Search results for 'Clive Chandler' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Clive Chandler (2005). Philodemus' Roman Garden D. Armstrong, J. Fish, P. A. Jonhston, M. B. Skinner (Edd.): Vergil, Philodemus, and the Augustans . Pp. Xiv + 361. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2004. Cased, US$55. ISBN: 0-292-70181-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 55 (02):521-.score: 120.0
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  2. James K. Chandler, Arnold Ira Davidson & Harry D. Harootunian (eds.) (1994). Questions of Evidence: Proof, Practice, and Persuasion Across the Disciplines. University of Chicago Press.score: 60.0
    Biologists, historians, lawyers, art historians, and literary critics all voice arguments in the critical dialogue about what constitutes evidence in research and scholarship. They examine not only the constitution and "blurring" of disciplinary boundaries, but also the configuration of the fact-evidence distinctions made in different disciplines and historical moments the relative function of such concepts as "self-evidence," "experience," "test," "testimony," and "textuality" in varied academic discourses and the way "rules of evidence" are themselves products of historical developments. The essays and (...)
     
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  3. Ronnie Littlejohn & Marthe Chandler (eds.) (2008). Polishing the Chinese Mirror: Essays in Honor of Henry Rosemont, Jr. Global Scholarly Publications.score: 60.0
    Edited by Marthe Chandler and Ronnie Littlejohn, this work is a collection of expository and critical essays on the work of Henry Rosemont, Jr., a prominent and influential contemporary philosopher, activist, translator, and educator in the field of Asian and Comparative Philosophy. The essays in this collection take up three major themes in Rosemont's work: his work in Chinese linguistics, his contribution to the theory of human rights, and his interest in East Asian religion. Contributions include works by the (...)
     
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  4. Hugh Chandler, Augustine's Argument for the Existence of God.score: 30.0
    Roughly speaking, Augustine claims that ‘Immutable Truth’ is superior to the human mind and, consequently a legitimate candidate for the role of God. Clearly there is such a thing as Immutable Truth. So either that is God, or there is something superior to Immutable Truth, and that superior thing is God. I spell out this argument, and offer some objections to it.
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  5. Hugh S. Chandler, Parfit on Division.score: 30.0
    Parfit’s well known book, Reasons and Persons, argues, among other things, that ‘what matters’ in regard to ‘survival’ is not personal identity but something he calls ‘relation R.’ On this basis, plus other considerations, he rejects the ‘Self-interest’ theory as to what should be our aim in life. Here I show, or try to show, that his over-all argument is seriously defective. In particular, he fails to prove that personal identity is not what matters for survival.
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  6. Hugh Chandler (2010). Wittgenstein on the Resurrection. Philosophical Investigations 33 (4):321-338.score: 30.0
    Wittgenstein probably did not believe in Christ's Resurrection (as an historical event), but he may well have believed that if he had achieved a higher level of devoutness he would believe it. His view seems to have been that devout Christians are right in holding onto this belief tenaciously even though, in fact, it's false. It's historical falsity, is compatible with its religious validity, so to speak. So far as I can see, he did not think that devout Christians should (...)
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  7. Hugh S. Chandler, Martha Nussbaum and Alcibiades.score: 30.0
    Nussbaum seems to have had a spell during which she made villains heroes (and sometimes visa versa). Thus she has argued, in effect, that Steerforth is the hero of David Copperfield, and Heathcliff the most admirable character in Wuthering Heights. Here I discuss her more or less explicit claim that Alcibiades is the hero, (and Socrates the villain) in Plato’s Symposium. -/- .
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  8. R. Boddy Clive, K. Ladyshewsky Richard & Peter Galvin (forthcoming). The Influence of Corporate Psychopaths on Corporate Social Responsibility and Organizational Commitment to Employees. Journal of Business Ethics.score: 30.0
    This study investigated whether employee perceptions of corporate social responsibility (CSR) were associated with the presence of Corporate Psychopaths in corporations. The article states that, as psychopaths are 1% of the population, it is logical to assume that every large corporation has psychopaths working within it. To differentiate these people from the common perception of psychopaths as being criminals, they have been called “Corporate Psychopaths” in this research. The article presents quantitative empirical research into the influence of Corporate Psychopaths on (...)
