Results for 'Don E. Marietta Jr'

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  1.  48
    World Views and Moral Decisions: A Reply to Tom Regan.Don E. Marietta Jr - 1980 - Environmental Ethics 2 (4):369-371.
    Tom Regan criticizes my thesis that obligation toward the environment is grounded in a world view and thereby has a moral overridingness which mere interests and desires do not have. He holds that my approach is too subjectivistic. I counter, first, by explaining that phenomenology, which I use in my analysis of moral obligation, is not subjectivistic in the way emotivism or prescriptivism inethics is subjectivistic. Second, I argue that world views are products of learning and experience of one shared (...)
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  2.  62
    Ethical Holism and Individuals.Don E. Marietta Jr - 1988 - Environmental Ethics 10 (3):251-258.
    Environmental holism has been accused of being totalitarian because it subsumes the interests and rights of individuals under the good of the whole biosphere, thus rejecting humanistic ethics. Whether this is true depends on the type of holism in question. Only an extreme form of holism leads to this totalitarian approach, and that type of holism should be rejected, not alone because it leads to unacceptable practices, but because it is too abstract and reductionistic to be an adequate basis for (...)
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  3. World Views and Moral Decisions: A Reply to Tom Regan.Don E. Marietta Jr - 1980 - Environmental Ethics 2 (4):369-371.
    Tom Regan criticizes my thesis that obligation toward the environment is grounded in a world view and thereby has a moral overridingness which mere interests and desires do not have. He holds that my approach is too subjectivistic. I counter, first, by explaining that phenomenology, which I use in my analysis of moral obligation, is not subjectivistic in the way emotivism or prescriptivism inethics is subjectivistic. Second, I argue that world views are products of learning and experience of one shared (...)
     
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  4. People, Penguins, and Plastic Trees. [REVIEW]Don E. Marietta Jr - 1987 - Environmental Ethics 9 (4):373-375.
     
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  5.  54
    On Using People.Don E. Marietta Jr - 1972 - Ethics 82 (3):232-238.
  6. The Alleged Oddness of Ethical Egoism.Don E. Marietta Jr - 1977 - Journal of Thought 77.
     
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  7.  5
    Introduction to Ancient Philosophy.Don Marietta Jr - 1998 - Routledge.
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  8. Environmental Philosophy and Environmental Activism.Don E. Marietta, Lester Embree, Lloyd C. Irland & Peter C. List - 1996 - Environmental Values 5 (1):93-94.
     
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  9.  19
    Beyond Certainty: A Phenomenological Approach to Moral Reflection.Don E. Marietta - 2004 - Lexington Books.
    A unique study, Beyond Certainty is a phenomenological approach to the connection between factual knowledge and moral judgment. Marietta holds logical certainty to be unnecessary for moral decision-making. In point of fact, logical certainty about our moral judgments, according to the author, is impossible. Key dilemmas in recent moral theory are caught within this impasse represented through an "is/ought" dichotomy. Marietta trumps this impasse through a return to concrete reflection on our most primal consciousness of the world.
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  10. For People and the Planet.Don E. Marietta - 1998 - Environmental Values 7 (4):485-487.
     
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  11.  28
    Books in review.Don E. Marietta - 1972 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 3 (4):257-258.
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  12.  20
    Environmental Philosophy and Environmental Activism.Don E. Marietta, Lester Embree & Lester E. Embree (eds.) - 1995 - Rowman & Littlefield.
    This collection of new essays by eleven distinguished environmental philosophers addresses two main questions: first, whether environmental philosophy and ethics should be seen as a form of applied philosophy or as something else, perhaps best called practical philosophy; and second, how environmental philosophy is practiced in human life, especially in the lives of academics.
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  13.  34
    Is talk of God talk of anything?Don E. Marietta - 1973 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 4 (3):187 - 195.
  14. Pluralism in environmental ethics.Don E. Marietta - 1993 - Topoi 12 (1):69-80.
    A number of recent books and articles have claimed that environmental ethics should be pluralistic; in response to these J. Baird Callicott has written a strong attack upon moral pluralism. This paper will survey briefly some of the recent work advocating moral pluralism and examine Callicott's defense of moral monism. Then it will examine the justification for building an ethical system upon more than one fundamental source of moral insight. The moral system which succeeds in taking into account all that (...)
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  15.  34
    Philosophy of Sexuality.Don E. Marietta - 1996 - M.E. Sharpe.
    1 Philosophers on Sexuality Ancient Philosophy A positive and constructive philosophy of sexuality is largely a product of the twentieth century. ...
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  16.  44
    Religious models and ecological decision making.Don E. Marietta - 1977 - Zygon 12 (2):151-166.
  17.  32
    Thoughts on the taxonomy and semantics of value terms.Don E. Marietta - 1991 - Journal of Value Inquiry 25 (1):43-53.
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  18.  12
    The Green Halo: A Bird’s-Eye View of Ecological Ethics. [REVIEW]Don Marietta Jr - 2001 - Environmental Ethics 23 (2):203-205.
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  19. Don E. Marietta Jr. & Lester Embree (eds). Environmental Philosophy and Environmental Activism.J. Teichman - 1997 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 14:90-91.
     
