Search results for 'Earl Rosenthal' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. David M. Rosenthal & Wilfrid S. Sellars (1972). The Rosenthal-Sellars Correspondence on Intentionality. In Ausonio Marras (ed.), Intentionality, Mind and Language. University of Illinois Press.score: 120.0
    In response to your kind offer to read through portions of the typescript of my thesis pertaining to your views on intentionality, I am sending you a copy of an introductory section to such a chapter.{1} The enclosed typescript represents a first draft, for which I apologize, but I thought it might be useful to get any comments you might have in at the ground floor, so to speak.
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  2. Earl Rosenthal (1971). Plus Ultra, Non Plus Ultra, and the Columnar Device of Emperor Charles V. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 34:204-228.score: 120.0
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  3. Earl E. Rosenthal (1973). The Invention of the Columnar Device of Emperor Charles V at the Court of Burgundy in Flanders in 1516. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 36:198-230.score: 120.0
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  4. Andrew J. Reck, John E. Smith & Sandra B. Rosenthal (1987). Pragmatism's Shared Metaphysical Vision: A Symposium on Sandra B. Rosenthal's "Speculative Pragmatism". Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 23 (3):341 - 380.score: 120.0
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  5. Joan Stambaugh, James L. Muyskens & Abigail Rosenthal (1978). Henry M. Rosenthal 1906-1977. Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 51 (5):583 - 584.score: 120.0
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  6. David M. Rosenthal (2005). Consciousness and Mind. Oxford: Clarendon Press.score: 60.0
    The first four essays develop various aspects of that theory.The next three essays present Rosenthal's homomorphism theory of mental qualities and qualitative ...
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  7. Yitzhak Y. Melamed & Michael A. Rosenthal (eds.) (2010). Spinoza's 'Theological-Political Treatise': A Critical Guide. Cambridge University Press.score: 60.0
    Machine generated contents note: List of contributors; Acknowledgements; List of abbreviations; Introduction Yitzhak Y. Melamed and Michael Rosenthal; Spinoza's exchange with Albert Burgh Edwin Curley; The text of Spinoza's Tractatus Theologico-Politicus Piet Steenbakkers; Spinoza on Ibn Ezra's Secret of the Twelve Warren Zev Harvey; Reflections of the medieval Jewish-Christian debate in the Theological-Political Treatise and the Epistles Daniel J. Lasker; The early Dutch and German reaction to the Tractatus Theologico-Politicus: foreshadowing the Enlightenment's more general Spinoza reception? Jonathan Israel; G. (...)
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  8. David M. Rosenthal (1968). Intentionality: A Study of the Views of Chisholm and Sellars. Philosophy.score: 60.0
    Edited in hypertext by Andrew Chrucky. Reprinted with the permission of Professor David Rosenthal. Editor's Note: Due to the limitation of current hypertext, the following conventions have been used. In general, if an expression has some mark over it, that mark is placed as a prefix to the expression. All Greek characters (except phi) are rendered by their names. Subscripts are placed in parentheses as concatenated suffixes: thus, e.g., H(2)O is the chemical formula for water. Sellars' dot quotes are (...)
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  9. Franz Rosenthal (1970/2007). Knowledge Triumphant: The Concept of Knowledge in Medieval Islam. Brill.score: 60.0
    In "Knowledge Triumphant," Franz Rosenthal observes that the Islamic civilization is one that is essentially characterized by knowledge ("'ilm"), for "ilm is ...
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  10. Erwin Isak Jakob Rosenthal & Saʻadia ben Joseph (eds.) (1980). Saadya Studies. Arno Press.score: 60.0
    Hertz, J. H. Saadya gaon (882-942).--Altmann, A. Saadya's theory of revelation.--Herzog, D. The polemic treatise against Saadya.--Krauss, S. Saadya's Tafsir of the seventy hapax legomena explained and continued.--Leveen, J. Saadya's lost commentary on Leviticus.--Markon, I. (Exodus XXX, 23) explained by Saadya and his successors.--Marmorstein, A. The doctrine of redemption in Saadya's theological system.--Mittwoch, E. An unknown fragment by Gaon Saadya.--Rabin, C. Saadya gaon's Hebrew prose style.--Rawidowicz, S. Saadya's purification of the idea of God.--Robertson, E. The relationship of the Arabic (...)