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  9. Hugh S. Chandler, Plantinga's Christian Epistemology.score: 30.0
    Plantinga claims that, at least for some people, the belief that God exists is ‘properly basic,’ or rather that they have properly basic beliefs that entail the existence of God. I think the underlying idea here is that we all have a properly working sensus divinitatus. This guarantees the existence of God. But, of course, if God does not exist, then our sensus divinitatus is not working properly, i.e. is not, really a sensus divinitatus. The issue as to whether there (...)
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  10. Hugh S. Chandler, Putnam on Realism.score: 30.0
    In 1974 Putnam was a ‘realist’ in regard to the physical world. By 1981 he had become a 'non-realist' in this regard. (I don’t know where he stands today.) In this paper I argue that his realism was more plausible than his non-realism. The physical world is what it is independently of any rational being’s interpretation of it.
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  11. Hugh Chandler, Contingent Apriori Truths.score: 30.0
    This paper attempts to show that Scott Soames has not given us an example of a contingent a priori truth. (What it probably shows is how confused I am on this topic.).
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  12. Hugh Chandler, Plato's Prime Mover Argument.score: 30.0
    In Laws book X Plato tries to give us conclusive evidence that there are at least two gods (one good and the other bad). The reasoning depends crucially on the idea of ‘self moving motion.’ In this paper I try to show that the ‘evidence’ is not persuasive. (Nevertheless, the idea of ‘self – moving motion is interesting.).
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  13. Jake Chandler (2012). Acceptance, Aggregation and Scoring Rules. Erkenntnis.score: 30.0
    As the ongoing literature on the paradoxes of the Lottery and the Preface reminds us, the nature of the relation between probability and rational acceptability remains far from settled. This article provides a novel perspective on the matter by exploiting a recently noted structural parallel with the problem of judgment aggregation. After offering a number of general desiderata on the relation between finite probability models and sets of accepted sentences in a Boolean sentential language, it is noted that a number (...)
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  14. Hugh S. Chandler, How Many Minds?score: 30.0
    In Analysis, Vol. 45, June 1984, George Rea published a paper attacking my claim that there could be ‘indeterminate minds'. This paper is a reply to his attack. I claim, again, that such ‘minds’ are possible – entities such that it is indeterminate whether or not these entities are people with minds. -/- .
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  15. Hugh S. Chandler (1975). Rigid Designation. Journal of Philosophy 72 (13):363-369.score: 30.0
    I have been told that for some twenty minutes after reading this paper Kripke believed I had shown that proper names could be non-rigid designators. (Then, apparently, he found a crucial error in the set-up.) I take great pride in this (alleged) fact.
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  16. Hugh S. Chandler, Fuzzy Cooky-Cutter Classes.score: 30.0
    It seems clear that second order fuzziness (indeterminacy) is possible. There can be borderline cases of borderline cases. But how about third order cases? Is there no end of degrees of borderlinehood? I offer a somewhat strange little 'language game' that seems to suggest that the ascension ends with second order cases. (The 'game' is intended to be somewhat like a simplified version of color perception.).
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  17. Hugh Chandler, Can There Be Conflict Between Conscience and Self-Love?score: 30.0
    Ethical dualists hold that we have good reason to pursue our own happiness and good reason to pursue moral goodness. It would seem that there is a potential conflict here. On the other hand there have been those who deny even the possibility of conflict, whether or not there is a God and an afterlife. Rawls seems to say, or hint, that this was Butlers’ view, and Kant, according to at least one person, argued that there cannot be conflict here. (...)
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  18. Jake Chandler (2009). Review of Franz Huber and Christoph Schmidt-Petri, Eds. Degrees of Belief. Philosophy in Review 296:422-424.score: 30.0
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  19. Hugh Chandler, Aristippus.score: 30.0
    Aristippus’ theory is, surely, one of the first genuinely ‘philosophical’ theories of ethics. He advocates pursuing immediate pleasure and avoiding immediate pain. This doctrine evoked vigorous attacks from such notables as Plato and Aristotle. Here I consider some of those early arguments.
