of this article is to investigate ethical aspects of technology through the moral term “paternalism”. The field of investigation is medicine. The reason for this is twofold. Firstly, “paternalism” has gained moral relevance through modern medicine, where physicians have been accused of behaving paternalistic and threatening patients’ autonomy. Secondly, medicine is a brilliant area to scrutinise the evaluative aspects of technology. It is argued that paternalism is a morally relevant term for the ethics of technology, but that its (...)
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  46. Bjørn Jespersen (2005). Explicit Intensionalization, Anti-Actualism, and How Smith's Murderer Might Not Have Murdered Smith. Dialectica 59 (3):285–314.score: 13.5
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  47. Bjørn Jespersen (2008). Predication and Extensionalization. Journal of Philosophical Logic 37 (5).score: 13.5
    In his 2000 book Logical Properties Colin McGinn argues that predicates denote properties rather than sets or individuals. I support the thesis, but show that it is vulnerable to a type-incongruity objection, if properties are (modelled as) functions, unless a device for extensionalizing properties is added. Alternatively, properties may be construed as primitive intensional entities, as in George Bealer. However, I object to Bealer’s construal of predication as a primitive operation inputting two primitive entities and outputting a third primitive entity. (...)
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  48. Bjørn Myskja (2011). Trustworthy Nanotechnology: Risk, Engagement and Responsibility. Nanoethics 5 (1):49-56.score: 13.5
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  49. Bjørn Ramberg, Hermeneutics. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 13.5
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  50. Bjørn Jespersen (2012). Post-Fregean Thoughts on Propositional Unity. In James Maclaurin (ed.), Rationis Defensor.score: 13.5
    This note sketches how a theory of procedural semantics may offer a solution to the problem of the unity of the proposition. The current revival of the notion of structured meaning has made the problem of propositional unity pressing. The problem, stated in its simplest form, is how an individual a and a property F combine into the proposition P that a is an F; i.e. how two different kinds of objects combine into a third kind of object capable of (...)
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  51. Bjørn-Ivar Davidsen (2005). Arguing Critical Realism: The Case of Economics. Journal of Critical Realism 4 (2).score: 13.5
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  52. Bjørn Hofmann (2013). Ethical Challenges with Welfare Technology: A Review of the Literature. [REVIEW] Science and Engineering Ethics 19 (2):389-406.score: 13.5
    Demographical changes in high income counties will increase the need of health care services but reduce the number of people to provide them. Welfare technology is launched as an important measure to meet this challenge. As with all types of technologies we must explore its ethical challenges. A literature review reveals that welfare technology is a generic term for a heterogeneous group of technologies and there are few studies documenting their efficacy, effectiveness and efficiency. Many kinds of welfare technology break (...)
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  53. Bjørn Hofmann (2002). The Myth of Technology in Health Care. Science and Engineering Ethics 8 (1).score: 13.5
    Technology is believed to have liberated health care from dogmas, myths and speculations of earlier times. However, we are accused of using technology in an excessive, futile and even detrimental way, as if technology is compelling our actions. It appears to be like the monster threatening Dr. Frankenstein or like the socerer’s broom in the hand of the apprentice. That is, the same technology that should liberate us from myths, appears to be mythical. The objective of this article is to (...)
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  54. Bjørn Jespersen & Pavel Materna (2002). Are Wooden Tables Necessarily Wooden? Acta Analytica 17 (1):115-150.score: 13.5
    This paper defendsintensional essentialism: a property (intensional entity) is not essential relative to an individual (extensional entity), but relative to other properties (or intensional entities). Consequently, an individual can have a property only accidentally, but in virtue of having that property the individual has of necessity other properties. Intensional essentialism is opposed to various aspects of the Kripkean notion of metaphysical modality, eg, varying domains, existence as a property of individuals, and its category of properties which are both empirical and (...)
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  55. Bjørn Hofmann (2002). Technological Medicine and the Autonomy of Man. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 5 (2):157-167.score: 13.5
    Is technology value-free or is it value-laden? How does technology affect human autonomy? These questions, viewed within the context of medicine, are the focus of attention in this article. The central argument is that we need neither to subscribe to the value-neutrality dictum nor to the all-encompassing value-ladenness thesis to explain the pertinent position of technology in medicine. Technology is constitutive of and strongly implicated in difficult questions of value. This, however, does not mean that technology is identical to (or (...)