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  11. David Rosenthal (web). Concepts and Definitions of Consciousness. In P W. Banks (ed.), Encyclopedia of Consciousness. Elsevier.score: 30.0
    in Encyclopedia of Consciousness, ed. William P. Banks, Amsterdam: Elsevier, forthcoming in 2009.
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  12. David M. Rosenthal (2002). How Many Kinds of Consciousness? Consciousness and Cognition 11 (4):653-665.score: 30.0
    Ned BlockÕs influential distinction between phenomenal and access consciousness has become a staple of current discussions of consciousness. It is not often noted, however, that his distinction tacitly embodies unargued theoretical assumptions that favor some theoretical treatments at the expense of others. This is equally so for his less widely discussed distinction between phenomenal consciousness and what he calls reflexive consciousness. I argue that the distinction between phenomenal and access consciousness, as Block draws it, is untenable. Though mental states that (...)
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  13. David M. Rosenthal (1986). Two Concepts of Consciousness. Philosophical Studies 49 (May):329-59.score: 30.0
    No mental phenomenon is more central than consciousness to an adequate understanding of the mind. Nor does any mental phenomenon seem more stubbornly to resist theoretical treatment. Consciousness is so basic to the way we think about the mind that it can be tempting to suppose that no mental states exist that are not conscious states. Indeed, it may even seem mysterious what sort of thing a mental state might be if it is not a conscious state. On this way (...)
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  14. David M. Rosenthal (2010). Consciousness, the Self and Bodily Location. Analysis 70 (2):270-276.score: 30.0
    (No abstract is available for this citation).
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  15. David M. Rosenthal (1997). Phenomenal Consciousness and What It's Like. Behavioral And Brain Sciences 20 (1):64-65.score: 30.0
    be realized. Whatever gets access to phenomenal awareness (to consciousness and P-consciousness are almost always present or P-consciousness as described by Block) is represented within this absent together.
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  16. David M. Rosenthal (1994). State Consciousness and Transitive Consciousness. Consciousness and Cognition 2 (3):355-63.score: 30.0
  17. David M. Rosenthal (2002). Consciousness and Higher-Order Thought. In L. Nagel (ed.), Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Macmillan.score: 30.0
    The problem of consciousness is to say what it is for some of our thoughts, feelings, and sensations to be conscious, given that others are not. This is different from saying what it is for a person to be conscious or not conscious. Even when people are conscious, many of their thoughts and sensations typically are not. And there's nothing problematic about a person's being conscious; it's just the person's being awake and responsive to sensory input.
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  18. David Rosenthal, Consciousness and its Function.score: 30.0
    MS, under submission, derived from a Powerpoint presentation at a Conference on Consciousness, Memory, and Perception, in honor of Larry Weiskrantz, City University, London, September 15, 2006.
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  19. David M. Rosenthal, The Kinds of Consciousness.score: 30.0
    I begin by considering Ned Block's widely accepted distinction between phenomenal and access consciousness. I argue that on Block's official characterization a mental state's being access conscious is not a way the state's being conscious in any intuitive sense; that if phenomenal consciousness itself corresponds to an intuitive way of a state's being conscious, it literally implies access consciousness; and that Block misconstrues the theoretical significance of the commonsense distinction. These considerations point to the view that mental states' being conscious (...)
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  20. Cynthia Schupak & Jesse Rosenthal (2009). Excessive Daydreaming: A Case History and Discussion of Mind Wandering and High Fantasy Proneness. Consciousness and Cognition 18 (1):290-292.score: 30.0
  21. Dennis Earl (2006). Concepts and Properties. Metaphysica 7 (1):67-85.score: 30.0
  22. David Rosenthal & Josh Weisberg, Higher-Order Theories of Consciousness.score: 30.0
     
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  23. Dennis Earl (2007). A Semantic Resolution of the Paradox of Analysis. Acta Analytica 22 (3):189-205.score: 30.0
    The paradox of analysis has been a problem for analytic philosophers at least since Moore’s time, and it is especially significant for those who seek an account of analysis along classical lines. The present paper offers a new solution to the paradox, where a theory of analysis is given where (1) analysandum and analysans are distinct concepts, due to their failing to share the same conceptual form, yet (2) they are related in virtue of satisfying various semantic constraints on the (...)