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  20.  23
    Don E. Marietta, Jr. Beyond Certainty: A Phenomenological Approach to Moral Reflection. [REVIEW]Timothy Casey - 2005 - Modern Schoolman 83 (1):79-80.
  21.  25
    Virtue in Positive Psychology.Everett L. Worthington Jr, Caroline Lavelock, Daryl R. Van, David J. Jennings Tongeren, Aubrey L. Gartner Ii, E. Davis Don & Joshua N. Hook - 2014 - In Kevin Timpe & Craig Boyd (eds.), Virtues and Their Vices. Oxford University Press.
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  22.  49
    Book Review Section 1. [REVIEW]Sylvester Kohut Jr, Nicholas C. Polos, Lois M. R. Louden, Cyril E. Griffith, Beverly Lindsay, Don T. Martin, M. M. Chambers, Joseph W. Newman, Harvey Neufeldt, Elizabeth Ihle, David C. Williams, James E. Christensen & J. Theodore Klein - 1978 - Educational Studies 9 (3):307-328.
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  23.  50
    Book Reviews Section 3.Roger R. Woock, Howard K. Macauley Jr, John M. Beck, Janice F. Weaver, Patti Mcgill Peterson, Stanley L. Goldstein, A. Richard King, Don E. Post, Faustine C. Jones, Edward H. Berman, Thomas O. Monahan, William R. Hazard, J. Estill Alexander, William D. Page, Daniel S. Parkinson, Richard O. Dalbey, Frances J. Nesmith, William Rosenfield, Verne Keenan, Robert Girvan & Robert Gallacher - 1973 - Educational Studies 4 (2):84-99.
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  24.  17
    Stylistics and Synonymity.E. D. Hirsch Jr - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 1 (3):559-579.
    Among philosophers as well as linguists the battle is still joined between those who view the correlation between meaning and linguistic form as strictly determined by convention and those who argue for the essential indeterminacy of the relationship between meaning and form.1 Plato's Cratylus aside, the philosphical dialogue that forms the locus classicus of this debate is the following: "You're holding it upside down!" Alice interrupted. "To be sure I was!" Humpty Dumpty said gaily, as she turned it round for (...)
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  25.  28
    Don't Take Unnecessary Chances!Henry E. Kyburg Jr - 2002 - Synthese 132 (1/2):9 - 26.
    The dominant argument for the introduction of propensities or chances as an interpretation of probability depends on the difficulty of accounting for single case probabilities. We argue that in almost all cases, the "single case" application of probability can be accounted for otherwise. "Propensities" are needed only in theoretical contexts, and even there applications of probability need only depend on propensities indirectly.
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  26.  41
    Book Review Section 1. [REVIEW]Theodore Brameld, Midori Matsuyama, Harvey Neufeldt, Lois M. R. Louden, Margaret Gillett, Don Adams, Theodore Hutchcroft, William T. Lowe, Rodney P. Riegle, Timothy J. Bergen Jr, Charles R. Schindler, Gerald L. Gutek, William E. Eaton, Gertrude Langsam, John F. Murphy, Paul D. Travers, Charles M. Dye, Natalie A. Naylor & Richard Edward Kelly - 1977 - Educational Studies 8 (4):395-437.
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  27.  23
    Acquisition.Hiram W. Woodward Jr - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 6 (2):291-303.
    Material acquisition—buying, inheriting, being given—and nonmaterial—learning a word, assimilating a form—have been likened, and in both, meaningful acquisition cannot take place without a taxonomy, a scheme of categories into which the acquired element can be fitted. Then with these elements—both material and nonmaterial—we create a world or build and project a self, the painter and the interior decorator equally manipulating the elements in a vocabulary. The coarseness of such an outlook seems to bludgeon away long-established fine distinctions. We need not (...)
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  28.  13
    The Troubadour's Lady Reconsidered Again.Don A. Monson - 1995 - Speculum 70 (2):255-274.
    Long a widespread and comfortable assumption in medieval studies, the notion of “courtly love” has come under considerable attack in recent years. Beginning in the 1960s, American scholars such as D. W. Robertson, Jr., E. Talbot Donaldson, and John F. Benton sharply criticized the whole concept, suggesting that it is a “myth” of rather recent origin, that it is an impediment to understanding medieval texts, and that it ought to be banned from scholarly discourse. Being rather crude and unrefined by (...)
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  29.  38
    Uncertain Inference.Henry E. Kyburg Jr & Choh Man Teng - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    Coping with uncertainty is a necessary part of ordinary life and is crucial to an understanding of how the mind works. For example, it is a vital element in developing artificial intelligence that will not be undermined by its own rigidities. There have been many approaches to the problem of uncertain inference, ranging from probability to inductive logic to nonmonotonic logic. Thisbook seeks to provide a clear exposition of these approaches within a unified framework. The principal market for the book (...)
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  30.  10
    Accuracy of Planetary Theories, Particularly for Mars.Stanley E. Babb Jr - 1977 - Isis 68 (3):426-434.
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  31. Ideals of Human Excellence and Preserving Natural Environments.Thomas E. Hill Jr - 1983 - Environmental Ethics 5 (3):211-224.