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  56. Bjørn Hofmann (2003). Medicine as Techne - a Perspective From Antiquity. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 28 (4):403 – 425.score: 13.5
    The objective of this article is to investigate whether the concept of techne is fruitful as a framework to analyze some of the pressing challenges inmodernmedicine. To do this, the concept of techne is scrutinized, and it is argued that it is a concept that integrates theoretical, practical and evaluative aspects, and that this makes it particularly suitable to analyze the complex activity of modern medicine. After applying this technical framework in relation to modern medicine, some of its (...)
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  57. Bjørn Hofmann (2005). On Value-Judgements and Ethics in Health Technology Assessment. Poiesis and Praxis 3 (4):277-295.score: 13.5
    The widespread application of technology in health care has imposed a broad range of challenges. The field of health technology assessment (HTA) is developed in order to face some of these challenges. However, this strategy has not been as successful as one could hope. One of the reasons for this is that social and ethical considerations have not been integrated in the HTA process. Nowadays however, such considerations have been included in many HTAs. Still, the conclusions and recommendations of the (...)
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  58. Bjørn Hofmann (2001). The Paradox of Health Care. Health Care Analysis 9 (4):369-386.score: 13.5
    The term ``paradox'' signifies acontradiction of some sort. Modern health careappears to be rich in contradictions, and it isclaimed to be paradoxical in a number of ways.In particular health care is held to be aparadox itself: it is supposed to do good, butis accused of doing harm. The objective of thisarticle is to investigate whether the conceptof paradox can serve as a framework foranalysing pressing problems in modern healthcare. To pursue this, three distinctive levelsof paradox are identified: resolvableparadoxes, antinomies and (...)
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  59. Bjørn Jespersen (2012). Recent Work on Structured Meaning and Propositional Unity. Philosophy Compass 7 (9):620-630.score: 13.5
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  60. Bjørn Kjonstad & Hugh Willmott (1995). Business Ethics: Restrictive or Empowering? Journal of Business Ethics 14 (6):445 - 464.score: 13.5
    There is a tendency in the business ethics literature to think of ethics in restrictive terms: what one should not do, and how to control this. Drawing on Lawrence Kohlberg''s theory of moral development, the paper focuses on, and draws attention to, another more positive aspect of ethics: the capacity of ethics to inspire and empower individuals, as well as groups. To understand and facilitate such empowerment, it is argued that it is necessary to move beyond Kohlberg''s justice reasoning so (...)
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  61. Bjørn Hofmann (2001). On the Value-Ladenness of Technology in Medicine. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 4 (3):335-345.score: 13.5
    The objective of this article is to analyse the value-ladenness of technology in the context of medicine. To address this issue several characteristics of technology are investigated: i) its interventive capacity, ii) its expansiveness and iii) its influence on the concept of disease, iv) its generalising character, v) its independence of the subjective experience of the patient. By this analysis I hope to unveil the double face of technology: Technology has a Janus-face in modern medicine, and the opposite of its (...)
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  62. Bjørn Hofmann (2013). Bariatric Surgery for Obese Children and Adolescents: A Review of the Moral Challenges. [REVIEW] BMC Medical Ethics 14 (1):18.score: 13.5
    Bariatric surgery for children and adolescents is becoming widespread. However, the evidence is still scarce and of poor quality, and many of the patients are too young to consent. This poses a series of moral challenges, which have to be addressed both when considering bariatric surgery introduced as a health care service and when deciding for treatment for young individuals.
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  63. Bjørn Hofmann (2001). Complexity of the Concept of Disease as Shown Through Rival Theoretical Frameworks. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 22 (3).score: 13.5
    The concept of disease has been the subject ofa vast, vivid and versatile debate. Categoriessuch as ``realist'', ``nominalist'', ``ontologist'',``physiologist'', ``normativist'' and``descriptivist'' have been applied to classifydisease concepts. These categories refer tounderlying theoretical frameworks of thedebate. The objective of this review is toanalyse these frameworks. It is argued that thecategories applied in the debate refer toprofound philosophical issues, and that thecomplexity of the debate reflects thecomplexity of the concept itself: disease is acomplex concept, and does not easily lenditself to definition.
