Search results for 'Doug Farquhar' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Thomas Sinks, Wendy E. Wagner & Doug Farquhar (2007). The Science and the Law of Toxics. Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 35:63-68.score: 120.0
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  2. Sandy Farquhar (2012). Narrative Identity and Early Childhood Education. Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (3):289-301.score: 30.0
    An intensification of interest in early childhood by government, parents, and employers, focuses primarily on the provision of private early childhood education services outside of the home. With a focus on New Zealand, the paper argues that the form of early education now promoted is a particular form of care and education that moves children away from family and community narratives embedded in the historical, cultural and humanist intentions of the national curriculum Te Whāriki (Ministry of Education, 1996). It argues (...)
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  3. Silke Machold, Pervaiz K. Ahmed & Stuart S. Farquhar (2008). Corporate Governance and Ethics: A Feminist Perspective. Journal of Business Ethics 81 (3):665 - 678.score: 30.0
    The mainstream literature on corporate governance is based on the premise of conflicts of interest in a competitive game played by variously defined stakeholders and thus builds explicitly and/or implicitly on masculinist ethical theories. This article argues that insights from feminist ethics, and in particular ethics of care, can provide a different, yet relevant, lens through which to study corporate governance. Based on feminist ethical theories, the article conceptualises a governance model that is different from the current normative orthodoxy.
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  4. Sandy Farquhar & Peter Fitzsimons (2011). Lost in Translation: The Power of Language. Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (6):652-662.score: 30.0
    The paper examines some philosophical aspects of translation as a metaphor for education—a metaphor that avoids the closure of final definitions, in favour of an ongoing and tentative process of interpretation and revision. Translation, it is argued, is a complex process involving language, within and among cultures, and in the exercise of power. Drawing on Foucault's analysis of power, Nietzschean contingency, and the inversion of meaning that characterises the work of Heidegger and Derrida, the paper points towards Ricoeur's notion of (...)
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  5. J. N. Farquhar (1924). Three Measures of Meal. By Frank G. Vial, B.D., Professor of Pastoral Theology, Lennoxville, Canada. London: Oxford University Press, 1923. 10s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 38 (5-6):136-137.score: 30.0
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  6. Peter H. Farquhar (1980). Advances in Multiattribute Utility Theory. Theory and Decision 12 (4):381-394.score: 30.0
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  7. Sandy Farquhar & Peter FitzSimons (eds.) (2008). Philosophy of Early Childhood Education: Transforming Narratives. Blackwell Pub..score: 30.0
    Philosophy of Early Childhood Education: Transforming Narratives provides an insightful reflection on some contemporary issues and theories underpinning early childhood education. The essays in this volume penned by an international group of educators are both critical and transformative, offering new insights on the practices and policies within early childhood education. Provides a critical reflection on some current issues within early childhood education Offers perspectives outside traditional narratives of early childhood Encourages the emergence of new paradigms for early childhood education Promotes (...)
     
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  8. J. N. Farquhar (1925). The Early History of Bengal. By F. J. Monahan, Late of the Indian Civil Service. Pp. Xii + 248, and 6 Illustrations. Milford, 1925. 15s.Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (5-6):140-.score: 30.0
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  9. Alec D. Walen (2008). Comments on Doug Husak: The Low Cost of Recognizing (and of Ignoring) the Limited Relevance of Intentions to Permissibility. Criminal Law and Philosophy 3 (1):71-78.score: 12.0
    Doug Husak frames a worry that makes sense in the abstract, but in reality, there is not much to worry about. The thesis that intentions are irrelevant to permissibility (IIP) is a straw man. There are reasons to think that the moral significance of intentions is not properly registered in criminal law. But the moral basis for criticism is not nearly as extreme as the IIP, and the fixes are not that hard to make. Lastly, if they are not (...)
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  10. Doug Adams (1975). II. "Implications of Polanyi's Thought Within the Arts" A Bibliographic Essay" by Doug Adams. Tradition and Discovery 2 (2):3-5.score: 12.0
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  11. Allen Dyer & Phil Mullins (2007). Remembering Doug Adams. Tradition and Discovery 34 (2):9-10.score: 12.0
    These brief reflections remember the late Doug Adams, Professor of Christianity and the Arts at Pacific School of Religion and Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley.