    The moral significance of preserving natural environments is not entirely an issue of rights and social utility, for a person’s attitude toward nature may be importantly connected with virtues or human excellences. The question is, “What sort of person would destroy the natural environment--or even see its value solely in cost/benefit terms?” The answer I suggest is that willingness to do so may well reveal the absence of traits which are a natural basis for a proper humility, self-acceptance, gratitude, and (...)
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  32.  75
    Virtue, Rules, and Justice: Kantian Aspirations.Thomas E. Hill Jr & Thomas E. Hill - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Thomas E. Hill, Jr., interprets and extends Kant's moral theory in a series of essays that highlight its relevance to contemporary ethics. He introduces the major themes of Kantian ethics and explores its practical application to questions about revolution, prison reform, and forcible interventions in other countries for humanitarian purposes.
  33.  10
    Brighter than a Thousand Suns. Robert Jungk, James Cleugh.Oscar E. Anderson Jr - 1960 - Isis 51 (1):117-119.
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  34.  14
    The Origin of Lavoisier's First Experiments on Combustion.Robert E. Kohler Jr - 1972 - Isis 63 (3):349-355.
  35.  65
    Kantian pluralism.Thomas E. Hill Jr - 1992 - Ethics 102 (4):743-762.
  36.  31
    Matters of Metaphysics.Henry E. Kyburg Jr - 1992 - Review of Metaphysics 46 (2):409-411.
    These essays are characterized by meticulous argument in the analytical tradition. The book concerns matters of metaphysics in a broad sense: philosophy of mind and the problems of subjectivity; questions concerning nomological and statistical laws of nature; and, as we would expect, chance and induction.
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  37. Kant’s Theory of Practical Reason.Thomas E. Hill Jr - 1989 - The Monist 72 (3):363 - 383.
    Contemporary discussions of practical reason often refer vaguely to the Kantian conception of reasons as an alternative to various means-ends theories, but it is rarely clear what this is supposed to be, except that somehow moral concerns are supposed to fare better under the Kantian conception. The theories of Nagel, Gewirth, Darwall, and Donagan have been labeled “Kantian” because they deviate strikingly from standard preference models, but their roots in Kant have not been traced in detail and important differences may (...)
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  38.  28
    "Catcher" in and out of History.James E. Miller Jr - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 3 (3):599-603.
    [The Catcher in the Rye's] catalogue of characters, incidents, expressions could be extended indefinitely, all of them suggesting that Holden's sickness of soul is something deeper than economic or political, that his revulsion at life is not limited to social and monetary inequities, but at something in the nature of life itself - the decrepitude of the aged, the physical repulsiveness of the pimpled, the disappearance and dissolution of the dead, the terrors of sex, the hauntedness of human aloneness, the (...)
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  39. Servility and Self-Respect.Thomas E. Hill Jr - 1973 - The Monist 57 (1):87-104.
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  40.  55
    Note on Defining 'Punishment'.Don E. Scheid - 1980 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 10 (3):453 - 462.
    Dictionaries distinguish the following senses of ‘punishment’:the act of punishing, or the fact of being punished - where ‘punish’ is defined as: an act of public authority causing an offender to suffer for an offense. As In: ‘the respectable not only obey the law, but punish those who refuse to do so’.that which is inflicted as a penalty for an offense. As in: ‘all punishments are to be carried out in the Barrack Yard’, ‘fit the punishment to the crime’.severe handling (...)
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  41.  40
    Henry James in Reality.James E. Miller Jr - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 2 (3):585-604.
    In working his way through his complex conception of the relation of fiction and reality, [Henry] James thus found the unconscious moral dimension inextricably embedded within "realism" itself. In following the threads of realism back to consciousness itself, James invariably found there intertwined with its roots those aspects and elements that other theorists kept carefully separate. By exploring experience to its source, he found imagination. By following objective life from "out there" to conception, he found individual vision. By following the (...)
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  42.  38
    Coalesce or collide? Ethics, technology, and tv journalism 1991.Don E. Tomlinson - 1987 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 2 (2):21 – 31.
    By strict definition, television journalism, like every form of journalism, has always been ?unreal?; some form of constructed mediated reality.1 But now, television journalism is coming to a crossroads?one where ethics and technology will meet squarely at right angles if not head?on. And it is reality, even the constructed mediated kind, that will be at risk. In a few years, television journalism at the network and local levels will have the capability, through television's emerging conversion from analog to digital technology, (...)
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  43. Jus post bellum : justice in the aftermath of war.Robert E. Williams Jr - 2014 - In Caron E. Gentry & Amy Eckert (eds.), The future of just war: new critical essays. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press.
     
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  44.  23
    Review of Michael Davis and Professor of Philosophy Humanities Department and Senior Fellow Center for the Study of Ethics in the Professions Michael Davis: To Make The Punishment Fit The Crime: Essays In The Theory Of Criminal Justice[REVIEW]Don E. Scheid - 1995 - Ethics 105 (3):667-670.
  45. Self-Respect Reconsidered.Thomas E. Hill Jr - 1982 - Tulane Studies in Philosophy 31:129-137.
  46.  18
    Moral Responsibilities of Bystanders.Thomas E. Hill Jr - 2010 - Journal of Social Philosophy 41 (1):28-39.
  47.  19
    Where mortality and law diverge: Ethical alternatives in the soldier of fortune cases.Don E. Tomlinson - 1991 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 6 (2):69 – 82.
    Classified advertising occupies a prominent place in the history and current economics of the print media in America, including magazines. There are dozens of classifications, most of which are as innocuous as the language that constitutes the individual advertisements. The personals classification, however, is not always so innocuous. Gun-for-hire classified advertisements in one magazine were so blatant that several serious crimes, including murder, were committed as a result of the advertisements. Generally, courts find no liability for disseminators of advertising that (...)
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  48. Awareness, rules, and propositional control: A confrontation with SR behavior theory.Don E. Dulany - 1968 - In T. Dixon & Deryck Horton (eds.), Verbal Behavior and General Behavior Theory. Prentice-Hall. pp. 340--387.
  49.  8
    The Ethics of Armed Humanitarian Intervention.Don E. Scheid (ed.) - 2014 - Cambridge University Press.
    The question of military intervention for humanitarian purposes is a major focus for international law, the United Nations, regional organizations such as NATO, and the foreign policies of nations. Against this background, the 2011 bombing in Libya by Western nations has occasioned renewed interest and concern about armed humanitarian intervention and the doctrine of Responsibility to Protect. This volume brings together new essays by leading international, philosophical, and political thinkers on the moral and legal issues involved in AHI, and contains (...)
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  50.  35
    Davis and the Unfair-Advantage Theory of Punishment.Don E. Scheid - 1990 - Philosophical Topics 18 (1):143-170.
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