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  24. David M. Rosenthal (ed.) (1971). Materialism and the Mind-Body Problem. Prentice-Hall.score: 30.0
    An expanded and updated edition of this classic collection.
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  25. David M. Rosenthal (2003). Unity of Consciousness and the Self. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 103 (3):325-352.score: 30.0
    The so-called unity of consciousness consists in the compelling sense we have that all our conscious mental states belong to a single conscious subject. Elsewhere I have argued that a mental state's being conscious is a matter of our being conscious of that state by having a higher-order thought (HOT) about it. Contrary to what is sometimes argued, this HOT model affords a natural explanation of our sense that our conscious states all belong to a single conscious subject. HOTs often (...)
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  26. David M. Rosenthal (2004). Being Conscious of Ourselves. The Monist 87 (2):161-184.score: 30.0
  27. David M. Rosenthal, Consciousness.score: 30.0
    One phenomenon pertains roughly to being awake. A person or other creature is conscious when it's awake and mentally responsive to sensory input; otherwise it's unconscious. This kind of consciousness figures most often in everyday discourse.
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  28. Dennis Earl (2009). Analyticity and the Analysis Relation. Acta Analytica 24 (2):139-148.score: 30.0
    Quine famously argued that analyticity is indefinable, since there is no good account of analyticity in terms of synonymy, and intensions are of no help since there are no intensions. Yet if there are intensions, the question still remains as to the right account of analyticity in terms of them. On the assumption that intensions must be admitted, the present paper considers two such accounts. The first analyzes analyticity in terms of concept identity, and the second analyzes analyticity in terms (...)
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  29. David Rosenthal, Aristotle's Hylomorphism.score: 30.0
    In these comments on Bernard Williams's probing and provocative paper, I shall first try to develop a line of response to the pair of problems Williams poses concerning Aristotle's account of soul. I shall then offer some reactions, of a more general sort, to his discussion of hylomorphism (henceforth "HMism"). In particular, I want to suggest that, though HMism is in part a form of inoffensive materialism, it is more than just that. And I want to urge also that HMism (...)
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  30. David Rosenthal (2011). Exaggerated Reports: Reply to Block. Analysis 71 (3):431-437.score: 30.0
  31. David Rosenthal (2005). The Higher-Order Model of Consciousness. In Rita Carter (ed.), Consciousness. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.score: 30.0
    All mental states, including thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and sensations, often occur consciously. But they all occur also without being conscious. So the first thing a theory of consciousness must do is explain the difference between thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and sensations that are conscious and those which are not.
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  32. David Rosenthal (2004). Varieties of Higher-Order Theory. In Rocco J. Gennaro (ed.), Higher-Order Theories of Consciousness: An Anthology. John Benjamins.score: 30.0
    A touchstone of much modern theorizing about the mind is the idea, still tac- itly accepted by many, that a state's being mental implies that it's conscious. This view is epitomized in the dictum, put forth by theorists as otherwise di-.
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  33. Abigail L. Rosenthal (2004). What Ayer Saw When He Was Dead. Philosophy 79 (4):507-531.score: 30.0
    It was news verging on sensational when A. J. Ayer came back from four minutes of heart death with a report of what he saw. Especially since the philosopher, who publicized his near-death experience [NDE] in 1988, in the Telegraph and the Spectator, was known for his lifelong rejection of religion and the supernatural. But, as will be seen, Ayer's beliefs on that head were substantially unchanged, if more ambivalently expressed, and the interest of his NDE lies elsewhere— in what (...)
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  34. David M. Rosenthal, The Mind and its Expression.score: 30.0
    pain' and ┌I think that p┐ express the pain and the thought that p, themselves. The book is most impressive. It is packed with careful argument, and addresses a remarkable range of important issues about the mind. I have very much enjoyed studying it.
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  35. David M. Rosenthal (2002). The Timing of Conscious States. Consciousness and Cognition 11 (2):215-20.score: 30.0
    Striking experimental results by Benjamin Libet and colleagues have had an impor- tant impact on much recent discussion of consciousness. Some investigators have sought to replicate or extend Libet’s results (Haggard, 1999; Haggard & Eimer, 1999; Haggard, Newman, & Magno, 1999; Trevena & Miller, 2002), while others have focused on how to interpret those findings (e.g., Gomes, 1998, 1999, 2002; Pockett, 2002), which many have seen as conflicting with our commonsense picture of mental functioning.