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  20. Hugh Chandler, The Monologion Argument for the Existence and Supremacy of God.score: 30.0
    In the first two chapters of the Monologion Anselm shows, or tries to show that “Of all the things that exist, there is one that is the best, greatest and supreme.” In this paper I examine his argument.
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  21. Jake Chandler (2012). Transmission Failure, AGM-Style. Erkenntnis 78 (2):383-398.score: 30.0
    This article provides a discussion of the principle of transmission of evidential support across entailment from the perspective of belief revision theory in the AGM tradition. After outlining and briefly defending a small number of basic principles of belief change, which include a number of belief contraction analogues of the Darwiche-Pearl postulates for iterated revision, a proposal is then made concerning the connection between evidential beliefs and belief change policies in rational agents. This proposal is found to be suffcient to (...)
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  22. Hugh Chandler, Paley's 'Proof' of the Existence of God.score: 30.0
    Paley’s ‘proof’ of the existence of God, or some supposed version of it, is well known. In this paper I offer the real thing and two objections to it. One objection is Hume's, and the other is provided by Darwin.
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  23. Jake Chandler (2010). The Transmission of Support: A Bayesian Re-Analysis. Synthese.score: 30.0
    Crispin Wright’s discussion of the notion of ‘transmission-failure’ promises to have important philosophical ramifications, both in epistemology and beyond. This paper offers a precise, formal characterisation of the concept within a Bayesian framework. The interpretation given avoids the serious shortcomings of a recent alternative proposal due to Samir Okasha.
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  24. Hugh S. Chandler (1967). Excluded Middle. Journal of Philosophy 64 (24):807-814.score: 30.0
    This is a paper on borderline cases and the law of Excluded Middle. In it I try to make use of some long forgotten, but perhaps valuable, work on the topic – a bit of Hegel for instance.
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  25. Jake Chandler (forthcoming). Subjective Probabilities Need Not Be Sharp. Erkenntnis.score: 30.0
    It is well known that classical, aka ‘sharp’, Bayesian decision theory, which models belief states as single probability functions, faces a number of serious difficulties with respect to its handling of agnosticism. These difficulties have led to the increasing popularity of so-called ‘imprecise’ models of decision-making, which represent belief states as sets of probability functions. In a recent paper, however, Adam Elga has argued in favour of a putative normative principle of sequential choice that he claims to be borne out (...)
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  26. Hugh Chandler, The Problem of Good.score: 30.0
    -/- Very few (if any) people believe that the world was created, and is maintained, by a thoroughly contemptible and malicious being. Do we have good reason for our disbelief? In the first part of this paper I offer an argument for the non-existence of such a being. According to this argument there is just too much good - too may good things - in the world for the ‘malicious being’ theory to be plausible. In the second part of the (...)
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  27. Teresa Chandler (2001). Kinds of Emotion. Biology and Philosophy 16 (1).score: 30.0
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  28. Hugh Chandler, Personal God or Something Greater.score: 30.0
    Alvin Plantinga says that according to classical Muslim, Jewish, and Christian belief, God is a person. (He spells out some of the characteristics of people as such.) In this rather messy little note I try to show that some of the best, most influential, Christian theologians, prior to the Reformation, did not think that God is literally a person (in Plantinga’s sense). In particular I focus on Anselm.
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  29. Hugh S. Chandler (1993). Some Ontological Arguments. Faith and Philosophy 10 (Jan):18-180.score: 30.0
    This was an attempt to show what is wrong with Anselm’s ‘Ontological Argument’ for the existence of God. My present view is that Peter Millican has given us a similar, but much better line of attack in his “The One Fatal Flaw….” Paper.
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  30. Jake Chandler (2013). Defeat Reconsidered. Analysis 73 (1):49-51.score: 30.0
    It appears to have gone unnoticed in the literature that Pollock's widely endorsed analysis of evidential defeat entails a remarkably strong symmetry principle, according to which, for any three propositions D, E and H, if both E and D provide a reason to believe H, then D is a defeater for E's support for H if and only if, in turn, E is a defeater for D's support for H. After illustrating the counterintuitiveness of this constraint, a simple, more suitable, (...)