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  64. James Maclaurin (ed.) (2012). Rationis Defensor: Essays in Honour of Colin Cheyne. Springer.score: 13.5
    Edited book containing the following essays: 1 Getting over Gettier, Alan Musgrave.- 2 Justified Believing: Avoiding the Paradox Gregory W. Dawes.- Chapter 3! Literature and Truthfulness,Gregory Currie.- 4 Where the Buck-passing Stops, Andrew Moore.- 5 Universal Darwinism: Its Scope and Limits, James Maclaurin, - 6 The Future of Utilitarianism,Tim Mulgan. 7 Kant on Experiment, Alberto Vanzo.- 8 Did Newton ʻFeignʼ the Corpuscular Hypothesis? Kirsten Walsh.- 9 The Progress of Scotland: The Edinburgh Philosophical Societies and the Experimental Method, Juan Gomez.- 10 (...)
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  65. Bjørn Hofmann, Anne Ingeborg Myhr & Søren Holm (2013). Scientific Dishonesty—a Nationwide Survey of Doctoral Students in Norway. BMC Medical Ethics 14 (1):3-.score: 13.5
    Background: The knowledge of scientific dishonesty is scarce and heterogeneous. Therefore this study investigates the experiences with and the attitudes towards various forms of scientific dishonesty among PhD-students at the medical faculties of all Norwegian universities.MethodAnonymous questionnaire distributed to all post graduate students attending introductory PhD-courses at all medical faculties in Norway in 2010/2011. Descriptive statistics. Results: 189 of 262 questionnaires were returned (72.1%). 65% of the respondents had not, during the last year, heard or read about researchers who committed (...)
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  66. Bjørn Jespersen (2012). Teaching & Learning Guide For:Recent Work on Structured Meaning and Propositional Unity. Philosophy Compass 7 (12):943-945.score: 13.5
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  67. Bjørn Ramberg (2008). Rorty, Davidson, and the Future of Metaphysics in America. In C. J. Misak (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of American Philosophy. Oxford University Press.score: 13.5
  68. Howard Friel (2010). The Lomborg Deception: Setting the Record Straight About Global Warming. Yale University Press.score: 13.5
    Questions the research, assumptions, and intention behind Danish statistician Bj²rn Lomborg's attacks on peer-reviewed scientific theories of global warming.
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  69. Bjørn Hofmann (forthcoming). Priority Setting in Health Care: Trends and Models From Scandinavian Experiences. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy.score: 13.5
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  70. Bjørn Hofmann, Søren Holm & Jan Solbakk (2006). Response to Open Peer Commentaries on “Analogical Reasoning in Handling Emerging Technologies: The Case of Umbilical Cord Blood Biobanking”: Analogy is Like Air—Invisible and Indispensable. American Journal of Bioethics 6 (6):W13-W14.score: 13.5
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  71. Paul John King, Kiril Ivanov Simov & Bjørn Aldag (1999). The Complexity of Modellability in Finite and Computable Signatures of a Constraint Logic for Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar. Journal of Logic, Language and Information 8 (1):83-110.score: 13.5
    The SRL (speciate re-entrant logic) of King (1989) is a sound, complete and decidable logic designed specifically to support formalisms for the HPSG (head-driven phrase structure grammar) of Pollard and Sag (1994). The SRL notion of modellability in a signature is particularly important for HPSG, and the present paper modifies an elegant method due to Blackburn and Spaan (1993) in order to prove that – modellability in each computable signature is 1 0 – modellability in some finite signature is (...)
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  72. Anne Myhr & Bjørn Myskja (2011). Precaution or Integrated Responsibility Approach to Nanovaccines in Fish Farming? A Critical Appraisal of the UNESCO Precautionary Principle. Nanoethics 5 (1):73-86.score: 13.5
    Nanoparticles have multifaceted advantages in drug administration as vaccine delivery and hence hold promises for improving protection of farmed fish against diseases caused by pathogens. However, there are concerns that the benefits associated with distribution of nanoparticles may also be accompanied with risks to the environment and health. The complexity of the natural and social systems involved implies that the information acquired in quantified risk assessments may be inadequate for evidence-based decisions. One controversial strategy for dealing with this kind of (...)