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  36. David Rosenthal (2010). Expressing One's Mind. Acta Analytica 25 (1):21-34.score: 30.0
    Remarks such as ‘I am in pain’ and ‘I think that it’s raining’ are puzzling, since they seem to literally describe oneself as being in pain or having a particular thought, but their conditions of use tend to coincide with unequivocal expressions of pain or of that thought. This led Wittgenstein, among others, to treat such remarks as expressing, rather than as reporting, one’s mental states. Though such expressivism is widely recognized as untenable, Bar-On has recently advanced a neo-expressivist view, (...)
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  37. David Rosenthal (2010). How to Think About Mental Qualities. Philosophical Issues 20 (1):368-393.score: 30.0
  38. Dennis Earl (2010). Vague Analysis. Metaphysica 11 (2):223-233.score: 30.0
    It might be thought that vagueness precludes the possibility of classical conceptual analysis and, thus, that the classical or definitional view of the nature of complex concepts is incorrect. The present paper argues that classical analysis can be had for concepts expressed by vague language since (1) all of the general theories of vagueness are compatible with the thesis that all complex concepts have classical analyses and also that (2) the meaning of vague expressions can be analyzed by having the (...)
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  39. David M. Rosenthal (2000). Consciousness, Content, and Metacognitive Judgments. Consciousness And Cognition 9 (2):203-214.score: 30.0
    Because metacognition consists in our having mental access to our cognitive states and mental states are conscious only when we are conscious of them in some suitable way, metacognition and consciousness shed important theoretical light on one another. Thus, our having metacognitive access to information carried by states that are not conscious helps con?rm the hypothesis that a mental state.
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  40. David Rosenthal, The Function and Facilitation of Consciousness.score: 30.0
  41. David Rosenthal (2012). Higher-Order Awareness, Misrepresentation, and Function. Higher-Order Awareness, Misrepresentation and Function 367 (1594):1424-1438.score: 30.0
    Conscious mental states are states we are in some way aware of. I compare higher-order theories of consciousness, which explain consciousness by appeal to such higher-order awareness (HOA), and first-order theories, which do not, and I argue that higher-order theories have substantial explanatory advantages. The higher-order nature of our awareness of our conscious states suggests an analogy with the metacognition that figures in the regulation of psychological processes and behaviour. I argue that, although both consciousness and metacognition involve higher-order psychological (...)
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  42. David M. Rosenthal (1995). Multiple Drafts and the Facts of the Matter. In Thomas Metzinger (ed.), Conscious Experience. Ferdinand Schoningh.score: 30.0
  43. Patrick L. Bourgeois & Sandra B. Rosenthal (1990). Scientific Time and the Temporal Sense of Human Existence: Merleau-Ponty and Mead. Research in Phenomenology 20 (1):152-163.score: 30.0
  44. David M. Rosenthal (1991). The Independence of Consciousness and Sensory Quality. Philosophical Issues 1:15-36.score: 30.0
  45. David Rosenthal (2001). Consciousness and Sensation: Philosophical Aspects. In N. J. Smelser & P. B. Baltes (eds.), International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Pergamon/Elsevier.score: 30.0
    consciousness. Such unconscious processing always
    Cambridge, UK
    tends to re?ect habitual or strong responses. From this.
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  46. David Rosenthal, Consciousness and Intrinsic Higher-Order Content.score: 30.0
    PowerPoint presentation at Tucson VII, Toward a Science of Consciousness 2006, session on Self-Representational Approaches to Consciousness.
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  47. David Rosenthal, V. Consciousness, Interpretation, and Higher-Order-Thought.score: 30.0
    Few contemporary researchers in psychology, philosophy, and the cognitive sciences have any doubt about whether mental phenomena occur without being conscious. There is extensive and convincing clinical and experimental evidence for the existence of thoughts, desires, and related mental states that aren’t conscious. We characterize thoughts, desires, intentions, expectations, hopes, and many other mental states in terms of the things they are about and, more fully, in terms of their content, as captured by a sentence nominalization, such as a clause (...)