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  31. Jake Chandler & Adam Rieger (2011). Self-Respect Regained. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 111 (2pt2):311-318.score: 30.0
    In a recent article, David Christensen casts aspersions on a restricted version of van Fraassen's Reflection principle, which he dubs ‘Self-Respect’(sr). Rejecting two possible arguments for sr, he concludes that the principle does not constitute a requirement of rationality. In this paper we argue that not only has Christensen failed to make a case against the aforementioned arguments, but that considerations pertaining to Moore's paradox indicate that sr, or at the very least a mild weakening thereof, is indeed a plausible (...)
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  32. Jake Chandler (2010). The Lottery Paradox Generalized? British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 61 (3):667-679.score: 30.0
    In a recent article, Douven and Williamson offer both (i) a rebuttal of various recent suggested sufficient conditions for rational acceptability and (ii) an alleged ‘generalization’ of this rebuttal, which, they claim, tells against a much broader class of potential suggestions. However, not only is the result mentioned in (ii) not a generalization of the findings referred to in (i), but in contrast to the latter, it fails to have the probative force advertised. Their paper does however, if unwittingly, bring (...)
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  33. Douglas McKnight & Prentice Chandler (2012). The Complicated Conversation of Class and Race in Social and Curricular Analysis: An Examination of Pierre Bourdieu's Interpretative Framework in Relation to Race. Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (5-6):74-97.score: 30.0
    As a means to challenge and diminish the hold of mainstream curriculum's claim of being a colorblind, politically neutral text, we will address two particular features that partially, though significantly, constitute the hidden curriculum in the United States—race and class—historically studied as separate social issues. Race and class have been embedded within the institutional curriculum from the beginning in the US; though rarely acknowledged as intertwined issues. We illustrate how the theoretical and interpretive structure of French philosopher and sociologist Pierre (...)
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  34. Hugh S. Chandler (1969). Shoemaker's Arguments Against Locke. Philosophical Quarterly 19 (76):263-265.score: 30.0
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  35. Hugh S. Chandler (1971). Constitutivity and Identity. Noûs 5 (3):313-319.score: 30.0
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  36. John H. Chandler (2010). Religious Reasons and Public Policy. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 91 (2):137-152.score: 30.0
    Most Liberals hold that public policies ought always be justifiable by reference to public reasons; that citizens should also refrain from advocacy in the absence of such reasons; and that exclusively religious reasons cannot be public reasons. This is challenged by Paul Weithman and Christopher Eberle. Both argue that basic liberal principles permit citizens in some circumstances to advance exclusively religious reasons, and in particular that Rawls's notions of reasonableness (Weithman) and the strains of commitment (Eberle) can be used in (...)
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  37. Hugh S. Chandler (1986). Sources of Essence. Midwest Studies in Philosophy 11 (1):379-389.score: 30.0
    Almost everyone believes in modality de dicto. Necessarily, puppies are young dogs. The necessity here derives from the meaning of “puppy.” The term means young dog. Essentialism is belief in a more exotic sort of modality, one that does not derive from meaning in this direct and simple way. In the first two sections of this paper, I consider indexical and nonindexical kind terms and the sort of modality applicable to each. In the last section, I consider individuals and proper (...)
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  38. John H. Chandler (1987). Androcentric Science? The Science Question in Feminism. Inquiry 30 (3):317 – 332.score: 30.0
  39. John H. Chandler (1973). Act-Utilitarianism and Collective Action. Ethics 84 (1):78-85.score: 30.0
  40. John H. Chandler (1990). Killing and Letting Die - Putting the Debate in Context. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 68 (4):420 – 431.score: 30.0
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  41. Hugh S. Chandler (2007). Platonistic and Disenchanting Theories of Ethics. Peter Lang.score: 30.0
    In this book I try to defend a traditional kind of dualism in regard to ethical theory. The idea is that Conscience and Self-love offer distinct but rational and reasonable objectives in our decision-making. When they conflict, pure reason does not resolve the issue. With this picture in mind, I argue that a kind of Platonistic realism in regard to morality is (still) intellectually permissible – has not yet been defeated. That is to say, it is permissible to hold that (...)