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  73. Bjørn T. Ramberg (1989). Donald Davidson's Philosophy of Language: An Introduction. B. Blackwell.score: 13.5
  74. Bjørn Torgrim Ramberg (2003). Illuminating Language : Interpretation and Understanding in Gadamer and Davidson. In C. G. Prado (ed.), A House Divided: Comparing Analytic and Continental Philosophy. Humanity Books.score: 13.5
  75. Bjørn T. Ramberg (2006). Language, Mind, and Naturalism in Analytic Philosophy. In John R. Shook & Joseph Margolis (eds.), A Companion to Pragmatism. Blackwell Pub..score: 13.5
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  76. Truls Wyller, Siri Granum Carson, Jonathan Knowles & Bjørn K. Myskja (eds.) (2011). Kant, Here, Now, and How: Essays in Honour of Truls Wyller. Mentis.score: 13.5
     
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  77. Zach Weber, Reply to Bjørdal.score: 12.0
    In [1], Bjørdal presents a paraconsistent set theory in which ∀x(x = x) is a theorem. The author rightly claims that, while not trivializing (in the sense of proving everything), results like this are to be avoided. The set theory presented in [1] is based on that of [16], but with an introduced definition of identity—which is used, in effect, as a new axiom. With this added notion of identity, the non-self-identity of every object does in fact obtain; and so (...)
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  78. Diana Coole (2003). Review: Review Essay of Hanssen and Schoolman. [REVIEW] Political Theory 31 (5):734 - 739.score: 9.0
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  79. Matthew W. Parker (2003). Undecidability in Rn: Riddled Basins, the KAM Tori, and the Stability of the Solar System. Philosophy of Science 70 (2):359-382.score: 9.0
    Some have suggested that certain classical physical systems have undecidable long-term behavior, without specifying an appropriate notion of decidability over the reals. We introduce such a notion, decidability in (or d- ) for any measure , which is particularly appropriate for physics and in some ways more intuitive than Ko's (1991) recursive approximability (r.a.). For Lebesgue measure , d- implies r.a. Sets with positive -measure that are sufficiently "riddled" with holes are never d- but are often r.a. This explicates Sommerer (...)
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  80. David Justin Hodge (1999). Cappelhørn, Niels Jørgen, and Jon Stewart, Eds. Kierkegaard Revisited: Proceedings From the Conference “Kierkegaard and the Meaning of Meaning It”. The Review of Metaphysics 53 (1):151-153.score: 9.0
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  81. E. J. Kenney (1967). E. Spang-Hanssen: J. N. Madvig Bibliografi. Pp. Xxiii+139. Copenhagen: Kongelige Bibliotek, 1966. Paper, 20 D.Kr. The Classical Review 17 (03):404-.score: 9.0
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  82. E. J. Kenney (1966). P. Bagge, P. Krarup, J. Pedersen, P. J. Jensen, E. Spang-Hanssen: Johann Nicolai Madvig: Et Mindeskrift. 2 Vols. Pp. [Viii] +271, [Viii] + 290. Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1955, 1963. Cloth. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 16 (01):129-.score: 9.0
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  83. Geoffrey M. Hodgson & Thorbjørn Knudsen (2012). Underqualified—Maximal Generality in Darwinian Explanation: A Response to Matt Gers. Biology and Philosophy 27 (4):607-614.score: 6.0
    Gers (Biol Philos, 2011) provides a positive and constructive view of the project to generalise Darwinian principles in Geoffrey Hodgson and Thorbjørn Knudsen’s Darwin’s Conjecture. We note considerable overlap with his work and ours, and also with important recent work of Godfrey-Smith ( 2009 ), which Gers cites extensively. But we also note that there are differences in research objectives between Gers and Godfrey-Smith, on the one hand, and ourselves, on the other. Gers and Godfrey-Smith focus on the elucidation of (...)