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  48. D. M. Rosenthal, Elsevier.score: 30.0
    p0005 The term ‘consciousness’ is used in several ways: to describe a person or other creature as being awake and sentient, to describe a person or other creature as being ‘aware of ’ something, and to refer to a property of mental states, such as perceiving, feeling, and thinking, that distinguishes those states from unconscious mental states. Distinguishing these different concepts of consciousness is crucial in evaluating the major theories of what it is for a state to be conscious. Among (...)
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  49. Jennifer Earl (2003). Tanks, Tear Gas, and Taxes: Toward a Theory of Movement Repression. Sociological Theory 21 (1):44-68.score: 30.0
    Despite the importance of research on repression to the study of social movements, few researchers have focused on developing a refined and powerful conceptualization of repression. To address the difficulties such theoretical inattention produces, three key dimensions of repression are outlined and crossed to produce a repression typology. The merit of this typology for researchers is shown by using the typology to: (1) reorganize major research findings on repression; (2) diagnose theoretical and empirical oversights and missteps in the study of (...)
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  50. David M. Rosenthal (2000). Consciousness, Interpretation, and Consciousness. Protosociology 14:67-84.score: 30.0
  51. David M. Rosenthal (2001). Color, Mental Location, and the Visual Field. Consciousness And Cognition 10 (1):85-93.score: 30.0
    Color subjectivism is the view that color properties are mental properties of our visual sensations, perhaps identical with properties of neural states, and that nothing except visual sensations and other mental states exhibits color properties. Color phys- icalism, by contrast, holds that colors are exclusively properties of visible physical objects and processes.
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  52. David M. Rosenthal (2000). Metacognition and Higher-Order Thoughts. Consciousness and Cognition 9 (2):231-242.score: 30.0
    Because there is a fair amount of overlap in the points by Balog and Rey, I will organize this response topically, referring specifically to each commentator as rele- vant. And, because much of the discussion focuses on my higher-order-thought (HOT) hypothesis independent of questions about metacognition, I will begin by addressing a cluster of issues that have to do with the status, motivation, and exact formulation of that hypothesis.
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  53. G. E. M. Anscombe, R. Rhees & David M. Rosenthal, The Mind and Its Expression.score: 30.0
    pain' and ┌I think that p┐ express the pain and the thought that p, themselves. The book is most impressive. It is packed with careful argument, and addresses a remarkable range of important issues about the mind. I have very much enjoyed studying it.
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  54. Dennis Earl (2011). Divine Intimacy and the Problem of Horrendous Evil. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 69 (1):17-28.score: 30.0
    The problem of horrendous evil is the problem of reconciling the existence of horrendous evils with the existence of a God that is nevertheless good to individuals. A solution to the problem along the lines of that proposed by Morilyn McCord Adams resolves the problem by appeal to various sorts of intimacy with God on the part of the participants in horrendous evils. One half of the problem concerns the victims of horrendous evils. A second half of the problem of (...)
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  55. Rogene A. Buchholz & Sandra B. Rosenthal (2004). Stakeholder Theory and Public Policy: How Governments Matter. Journal of Business Ethics 51 (2):143-153.score: 30.0
    The Social Issues in Management Division has had a long history of research into various aspects of governmental influences on business. Recent years, however, have seen stakeholder theory sort of sweep the field, and under a stakeholder theory of capitalism, governments will matter less then they have in the past as stakeholder principles are implemented throughout the corporate world. This article will examine the nature of this claim by discussing problems with the implementation of stakeholder theory and examining the role (...)
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  56. David M. Rosenthal, Will and the Theory of Judgment.score: 30.0
    Contemporary discussions typically give somewhat sort shrift to the theory of judgment Descartes advances in the Fourth Meditation.' One reason for this relative neglect is presumably the prima facie implausibility of the theory. It sounds odd to say that, in believing something, one's mental affirmation is an act of free will, on a par with freely deciding what to do. In addition, Descartes advances the theory as a way to explain the possibility of human error, which doubtless strikes many as (...)
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  57. Rogene A. Buchholz & Sandra B. Rosenthal (2006). Integrating Ethics All the Way Through: The Issue of Moral Agency Reconsidered. Journal of Business Ethics 66 (2/3):233 - 239.score: 30.0
    Integrating "ethics all the way through" an organization suggests that the issue of moral agency and the corporation be reconsidered. Is the corporation a moral agent in some sense or is it no more than the people who are a part of the organization? Views which stress the role of the individual lose sight of the whole corporate entity, and views which think of the corporation as a collective lose sight of the individual. A view which rejects both these alternatives (...)