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  12. Charles Francis (forthcoming). Doug Elliott: Swarm Tree: Of Honeybees, Honeymoons and the Tree of Life. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics.score: 9.0
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  13. Ronnie L. Littlejohn (1992). A Response to Daniel Holbrook's 'Descartes on Persons' and Doug Anderson's 'The Legacy oE Bowne's Empiricism'. The Personalist Forum 8:15-20.score: 9.0
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  14. Doug McGill, Jeremy Iggers & Andrew R. Cline (2007). Death in Gambella: What Many Heard, What One Blogger Saw, and Why the Professional News Media Ignored It. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 22 (4):280 – 299.score: 6.0
    Doug McGill published several articles about the massacre of 425 members of the Anuak tribe by the Ethiopian military in 2003 and 2004 on his Web site, The McGill Report. The mainstream news media ignored it. McGill's narrative demonstrates the impact of his reporting on the Anuak community worldwide, its impact on several beneficiary groups in the United States, and the lack of interest by the mainstream news media that failed to fulfill journalism's primary purpose. Two responses follow McGill's (...)
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  15. Doug Seale (2011). Michael Williams: Deforesting the Earth: From Prehistory to Global Crisis, an Abridgment. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 24 (6):673-686.score: 6.0
    Michael Williams: Deforesting the Earth: From Prehistory to Global Crisis, an Abridgment Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s10806-010-9294-y Authors Doug Seale, 21 Turner Ridge Road, Marlborough, MA 01752, UK Journal Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics Online ISSN 1573-322X Print ISSN 1187-7863.
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  16. Doug Seale (2011). Patrick J. Carr and Maria J. Kafalas, Hollowing Out the Middle: The Rural Brain Drain and What It Means for America. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 24 (5):535-543.score: 6.0
    Patrick J. Carr and Maria J. Kafalas, Hollowing Out the Middle: The Rural Brain Drain and What It Means for America Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s10806-010-9266-2 Authors Doug Seale, 21 Turner Ridge Road Marlborough MA 01752 USA Journal Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics Online ISSN 1573-322X Print ISSN 1187-7863.
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  17. Doug Adams (1990). I Am a Convicted Felon. Business Ethics 4 (3):25-26.score: 6.0
    My name is Doug Adam. I am a convicted felon. I turned myself in, in mid-1987, to a U.S. attorney in New York, pleading guilty to felony charges of tax fraud and fraud on a mutual fund. It leftme scared to death, millions of dollars in debt, with no job, and at the age of37 back living with my parents while I awaited sentencing. What began then was a painful process of self discovery. After thriving on competition and perfection (...)
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  18. Mark Schroeder (2010). Value and the Right Kind of Reason. Oxford Studies in Metaethics 5:25-55.score: 3.0
    Fitting Attitudes accounts of value analogize or equate being good with being desirable, on the premise that ‘desirable’ means not, ‘able to be desired’, as Mill has been accused of mistakenly assuming, but ‘ought to be desired’, or something similar. The appeal of this idea is visible in the critical reaction to Mill, which generally goes along with his equation of ‘good’ with ‘desirable’ and only balks at the second step, and it crosses broad boundaries in terms of philosophers’ other (...)
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  19. Doug McConnell (2011). Naturalism and Normativity. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 89 (4):753 - 754.score: 3.0
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Volume 89, Issue 4, Page 753-754, December 2011.
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  20. Daniel C. Dennett, Review of Hofstadter Et Al., Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies. [REVIEW]score: 3.0
    In 1979, Douglas Hofstadter published Gödel Escher Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid , a brilliant exploration of some of the most difficult and fascinating ideas at the heart of cognitive science: recursion, computation, reduction, holism, meaning, "jootsing" (jumping out of the system), "strange loops", and much, much more. What made the book's expositions so effective were a family of elaborate (and lovingly elaborated) analogies: the mind is like an anthill, a formal system is like a game, theorem and nontheorem are (...)
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  21. Doug Al-Maini (2011). Filial Piety in the Euthyphro. Ancient Philosophy 31 (1):1-24.score: 3.0
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  22. Doug McCready (2009). Ending the War Right: Jus Post Bellum and the Just War Tradition. Journal of Military Ethics 8 (1):66-78.score: 3.0
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  23. Kenneth Simons (2011). When is Negligent Inadvertence Culpable? Criminal Law and Philosophy 5 (2):97-114.score: 3.0
    Doug Husak suggests that sometimes an actor should be deemed reckless, and not merely negligent, with respect to the risks that she knowingly created but has forgotten at the moment of action. The validity of this conclusion, he points out, depends crucially on what it means to be aware of a risk. Husak’s neutral prompt and counterfactual actual belief criteria are problematic, however. More persuasive is his suggestion that we understand belief, in this moral and criminal law context, as (...)
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  24. Doug Blomberg (2010). Multiple Intelligences, Judgment, and Realization of Value. Ethics and Education 4 (2):163-175.score: 3.0
    In the theory of multiple intelligences, Howard Gardner proposes a scientific justification for a more pluralistic pedagogy, while denying that science can determine educational goals. Wearing an educator's hat, however, he favors a pathway in which students come 'to understand the most fundamental questions of existence … familiarly, the true, the beautiful, and the good.' Yet Gardner claims to exclude the realm of values from an intrinsic role in any of the intelligences; furthermore, the intelligences have no role to play (...)
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  25. Larry Alexander (2013). You Got What You Deserved. Criminal Law and Philosophy 7 (2):309-319.score: 3.0
    The Philosophy of Criminal Law collects 17 of Doug Husak’s articles on legal theory, 16 of which have been previously published, spanning a period of over two decades. In sum, these 17 articles make a huge and lasting contribution to criminal law theory. There is much wisdom contained in them; and I find surprisingly little to disagree with, making my job as a critical reviewer quite challenging. Most of the points on which Doug and I disagree can be (...)
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  26. Doug Blomberg (2008). Persons, Values, and Multiple Intelligences Theory. Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 37:19-26.score: 3.0
    For Howard Gardner, Multiple Intelligences Theory (MI) constitutes “a new understanding of human nature,” on a par with those proffered by Socrates and Freud. While the educational community in general has responded enthusiastically to MI, because it enables them to deal with students more holistically, MI embeds a significant dualism that is detrimental to truly holistic education. I will argue that: values are pervasive; intelligence requires the exercise of judgment, which no computational system can emulate; domains in which intelligence functions (...)
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  27. Stephen Leighton (1995). THE VALUE OF PASSIONS IN PLATO AND ARISTOTLE. Southwest Philosophy Review 11 (Supplement):41-56.score: 3.0
    This paper was originally presented at a Conference (the Ontological and Practical) held at the University of Texas at Austin, part of a celebration of the career of Doug Browning.
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  28. M. Guy Thompson (2007). Apprehending the Inaccessible: Freudian Psychoanalysis and Existential Phenomenology. Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 38 (1):136-150.score: 3.0
    Book review of Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar's critique of Freud's conception of the unconscious from a phenomenological perspective.
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  29. Doug Martin & Peter Singer (2003). A Strategy to Improve Priority Setting in Health Care Institutions. Health Care Analysis 11 (1):59-68.score: 3.0
    Priority setting (also known as resource allocation or rationing) occurs at every level of every health system and is one of the most significant health care policy questions of the 21st century. Because it is so prevalent and context specific, improving priority setting in a health system entails improving it in the institutions that constitute the system. But, how should this be done? Normative approaches are necessary because they help identify key values that clarify policy choices, but insufficient because different (...)
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  30. Peter Westen (2013). The Significance of Transferred Intent. Criminal Law and Philosophy 7 (2):321-350.score: 3.0
    The doctrine of transferred intent (or transferred “malice” in England) generally provides that if A attempts to harm B but, because of bad aim, misses and accidentally causes the same harm to befall C, A’s harmful intent vis-à-vis B is transferred to C, thus rendering A guilty of intentionally harming C. Commentators acknowledge the doctrine to be a legal fiction, but they differ regarding whether the fiction produces just results, some believing it does, others believing that A is guilty at (...)
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  31. Doug Brooks & Hanna Streng (2012). The Stability Operations Industry: The Shared Responsibility of Compliance and Ethics. Criminal Justice Ethics 31 (3):302-318.score: 3.0
    Abstract Companies in the stability operations industry have been subjected to painstaking scrutiny while critics have ignored the value they bring to contingency operations and government clients. Moreover, the scope of the industry is often overlooked by critics who paint a picture of uncontrollable companies making ridiculous profits. In response, this article offers some insight on stability operations, contracting processes, pitfalls, and opportunities. The article then discusses some of the criticisms that surround the industry. These criticisms are often due to (...)
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  32. Doug Jesseph (2011). Matter Matters: Metaphysics and Methodology in the Early Modern Period (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (2):254-255.score: 3.0
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  33. Gill Kirkup (ed.) (2000). The Gendered Cyborg: A Reader. Routledge in Association with the Open University.score: 3.0
    The Gendered Cyborg brings together material from a variety of disciplines that analyze the relationship between gender and technoscience, and the way that this relationship is represented through ideas, language and visual imagery. The book opens with key feminist articles from the history and philosophy of science. They look at the ways that modern scientific thinking has constructed oppositional dualities such as objectivity/subjectivity, human/machine, nature/science, and male/female, and how these have constrained who can engage in science/technology and how they have (...)
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  34. Doug Brugge & Mariam Missaghian (2006). Protecting the Navajo People Through Tribal Regulation of Research. Science and Engineering Ethics 12 (3).score: 3.0
    This essay explores the process and issues related to community collaborative research that involves Native Americans generally, and specifically examines the Navajo Nation’s efforts to regulate research within its jurisdiction. Researchers need to account for both the experience of Native Americans and their own preconceptions about Native Americans when conducting research about Native Americans. The Navajo Nation institutionalized an approach to protecting members of the nation when it took over Institutional Review Board (IRB) responsibilities from the US Indian Health Service (...)
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  35. Doug Jesseph (2008). Review of Emily R. Grosholz, Representation and Productive Ambiguity in Mathematics and the Sciences. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (5).score: 3.0
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  36. Doug Mann & Malcolm Murray (2001). A Dialogue Concerning Liberty and Community. Dialogue 40 (02):255-.score: 3.0
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  37. Doug Seale (2010). Christopher J. Preston: Saving Creation: Nature and Faith in the Life of Holmes Rolston III. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 23 (3).score: 3.0
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  38. Don R. Hansen, Rick L. Crosser & Doug Laufer (1992). Moral Ethics V. Tax Ethics: The Case of Transfer Pricing Among Multinational Corporations. Journal of Business Ethics 11 (9):679 - 686.score: 3.0
    In recent years there has been an increased awareness with regards to ethics in business. More specifically, the abundance of well-publicized examples of cheating, greed, and hypocrisy has created some alarm about the general state of personal ethics (Josephson, 1988). Recent examples include the Oliver North, Ivan Boesky, and Jimmy Swaggart cases. The tax practitioner probably has little direct concern for matters of misconduct and ethical improprieties as mentioned above. Adherence to a code of conduct appears to circumvent the (...)
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  39. Doug Anderson (2003). Respectability and the Wild Beasts of the Philosophical Desert: The Heart of James's. Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (1):1-13.score: 3.0
    This commentary was suggested to me in part by a colleague's remark that it would be nice if we could make William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience "respectable." The implication was that though there was something redeemable about the book, it somehow wasn't philosophically or scientifically proper. The remark awakened me to—or at least reminded me of—the fact that this has been a traditional take on James's text. As Julius Bixler points out, ridicule began soon after the book was (...)
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  40. Dale Benos & Sara Vollmer (2010). Generalizing on Best Practices in Image Processing: A Model for Promoting Research Integrity. Science and Engineering Ethics 16 (4):669-673.score: 3.0
    Modifying images for scientific publication is now quick and easy due to changes in technology. This has created a need for new image processing guidelines and attitudes, such as those offered to the research community by Doug Cromey (Cromey 2010). We suggest that related changes in technology have simplified the task of detecting misconduct for journal editors as well as researchers, and that this simplification has caused a shift in the responsibility for reporting misconduct. We also argue that the (...)
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  41. Doug Long (2004). A Theory of Philosophical Enquiry: Unity and Plurality in Adam Smith's Thought. Journal of Scottish Philosophy 2 (1):1-21.score: 3.0
  42. Doug Mann (1996). The Body as an “Object” of Historical Knowledge. Dialogue 35 (04):753-.score: 3.0
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  43. Doug Wallace (1989). What Would You Do? Business Ethics 3 (2):26-28.score: 3.0
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  44. Doug Brugge & Alison Kole (2003). A Case Study of Community-Based Participatory Research Ethics: The Healthy Public Housing Initiative. Science and Engineering Ethics 9 (4):485-501.score: 3.0
    We conducted and analyzed qualitative interviews with 12 persons working on the Healthy Public Housing Initiative in Boston, Massachusetts in 2001. Our goal was to generate ideas and themes related to the ethics of the community-based participatory research in which they were engaged. Specifically, we wanted to see if we found themes that differed from conventional research that is based on an individualistic ethics. There were clearly distinct ethical issues raised with respect to projects and individuals who engage in community-based (...)
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  45. Doug Anderson (2009). Santayana and Spinoza On Philosophic Liberty. Overheard in Seville 27 (27):9-17.score: 3.0
  46. Doug Mann (1997). Porn Revisited. Journal of Social Philosophy 28 (1):77-86.score: 3.0
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  47. Doug Flippen (1996). Aquinas' Five Arguments in the Summa Theologiae 1a 2. International Philosophical Quarterly 36 (1):122-123.score: 3.0
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  48. Doug Jesseph (2006). Review of A. P. Martinich, Hobbes. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (6).score: 3.0
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  49. Doug Mann (1999). The Limits of Instrumental Rationality in Social Explanation. Critical Review 13 (1-2):165-189.score: 3.0
    Abstract The goal of social explanation is to understand human action, both individual and collective. To do so successfully we must explain action on three distinct (but intertwined) levels: the actors? intentions, the meaning that actors and interpreters ascribe to action, and the structural ideals that govern action. Each level of explanation has certain types of rationality associated with it. Only on the level of intentionality does instrumental rationality assume a prime importance, yet even there it must compete with normative (...)
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  50. Doug Porpora (2007). Quantum Reality as Unrealised Possibility: Review of Quantum Theory and the Flight From Realism: Philosophical Responses to Quantum Mechanics by Christopher Norris. [REVIEW] Journal of Critical Realism 3 (2).score: 3.0
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  51. Doug Vickers, Michael D. Lee, M. Dry, P. Hughes & Jennifer Anne McMahon, The Aesthetic Appeal of Minimal Structures: Judging the Attractiveness of Solutions to Traveling Salesperson Problems.score: 3.0
    Ormerod and Chronicle (1999) reported that optimal solutions to traveling salesperson problems were judged to be aesthetically more pleasing than poorer solutions and that solutions with more convex hull nodes were rated as better figures. To test these conclusions, solution regularity and the number of potential intersections were held constant, whereas solution optimality, the number of internal nodes, and the number of nearest neighbors in each solution were varied factorially. The results did not support the view that the convex hull (...)
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  52. Davis Baird, Joan Callahan, Doug MacLean & Susan Wolf (1993). Ferdy Schoeman 1945-1992. Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 67 (1):19 - 21.score: 3.0
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  53. Doug Den Uyl (2007). : Iain McLean , Adam Smith, Radical and Egalitarian, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2006. 192pp. £15.99. ISBN: 0 7486 2352. [REVIEW] Journal of Scottish Philosophy 5 (2):221-227.score: 3.0
  54. Doug Jesseph, Home | Archives | Announcements | About the Journal | Submission Information | Contact Us.score: 3.0
    Decision under conditions of uncertainty is an unavoidable fact of life. The available evidence rarely suffices to establish a claim with complete confidence, and as a result a good deal of our reasoning about the world must employ criteria of probable judgment. Such criteria specify the conditions under which rational agents are justified in accepting or acting upon propositions whose truth cannot be ascertained with certainty. Since the seventeenth century philosophers and mathematicians have been accustomed to consider belief under uncertainty (...)
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  55. Jill Moore, Marice Ashe, Patricia Gray & Doug Blanke (2003). Should Your State Have: A Public Health Law Center? Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (s4):58-59.score: 3.0
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  56. Doug Seale (2009). Kimberly K. Smith, Wendell Berry and the Agrarian Tradition: A Common Grace. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 22 (5).score: 3.0
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  57. Martin L. Smith & Doug Burleigh (1991). Pastoral Care Representation on the Hospital Ethics Committee. HEC Forum 3 (5).score: 3.0
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  58. Doug Wallace (2004). What Would You Do? Classic. Business Ethics 18 (4):18-18.score: 3.0
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  59. Doug Wojcieszak, James W. Saxton & Maggie M. Finkelstein (2008). Ethics Training Needs to Emphasize Disclosure and Apology. HEC Forum 20 (3).score: 3.0
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  60. Doug Anderson (2005). Peirce and the Art of Reasoning. Studies in Philosophy and Education 24 (3-4):277-289.score: 3.0
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  61. Doug Childers (1988). Media Practices in Aids Coverage and a Model for Ethical Reporting on Aids Victims. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 3 (2):60 – 65.score: 3.0
    With AIDS increasingly recognized as a potentially devastating disease, no concensus has emerged in the media about such AIDS?coverage questions as use of names of AIDS victims, whether cause of death of AIDS victims should be reported and what moral limitations should restrict AIDS coverage. A study of AIDS coverage in two major newspapers and two news magazines in 1987 identify weaknesses in current coverage of the AIDS phenomenon and suggests guidelines for ethical reporting ? servicing the greater good without (...)
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  62. Doug Knapp (2004). An Evaluation of the “No Purpose” and Some Other Theories (Such as Oil) For Explaining Al-Qaeda's Motives. Social Philosophy Today 20:109-128.score: 3.0
    Various causal factors have been offered to explain the motives behind the Al-Qaeda terrorist attacs on 9/11 and at various other times and places throughout the world. Quite often the reasons or purposes are said to include political, economic, religious and ethnic factors. Often historical factors, such as colonialism and neo-colonialism, as well as nationalism, poverty, class divisions and modernization, are included. But some scholars and political figures, quite inconsistently at times, assert that there is no discernable purpose or purposes (...)
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  63. Doug Porpora (2007). Reducing the Scatter: Review of Critical Realism in Economics: Development and Debate Edited by Steve Fleetwood. [REVIEW] Journal of Critical Realism 2 (2).score: 3.0
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  64. John Paul Ricco (2002). The Logic of the Lure. University of Chicago Press.score: 3.0
    The attraction of a wink, a nod, a discarded snapshot-such feelings permeate our lives, yet we usually dismiss them as insubstantial or meaningless. With The Logic of the Lure , John Paul Ricco argues that it is precisely such fleeting, erotic, and even perverse experiences that will help us create a truly queer notion of ethics and aesthetics, one that recasts sociality and sexuality, place and finitude in ways suggested by the anonymity and itinerant lures of cruising. Shifting our attention (...)
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  65. Doug Seale (forthcoming). Jack E. Davis: An Everglades Providence: Marjory Stoneman Douglas and the American Environmental Century. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics.score: 3.0
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  66. Martin L. Smith, Kathleen Lawry, Loretta Planavsky, Holly A. Segel, Linda Solar & Doug Burleigh (1994). Guidelines for Patient Refusal of Life-Sustaining Treatment. HEC Forum 6 (1).score: 3.0
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  67. Doug Underwood (2001). Secularists or Modern Day Prophets?: Journalists' Ethics and the Judeo-Christian Tradition. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 16 (1):33 – 47.score: 3.0
    In this nationwide study of American and Canadian journalists, I found that their moral and ethical values are solidly connected to the Judeo-Christian tradition, even among those who do not claim to be religiously oriented. This study shows that religious values are imbedded deeply, if not always consciously, in the moral and ethical values of journalists and that journalists of varying religious orientations tend to endorse a core group of moral and ethical principles at the heart of the religious heritage (...)
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  68. Doug Wallace (2002). What Would You Do? Classic. Business Ethics 16 (1):18-18.score: 3.0
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  69. Doug Adams (1997). Charles S. McCoy. Tradition and Discovery 24 (3):41-43.score: 3.0
    These anecdotes and a limerick humorously celebrate the life and work of Charles S. McCoy.
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  70. Doug Adams (1978). New Implications of Polanyi's Epistemology Within the Arts. Tradition and Discovery 6 (1):2-2.score: 3.0
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  71. Sanjay K. Agarwal, Sylvia Estrada, Warren G. Foster, L. Lewis Wall, Doug Brown, Elaine S. Revis & Suzanne Rodriguez (2007). What Motivates Women to Take Part in Clinical and Basic Science Endometriosis Research? Bioethics 21 (5):263–269.score: 3.0
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  72. Doug Allen (1992). Civilian-Based Defense. Radical Philosophy Review of Books 5 (5):40-45.score: 3.0
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  73. Doug Anderson (1992). The Legacy of Bowne's Empiricism. The Personalist Forum 8:1-8.score: 3.0
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  74. Bruce Bragg, Thomas Galloway, Doug B. Spohn & Donne E. Trotter (2003). Land Use and Zoning for the Public's Health. Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (s4):78-80.score: 3.0
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  75. Dick Epstein & Doug Walton (1979). Preface. Philosophical Studies 36 (2):113-114.score: 3.0
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  76. Doug Fleer (1992). Social Investing. Business Ethics 6 (4):42-42.score: 3.0
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  77. Alex Gillespie & Doug Porpora (2011). Editorial Note. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 41 (4):331-332.score: 3.0
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  78. Doug Gurian-Sherman (2008). Cafos Uncovered: The Untold Costs of Confined Animal Feeding Operations. Union of Concerned Scientists.score: 3.0
     
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  79. Doug Mann (2008). Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory. Oxford University Press.score: 3.0
    This ten chapter text is designed to be used as a stand-alone text or in conjunction with a set of primary readings in a twelve week course on modern social theory or the second half of a full-year course on sociological theory. It examines the most important theoretical approaches of the 20th and 21st centuries, balancing concise coverage with appropriate depth of analysis. It avoids rehashing classical theory while still placing recent theorists in a historical context. It takes into account (...)
     
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  80. Doug Morris (2009). Mystic River's Blood-Dimmed Tide. Radical Philosophy Review 12 (1/2):171-198.score: 3.0
    This chapter interrogates Hollywood film as a powerful public pedagogical machine and as an influential component of the broader media culture, that serves as a primary terrain where the authority of violence and the violence of authority expresses, justifies, and legitimates itself in the U.S. Allegiances to, identifications with, beliefs in, desires for, and attitudes about violence, authority, militarism, and power are largely constructed, imbued, directed and shaped through dominant media formations as they create images and spectacles of violence, either (...)
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  81. Doug Mann And Malcolm Murray (2001). A Dialogue Concerning Liberty and Community. Dialogue 40 (2):255-278.score: 3.0
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  82. Doug Odegard (1986). Demon Scepticism. American Philosophical Quarterly 23 (2):209 - 216.score: 3.0
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  83. Doug Owram (2004). Managing the Ethical Risks: Universities and the New World of Funding. Journal of Academic Ethics 2 (3).score: 3.0
  84. Doug Porpora (2010). Societal Facts and Laws After Fifty Years. In Ian Verstegen (ed.), Maurice Mandelbaum and American Critical Realism. Routledge.score: 3.0
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  85. Doug J. Porter (2012). Some Implications of the Application of Legal Pluralism to Development Practice. In Brian Z. Tamanaha, Caroline Mary Sage & Michael J. V. Woolcock (eds.), Legal Pluralism and Development: Scholars and Practitioners in Dialogue. Cambridge University Press.score: 3.0
     
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  86. Doug Porpora (2007). The Sociology of Ultimate Concern. Journal of Critical Realism 3 (1).score: 3.0
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  87. David W. Rutledge, Walter B. Gulick, John V. Apczynski, Doug Adams & J. Stines (1991). The Tacit Victory and the Unfinished Agenda. Tradition and Discovery 18 (1):5-17.score: 3.0
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  88. Doug Sherman (1990). Keeping Your Ethical Edge Sharp: How to Cultivate a Personal Character That is Honest, Faithful, Just, and Morally Clean. Navpress.score: 3.0
     
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  89. Brian Z. Tamanaha, Caroline Mary Sage & Michael J. V. Woolcock (eds.) (2012). Legal Pluralism and Development: Scholars and Practitioners in Dialogue. Cambridge University Press.score: 3.0
    Machine generated contents note: Part I. Origins and Contours: 1. Historical perspectives on legal pluralism Lauren Benton; 2. The rule of law and legal pluralism in development Brian Z. Tamanaha; 3. Bendable rules: the development implications of human rights pluralism David Kinley; 4. Legal pluralism and legal culture: mapping the terrain Sally Engle Merry; 5. Towards equity in development when the law is not the law: reflections on legal pluralism in practice Daniel Adler and So Sokbunthouen; Part II. Theoretical Foundations (...)
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  90. Doug Wallace (1994). Between a Rock and a Hard Place. Business Ethics 8 (4):34-35.score: 3.0
    Jack knew the contract was unreasonable, but did that give his company a right to fudge on specifications?
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  91. Doug Walton (2000). Evaluating Appeals to Popular Opinion. Inquiry 20 (1):33-45.score: 3.0
    There is a tendency to swing to extremes in evaluating arguments based on appeal to popular opinion. Traditional logic textbooks have portrayed the argumentum ad populum, or appeal to popular opinion, as a fallacy. In contrast, many arguments based on appeal to public opinion in marketing of commercial products do not seem all that unreasonable. Three cases of commercial ads are studied. The problem posed is that of building an objective structure for evaluating such arguments that does not swing, without (...)
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