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  84. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (2006). No Norm Needed: On the Aim of Belief. Philosophical Quarterly 56 (225):499–516.score: 3.0
    Does transparency in doxastic deliberation entail a constitutive norm of correctness governing belief, as Shah and Velleman argue? No, because this presupposes an implausibly strong relation between normative judgements and motivation from such judgements, ignores our interest in truth, and cannot explain why we pay different attention to how much justification we have for our beliefs in different contexts. An alternative account of transparency is available: transparency can be explained by the aim one necessarily adopts in deliberating about whether to (...)
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  85. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (ed.) (2010). Metaphysics: 5 Questions. Automatic Press.score: 3.0
    Metaphysics: 5 Questions is a collection of short interviews based on 5 questions presented to some of the most influential and prominent philosophers in the field. We hear their views on metaphysics, the aim, the scope, the future direction of research and how their work fits in these respects. Interviews with Lynne Rudder Baker, Helen Beebee, Thomas Hofweber, Hugh Mellor, Peter Menzies, Stephen Mumford, Daniel Nolan, Eric T.Olson, L. A. Paul, Lorenz B. Puntel, Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra, Gideon Rosen, Jonathan Schaffer, Peter (...)
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  86. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (forthcoming). Truth as the Aim of Epistemic Justification. In Timothy Chan (ed.), The Aim of Belief. Oxford University Press.score: 3.0
    A popular account of epistemic justification holds that justification, in essence, aims at truth. An influential objection against this account points out that it is committed to holding that only true beliefs could be justified, which most epistemologists regard as sufficient reason to reject the account. In this paper I defend the view that epistemic justification aims at truth, not by denying that it is committed to epistemic justification being factive, but by showing that, when we focus on the relevant (...)
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  87. Andrew Reisner & Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (eds.) (2011). Reasons for Belief. Cambridge University Press.score: 3.0
    Philosophers have long been concerned about what we know and how we know it. Increasingly, however, a related question has gained prominence in philosophical discussion: what should we believe and why? This volume brings together twelve new essays that address different aspects of this question. The essays examine foundational questions about reasons for belief, and use new research on reasons for belief to address traditional epistemological concerns such as knowledge, justification and perceptually acquired beliefs. This book will be of interest (...)
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  88. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (2012). Against the Contrastive Account of Singular Causation. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 63 (1):115-143.score: 3.0
    For at least three decades, philosophers have argued that general causation and causal explanation are contrastive in nature. When we seek a causal explanation of some particular event, we are usually interested in knowing why that event happened rather than some other specified event. And general causal claims, which state that certain event types cause certain other event types, seem to make sense only if appropriate contrasts to the types of events acting as cause and effect are specified. In recent (...)
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  89. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (2011). How to Be a Teleologist About Epistemic Reasons. In Asbjorn Steglich-Petersen & Andrew Reisner (eds.), Reasons for Belief. Cambridge University Press.score: 3.0
    In this paper I propose a teleological account of epistemic reasons. In recent years, the main challenge for any such account has been to explicate a sense in which epistemic reasons depend on the value of epistemic properties. I argue that while epistemic reasons do not directly depend on the value of epistemic properties, they depend on a different class of reasons which are value based in a direct sense, namely reasons to form beliefs about certain propositions or subject matters. (...)
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  90. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (2010). Luck as an Epistemic Notion. Synthese 176:361-377.score: 3.0
    Many philosophers have argued that an event is lucky for an agent only if it was suitably improbable, but there is considerable disagreement about how to understand this improbability condition. This paper argues for a hitherto overlooked construal of the improbability condition in terms of the lucky agent’s epistemic situation. According to the proposed account, an event is lucky for an agent only if the agent was not in a position to know that the event would occur. It is also (...)
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  91. Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen (2010). The Truth Norm and Guidance: A Reply to Gluer and Wikforss. Mind 119 (475):749-755.score: 3.0
    Kathrin Glüer and Åsa Wikforss (2009) argue that any truth norm for belief, linking the correctness of believing p with the truth of p, is bound to be uninformative, since applying the norm to determine the correctness of a belief as to whether p, would itself require forming such a belief. I argue that this conflates the condition under which the norm deems beliefs correct, with the psychological state an agent must be in to apply the norm. I also show (...)
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