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  58. Rogene A. Buchholz & Sandra B. Rosenthal (2005). Toward a Contemporary Conceptual Framework for Stakeholder Theory. Journal of Business Ethics 58 (1-3):137 - 148.score: 30.0
    . Atomic individualism is embedded in most definitions of stakeholder theory, and as a result, stakeholders are not integral to the basic identity of the corporation which is considered to be independent of, and separate from, its stakeholders. Feminist theory has been suggested as a way of developing a more relational view of the corporation and its stakeholders, but it lacks a systematically developed conceptual framework for undergirding its own insights. Pragmatic philosophy is offered as a way of providing this (...)
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  59. Michael A. Rosenthal (2001). Tolerance as a Virtue in Spinoza's Ethics. Journal of the History of Philosophy 39 (4):535-557.score: 30.0
  60. David M. Rosenthal (2006). Experience and the Physical. Journal of Consciousness Studies 13 (10-11):117-28.score: 30.0
    Strawson’s challenging and provocative defence of panpsychism1 begins by sensibly insisting that physicalism, properly understood, must unflinchingly countenance the occurrence of conscious experiences. No view, he urges, will count as ‘real physicalism’ (p. 4) if it seeks to get around or soften that commitment, as versions of socalled physicalism sometimes do. Real physicalism (hereinafter physicalism tout court) must accordingly reject any stark opposition of mental and physical, which is not only invoked by many followers of Descartes, but even countenanced by (...)
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  61. David Rosenthal, “Replies to Galen Strawson and Ned Block.score: 30.0
    (not intended for publication), Replies to Strawson and Block in Colloquium at the CUNY Graduate Center, December 13, 2006.
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  62. David M. Rosenthal (2004). Subjective Character and Reflexive Content. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 68 (1):191-198.score: 30.0
    I. Zombies and the Knowledge Argument John Perry.
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  63. E. M. Anscombe, R. Rhees & David M. Rosenthal, Consciousness.score: 30.0
    One phenomenon pertains roughly to being awake. A person or other creature is conscious when it's awake and mentally responsive to sensory input; otherwise it's unconscious. This kind of consciousness figures most often in everyday discourse.
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  64. Dennis Earl, The Classical Theory of Concepts. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 30.0
  65. David M. Rosenthal (2002). Consciousness and the Mind. Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly 51 (July):227-251.score: 30.0
    Everyone — or almost everyone — was agreed that what is [mental] … has a common quality in which its essence is expressed: namely the quality of being conscious — unique, indescribable, but needing no description. All that is conscious … is [mental], and conversely all that is [mental] is conscious; that is self-evident and to contradict it is nonsense.
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  66. David M. Rosenthal, Consciousness (.score: 30.0
    (1) Most commonly these terms are used to describe people. People and other creatures are conscious if they are awake and responsive to sensory stimulation. Because this is a property of creatures, we can call it creature consciousness. An individual lacks such consciousness if it is asleep, in a coma, anesthetized, and so forth. Creature consciousness demands a mainly biological explanation, as against an explanation in mainly psychological terms.
     
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  67. David M. Rosenthal (1993). Higher-Order Thoughts and the Appendage Theory of Consciousness. Philosophical Psychology 6 (2):155-66.score: 30.0
    Theories of what it is for a mental state to be conscious must answer two questions. We must say how we're conscious of our conscious mental states. And we must explain why we seem to be conscious of them in a way that's immediate. Thomas Natsoulas (1993) distinguishes three strategies for explaining what it is for mental states to be conscious. I show that the differences among those strategies are due to the divergent answers they give to the foregoing questions. (...)
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  68. David M. Rosenthal (1993). Multiple Drafts and Higher-Order Thoughts. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 (4):911-18.score: 30.0
    whatever it is that occurs in between the two. Though superficially tempting, this idea heightens the air of mystery surrounding consciousness. As far..
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  69. David M. Rosenthal (1995). Moore's Paradox and Consciousness. Philosophical Perspectives 9:313-33.score: 30.0
  70. