Results for 'David W. Mattausch'

999 found
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  1.  45
    Ethics of Spying: A Reader for the Intelligence Professional, vol. I.Joel H. Rosenthal, J. E. Drexel Godfrey, R. V. Jones, Arthur S. Hulnick, David W. Mattausch, Kent Pekel, Tony Pfaff, John P. Langan, John B. Chomeau, Anne C. Rudolph, Fritz Allhoff, Michael Skerker, Robert M. Gates, Andrew Wilkie, James Ernest Roscoe & Lincoln P. Bloomfield Jr (eds.) - 2006 - Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press.
    This is the first book to offer the best essays, articles, and speeches on ethics and intelligence that demonstrate the complex moral dilemmas in intelligence collection, analysis, and operations. Some are recently declassified and never before published, and all are written by authors whose backgrounds are as varied as their insights, including Robert M. Gates, former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency; John P. Langan, the Joseph Cardinal Bernardin Professor of Catholic Social Thought at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown (...)
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  2.  27
    The human body and the law: a medico-legal study.David W. Meyers - 2006 - New Brunswick: Aldine Transaction.
    Thus, Meyers provides a valuable account, not only of current medical attitudes, but also of relevant case and statute law as it stands at present.
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  3.  12
    An Introduction to Hilbert Space and Quantum Logic.David W. Cohen & David William Cohen - 1989 - Springer.
    Historically, nonclassical physics developed in three stages. First came a collection of ad hoc assumptions and then a cookbook of equations known as "quantum mechanics". The equations and their philosophical underpinnings were then collected into a model based on the mathematics of Hilbert space. From the Hilbert space model came the abstaction of "quantum logics". This book explores all three stages, but not in historical order. Instead, in an effort to illustrate how physics and abstract mathematics influence each other we (...)
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  4.  32
    Critical Rationalism: A Restatement and Defence.David W. Miller - 1994 - Open Court.
    David Miller elegantly and provocatively reformulates critical rationalism—the revolutionary approach to epistemology advocated by Karl Popper—by answering its most important critics. He argues for an approach to rationality freed from the debilitating authoritarian dependence on reasons and justification. "Miller presents a particularly useful and stimulating account of critical rationalism. His work is both interesting and controversial... of interest to anyone with concerns in epistemology or the philosophy of science." —Canadian Philosophical Reviews.
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  5.  15
    Purpose and Cognition: Edward Tolman and the Transformation of American Psychology.David W. Carroll - 2017 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book discusses the development of Edward Tolman's purposive behaviourism from the 1920s to the 1950s, highlighting the tension between his references to cognitive processes and the dominant behaviourist trends. It shows how Tolman incorporated concepts from European scholars, including Egon Brunswik and the Gestalt psychologists, to justify a more purposive form of behaviourism and how the theory evolved in response to the criticisms of his contemporaries. The manuscript also discusses Tolman's political activities, culminating in his role in the California (...)
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  6. The memory boom: why and why now.David W. Blight - 2009 - In Pascal Boyer & James Wertsch (eds.), Memory in Mind and Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 238--251.
     