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  42. Jerry L. R. Chandler (2009). Algebraic Biology: Creating Invariant Binding Relations for Biochemical and Biological Categories. Axiomathes 19 (3).score: 30.0
    The desire to understand the mathematics of living systems is increasing. The widely held presupposition that the mathematics developed for modeling of physical systems as continuous functions can be extended to the discrete chemical reactions of genetic systems is viewed with skepticism. The skepticism is grounded in the issue of scientific invariance and the role of the International System of Units in representing the realities of the apodictic sciences. Various formal logics contribute to the theories of biochemistry and molecular biology (...)
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  43. John Chandler (1985). Divine Command Theories and the Appeal to Love. American Philosophical Quarterly 22 (3):231 - 239.score: 30.0
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  44. Jennifer D. Chandler & John L. Graham (2010). Relationship-Oriented Cultures, Corruption, and International Marketing Success. Journal of Business Ethics 92 (2).score: 30.0
    This study explores the general problems associated with marketing across international markets and focuses specifically on the role of corruption in deterring international marketing success. The authors do this by introducing a broader conceptualization of corruption. The dimensions of corruption and their importance in explaining the exporters’ successes in international markets are developed empirically. Partial Least Squares formative indicators are used in a comprehensive model including consumer resources (wealth and information resources), physical distance (kilometers and time zones), and cultural distance (...)
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  45. Jake Chandler (2007). Solving the Tacking Problem with Contrast Classes. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 58 (3):489 - 502.score: 30.0
    The traditional Bayesian qualitative account of evidential support (TB) takes assertions of the form ‘E evidentially supports H’ to affirm the existence of a two-place relation of evidential support between E and H. The analysans given for this relation is C(H,E)=def Pr(H|E) > Pr(H). Now it is well known that when a hypothesisHentails evidence E, not only is it the case that C(H,E), but it is also the case that C(H&X,E) for any arbitrary X. There is a widespread feeling that (...)
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  46. Hugh S. Chandler (1975). Hedonism. American Philosophical Quarterly 12 (3):223-233.score: 30.0
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  47. John Chandler (1984). Is the Divine Command Theory Defensible? Religious Studies 20 (3):443 - 452.score: 30.0
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  48. Hugh S. Chandler (1966). Three Kinds of Classses. American Philosophical Quarterly 3 (Jan):77-188.score: 30.0
    This is a boiled down version of my doctoral dissertation. Ryle wouldn’t publish it, claiming that it is like ‘a well sharpened pencil that no one will ever use.’ I guess he turned to be right. Nevertheless I think it was, and is, a good paper.
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  49. Jake Chandler (2010). Contrastive Support: Some Competing Accounts. Synthese:1-10.score: 30.0
    I outline four competing probabilistic accounts of contrastive evidential support and consider various considerations that might help arbitrate between these. The upshot of the discussion is that the so-called ‘Law of Likelihood’ is to be preferred to any of the alternatives considered.
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  50. John H. Chandler (1970). Incorrigibity and Classification. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 48 (May):101-6.score: 30.0
  51. Hugh S. Chandler (1976). Plantinga and the Contingently Possible. Analysis 36 (2).score: 30.0
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  52. Sir Geoffrey Chandler (1993). Business and Human Rights. Business Ethics 2 (2):47–49.score: 30.0
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  53. Jennifer A. Chandler (2013). Autonomy and the Unintended Legal Consequences of Emerging Neurotherapies. Neuroethics 6 (2):249-263.score: 30.0
    One of the ethical issues that has been raised recently regarding emerging neurotherapies is that people will be coerced explicitly or implicitly in the workplace or in schools to take cognitive enhancing drugs. This article builds on this discussion by showing how the law may pressure people to adopt emerging neurotherapies. It focuses on a range of private law doctrines that, unlike the criminal law, do not come up very often in neuroethical discussions. Three doctrines—the doctrine of mitigation, the standard (...)
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  54. Hugh S. Chandler (1971). A Note in Defense of Personal Materialism. Philosophical Studies 22 (4):61 - 64.score: 30.0
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  55. Hugh Chandler (1985). Indeterminate People. Analysis 45 (3):141-145.score: 30.0
    Here is the paper that was attacked by George Rea in his “How many minds…?” paper. Has this issue been resolved? Can there be entities such that there is no definite answer to the question “Are there 13 minds at work here, or 14?” -/- .
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  56. Jennifer Chandler (2010). Stem Cell Tourism: Doctors' Duties to Minors and Other Incompetent Patients. American Journal of Bioethics 10 (5):27-28.score: 30.0
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  57. David Chandler (2000). Will There Be a Trial for the Khmer Rouge? Ethics and International Affairs 14 (1):67–82.score: 30.0
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  58. Hugh S. Chandler (1985). Book Review:God, Free Will, and Morality. Robert J. Richman. [REVIEW] Ethics 95 (3):743-.score: 30.0
  59. Marthe Chandler (1988). Models of Voting Behavior in Survey Research. Synthese 76 (1):25 - 48.score: 30.0
    This paper examines two models used in survey research to explain voting behavior. Although the models rely on the same data they make radically different predictions about the political future. Nevertheless, both models may be more or less correct. The models represent interacting systems and it may be impossible to get a super model of the interactions between their elements. In the natural sciences causal relationships between the elements of interacting models can often be ignored. Because voting behavior models describe (...)
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  60. Geoffrey Chandler (1998). Oil Companies and Human Rights. Business Ethics 7 (2):69–72.score: 30.0
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  61. Jake Chandler & Victoria Harrison (eds.) (2012). Probability in the Philosophy of Religion. OUP Oxford.score: 30.0
    At a time in which probability theory is exerting an unprecedented influence on epistemology and philosophy of science, promising to deliver an exact and unified foundation for the philosophy of rational inference and decision-making, it is worth remembering that the philosophy of religion has long proven to be an extremely fertile ground for the application of probabilistic thinking to traditional epistemological debates. This volume brings together original contributions from twelve contemporary researchers, both established and emerging, to offer a representative sample (...)
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  62. Marthe Chandler (1982). The Logic of 'Unless'. Philosophical Studies 41 (3):383 - 405.score: 30.0
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  63. Hugh S. Chandler (1978). What is Wrong with the Addition of an Alternate? Philosophical Quarterly 28 (110):31-36.score: 30.0
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  64. Marthe Chandler (2012). The Chinese Aesthetic Tradition (Review). Philosophy East and West 62 (1):147-150.score: 30.0
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  65. Sir Geoffrey Chandler (1996). Book Review Should You Be Starting From Here? [REVIEW] Business Ethics 5 (1):60–62.score: 30.0
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  66. Hugh S. Chandler (1987). Cook's Reductionis. Philosophia 17 (4):509-515.score: 30.0
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  67. Marthe Chandler (2003). "Meno" and "Mencius:" Two Philosophical Dramas. Philosophy East and West 53 (3):367-398.score: 30.0
    The conversations between Meno and Socrates and between Mencius and King Xuan are philosophical dramas whose "plots" are intellectual arguments. Although both texts present historical characters at particular times in their lives, the texts were written some years after the events they describe by disciples of Socrates and Mencius. The authors had a number of motives: they wanted to represent what the characters thought and said, to explain the philosophical theories underlying the dramatic plots, and to justify the failure of (...)
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  68. Hugh S. Chandler (1968). Persons and Predicability. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 46 (2):112 – 116.score: 30.0
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  69. John H. Chandler (1979). Richard Klein: Constantius II. Und Die Christliche Kirche. (Impulse der Forschung, 26.) Pp. Xvii + 321. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1977. Paper, DM. 96. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 29 (02):328-329.score: 30.0
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  70. Hugh Chandler (1993). Some Ontological Arguments. Faith and Philosophy 10 (1):18-32.score: 30.0
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  71. John H. Chandler (1990). Feminism and Epistemology. Metaphilosophy 21 (4):367-381.score: 30.0
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  72. Marthe Atwater Chandler (1996). Book Review:Philosophy of Social Science. Michael Root. [REVIEW] Ethics 106 (3):655-.score: 30.0
  73. Marthe Chandler (1990). Attitudes, Leprechauns and Neutrinos: The Ontology of Behavioral Science. Philosophical Studies 60 (1-2):5 - 17.score: 30.0
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  74. Chris Chandler, Jeff Brooks, Ryan Mulvaney & W. Pitt Derryberry (2009). Addressing the Relationships Among Moral Judgment Development, Authenticity, Nonprejudice, and Volunteerism. Ethics and Behavior 19 (3):201-217.score: 30.0
    This study addresses how moral judgment development, authenticity, and nonprejudice account for variance in scores pertaining to various motivational functions underlying volunteerism in order to clarify certain problems associated with previous research that has considered such relationships. In the study, 127 participants completed measurements that pertain to these constructs. Correlations revealed that moral judgment had a negligible relationship with both authenticity and nonprejudice, thereby affirming that the former construct is distinct from the latter two. Linear regression analyses supported that moral (...)