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  7.  21
    Out of Error: Further Essays on Critical Rationalism.David W. Miller - 2006 - Ashgate Publishing.
    David Miller is the foremost exponent of the purist critical rationalist doctrine and here presents his mature views, discussing the role that logic and argument play in the growth of knowledge, criticizing the common understanding of argument as an instrument of justification, persuasion or discovery and instead advocating the critical rationalist view that only criticism matters. Miller patiently and thoroughly undoes the damage done by those writers who attack critical rationalism by invoking the sterile mythology of induction and justification (...)
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  8. Caring, identification, and agency.David W. Shoemaker - 2003 - Ethics 114 (1):88-118.
    This paper articulates and defends a noncognitive, care-based view of identification, of what privileged psychic subset provides the source of self-determination in actions and attitudes. The author provides an extended analysis of "caring," and then applies it to debates between Frankfurtians, on the one hand, and Watsonians, on the other, about the nature of identification, then defends the view against objections.
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  9.  48
    Transposable elements and an epigenetic basis for punctuated equilibria.David W. Zeh, Jeanne A. Zeh & Yoichi Ishida - 2009 - Bioessays 31 (7):715-726.
    Evolution is frequently concentrated in bursts of rapid morphological change and speciation followed by long‐term stasis. We propose that this pattern of punctuated equilibria results from an evolutionary tug‐of‐war between host genomes and transposable elements (TEs) mediated through the epigenome. According to this hypothesis, epigenetic regulatory mechanisms (RNA interference, DNA methylation and histone modifications) maintain stasis by suppressing TE mobilization. However, physiological stress, induced by climate change or invasion of new habitats, disrupts epigenetic regulation and unleashes TEs. With their capacity (...)
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  10. Personal identity and practical concerns.David W. Shoemaker - 2007 - Mind 116 (462):317-357.
    Many philosophers have taken there to be an important relation between personal identity and several of our practical concerns (among them moral responsibility, compensation, and self-concern). I articulate four natural methodological assumptions made by those wanting to construct a theory of the relation between identity and practical concerns, and I point out powerful objections to each assumption, objections constituting serious methodological obstacles to the overall project. I then attempt to offer replies to each general objection in a way that leaves (...)
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  11.  14
    Reflections on Guide to Personal Knowledge.David W. Agler - 2023 - Tradition and Discovery (2):11-17.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is the first paragraph: Paksi and Héder’s Guide to Personal Knowledge (hereafter GPK and Guide) is, as the title suggests, a guide of the most important and original ideas of Michael Polanyi’s book Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy (1958, hereafter PK). Is a guide to Personal Knowledge needed? I think the answer is a resounding “yes” for many new readers. To see why, let’s briefly review two common complaints about PK.
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  12. Psychopathy, Responsibility, and the Moral/Conventional Distinction.David W. Shoemaker - 2011 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 49 (s1):99-124.
    In this paper, I attempt to show that the moral/conventional distinction simply cannot bear the sort of weight many theorists have placed on it for determining the moral and criminal responsibility of psychopaths. After revealing the fractured nature of the distinction, I go on to suggest how one aspect of it may remain relevant—in a way that has previously been unappreciated—to discussions of the responsibility of psychopaths. In particular, after offering an alternative explanation of the available data on psychopaths and (...)
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  13.  29
    Book Symposium: David W. Johnson, Watsuji on Nature.David W. Johnson, Bernard Stevens, Augustin Berque, Hideki Mine & Hans Peter Liederbach - 2021 - European Journal of Japanese Philosophy 6:133–215.
    [Open access] In this book symposium the author takes up questions from phenomenology, hermeneutics, ethical theory, and intellectual history raised by a group of scholarly interlocutors from a range of backgrounds. In the course of engaging with these issues, he discusses, inter alia, McDowell’s realism, Jonathon Lear’s work on the end of a world, Michael Oakeshott’s view of selfhood, Heidegger’s conception of Jemeinigkeit, Uexküll’s notion of Umwelt, and Gadamer’s hermeneutic conception of truth.
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  14.  19
    Pragmatism and Vagueness: The Venetian Lectures; Edited by Giovanni Tuzet by Claudine Tiercelin.David W. Agler - 2020 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 55 (4):458-463.
    Take a hypothetical sequence of human beings ordered by height from tallest to shortest. Make sure there is no more than a difference of a millimeter between each person and make sure the tallest person is clearly tall and the shortest person is clearly not tall. Now consider the following argument: P1 A person of height n is tall ; P2 For any height n, if n is tall, then n–1mm is tall ; C Therefore, a person of height n (...)
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  15.  34
    Symbolic Logic: Syntax, Semantics, and Proof.David W. Agler - 2012 - Lanham, MD, USA: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Brimming with visual examples of concepts, derivation rules, and proof strategies, this introductory text is ideal for students with no previous experience in logic. Students will learn translation both from formal language into English and from English into formal language; how to use truth trees and truth tables to test propositions for logical properties; and how to construct and strategically use derivation rules in proofs.
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  16.  31
    The Decline from Authority: Kierkegaard on Intellectual Sin.David W. Aiken - 1993 - International Philosophical Quarterly 33 (1):21-35.
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  17.  14
    Reproductive mode and speciation: the viviparity‐driven conflict hypothesis.David W. Zeh & Jeanne A. Zeh - 2000 - Bioessays 22 (10):938-946.
    In birds and frogs, species pairs retain the capacity to produce viable hybrids for tens of millions of years, an order of magnitude longer than mammals. What accounts for these differences in relative rates of pre- and postzygotic isolation? We propose that reproductive mode is a critically important but previously overlooked factor in the speciation process. Viviparity creates a post-fertilization arena for genomic conflicts absent in egg-laying species. With viviparity, conflict can arise between: mothers and embryos; sibling embryos in the (...)
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  18.  6
    Facts and Values.David W. Ardagh - unknown
    Since the advent in the early thirties of logical positivism much attention has been focused upon the nature of ethics.
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  19. Helping People Forgive.David W. Augsburger - 1996
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  20.  9
    Epistemologies of rape and revelation.David W. Bade - 2021 - [Hong Kong]: The International Association for the Integrational Study of Language and Communication. Edited by Adrian Pablé.
  21.  20
    Watsuji on nature: Japanese philosophy in the wake of Heidegger.David W. Johnson - 2019 - Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.
    "In the first study of its kind, David W. Johnson's "Watsuji on Nature" reconstructs the astonishing philosophy of nature of Watsuji Tetsurō (1889-1960), situating it in relation both to his reception of the thought of Heidegger and to his renewal of core ontological positions in classical Confucian and Buddhist philosophy. Johnson shows that for Watsuji we have our being in the lived experience of nature, one in which nature and culture compose a tightly interwoven texture called "fūdo". By fully (...)
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  22. Enlightenment Aberrations: Error and Revolution in France.David W. Bates, Pierre Birnbaum, M. B. Debevoise, Sudhir Hazareesingh & Darrin M. Mcmahon - 2003 - Political Theory 31 (2):295-301.
     
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  23. Virtue in Montesqueiu.David W. Carrithers - 2021 - In Keegan Callanan & Sharon R. Krause (eds.), The Cambridge companion to Montesquieu. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  24.  24
    Buddhist perspectives on weapons of mass destruction.David W. Chappell - 2004 - In Sohail H. Hashmi & Steven Lee (eds.), Ethics and Weapons of Mass Destruction: Religious and Secular Perspectives. Cambridge University Press. pp. 13--213.
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  25.  22
    Buddhist responses to religious pluralism: what are the ethical issues?David W. Chappell - 1991 - In Charles Wei-Hsun Fu & Sandra A. Wawrytko (eds.), Buddhist Ethics and Modern Society: An International Symposium. Greenwood Press. pp. 355--370.
  26.  7
    Building the Moral Community: Radical Naturalism and Emergence.David W. Chambers - 2016 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    Building the Moral Community is an exploration of naturalistic ethics, offering a modified classical analytic philosophy exploration of morality that is consistent with emerging thinking in psychology, neurobiology, game theory, and self-adjusting systems.
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  27.  8
    Conflict and Harmony.David W. Chappell - 1995 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 15:89-136.
  28.  10
    Chinese Buddhism and Christianity.David W. Chappell - 1993 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 13:59-83.
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  29.  7
    Dialogue Issues in Japan.David W. Chappell - 1994 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 14:11-32.
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  30.  11
    Ecological crisis [Christian and Buddhist responses].David W. Chappell - 1992 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 12:161-178.
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  31.  8
    Faith and Transformation.David W. Chappell - 1994 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 14:33-69.
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  32.  9
    Foundations for Dialogue.David W. Chappell - 1993 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 13:85-117.
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  33.  5
    Fourth International Buddhist-Christian Conference.David W. Chappell - 1993 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 13:119-145.
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  34.  19
    Frederick John Streng, 1933-1993.David W. Chappell - 1994 - Philosophy East and West 44 (2):215-217.
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  35.  8
    Interreligious encounter in Asian societies.David W. Chappell - 1992 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 12:5-79.
  36.  22
    Japanese Buddhist Death and Dying.David W. Chappell - 1995 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 15:3-85.
  37.  6
    Joint Practice.David W. Chappell - 1994 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 14:137-196.
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  38.  7
    Monasticism East and West.David W. Chappell - 1992 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 12:123-158.
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  39.  12
    Pure Land Buddhism in America.David W. Chappell - 1990 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 10:143-186.
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  40.  13
    Religious accommodation.David W. Chappell - 1990 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 10:5-84.
  41. Remembering Fred Streng: Frederick John Streng, 1933-1993.David W. Chappell - 1994 - Philosophy East and West 44 (2).
     
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  42.  12
    Responses to the rejoinder of Masao Abe.David W. Chappell - 1993 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 13:205-231.
  43.  13
    Salvation and nirvana.David W. Chappell - 1992 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 12:181-199.
  44.  38
    Searching for a Mahāyāna Social Ethic.David W. Chappell - 1996 - Journal of Religious Ethics 24 (2):351 - 375.
    Mahāyāna ethics has a threefold emphasis: avoiding all evil, cultivating good, and saving all beings. Most Western studies of Buddhist ethics have used Pali and Sanskrit sources to examine the first two components, which are based on monastic codes for avoiding wrong doing and attain- ing virtue. Among the few studies of the third category, which includes Buddhist social ethics, East Asian Mahāyāna materials have been sadly lacking despite the Mahāyāna rhetoric about saving all beings. To correct this deficiency, this (...)
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  45. The 1994 European Buddhist-Christian Symposium.David W. Chappell - forthcoming - Buddhist-Christian Studies.
     
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  46.  7
    Theological encounter II.David W. Chappell - 1987 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 7:5-148.
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  47.  17
    Zen Buddhism and Western Thought.David W. Chappell - 1989 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 9:5-60.
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  48. African Ubuntu Philosophy and Global Management.David W. Lutz - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (S3):313-328.
    In our age of globalization, we need a theory of global management consistent with our common human nature. The place to begin in developing such a theory is the philosophy of traditional cultures. The article focuses on African philosophy and its fruitfulness for contributing to a theory of management consistent with African traditional cultures. It also looks briefly at the Confucian and Platonic-Aristotelian traditions and notes points of agreement with African traditions. It concludes that the needed theory of global management (...)
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  49.  88
    The Arrogance of Humanism.David W. Ehrenfeld - 1978 - New York: Oup Usa.
    Attacks nothing less than the currently prevailing worldphilosophy--humanism, which the author feels is exceedingly dangerous in itshidden assumptions.
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  50.  14
    Effects of meaningfulness of structurally similar CVSs on stimulus generalization of eyelid closure.David W. Abbott - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (4):511.
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