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  75. Hugh S. Chandler (1993). Divine Intervention and the Origin of Life. Faith and Philosophy 10 (2):pp. 259-161.score: 30.0
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  76. Hugh S. Chandler (1966). Essence and Accident. Analysis 6 (6):77-81.score: 30.0
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  77. Albert R. Chandler (1920). The Nature of Esthetic Objectivity. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 17 (23):632-635.score: 30.0
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  78. Robert W. Chandler (1954). A Revised Conception of Ethical Analysis. Journal of Philosophy 51 (16):464-474.score: 30.0
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  79. Jake Chandler (2013). Contrastive Confirmation: Some Competing Accounts. Synthese 190 (1):129-138.score: 30.0
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  80. John H. Chandler (1985). Clark on God's Law and Morality. Philosophical Quarterly 35 (138):87-90.score: 30.0
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  81. Hugh S. Chandler (1970). Defending Continuants. Noûs 4 (3):279-283.score: 30.0
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  82. Hugh S. Chandler (1984). Theseus' Clothes-Pin. Analysis 44 (2):55 - 58.score: 30.0
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  83. Hugh S. Chandler (1968). Logical Continuity. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 9 (4):325-328.score: 30.0
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  84. Hugh S. Chandler (1987). Cartesian Semantics. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (1):63-70.score: 30.0
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  85. R. E. Chandler (2013). Exploiting Strength, Discounting Weakness: Combining Information From Multiple Climate Simulators. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A 371 (1991):20120388-20120388.score: 30.0
    This paper presents and analyses a statistical framework for combining projections of future climate from different climate simulators. The framework recognizes explicitly that all currently available simulators are imperfect; that they do not span the full range of possible decisions on the part of the climate modelling community; and that individual simulators have strengths and weaknesses. Information from individual simulators is automatically weighted, alongside that from historical observations and from prior knowledge. The weights for a simulator depend on its internal (...)
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  86. David Chandler (2007). Potemkin Sovereignty: Statehood Without Politics in the New World Order. The Monist 90 (1):86-105.score: 30.0
  87. C. Chandler (2009). Philodemus (V.) Tsouna The Ethics of Philodemus. Pp. Xiv + 350. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. Cased, £40. ISBN: 978-0-19-929217-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 59 (02):411-.score: 30.0
  88. Hugh S. Chandler (1968). Taylor's Incompatibility Argument. Dialogue 7 (02):273-277.score: 30.0
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  89. Albert R. Chandler (1942). The Problem of a Philosophical Dictionary. Philosophical Review 51 (3):304-312.score: 30.0
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  90. Hugh S. Chandler (1969). Butler on Bodies. American Philosophical Quarterly 6 (1):84 - 87.score: 30.0
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  91. Hugh S. Chandler (1966). -≫Three Kinds of Classes. American Philosophical Quarterly 3 (No. 1):77-81.score: 30.0
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  92. Albert R. Chandler (1947). List of Works Translated Under the Russian Translation Project. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 7 (3):497-502.score: 30.0
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  93. John Henry Chandler (1996). Mandatory Retirement and Justice. Social Theory and Practice 22 (1):35-46.score: 30.0
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  94. Albert Richard Chandler (1979). A Bibliography of Psychological and Experimental Aesthetics, 1864-1937. Ams Press.score: 30.0
     
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  95. Keith A. Chandler (2002). Artificial Intelligence and Artificial Consciousness. Philosophia 31 (1):32-46.score: 30.0
     
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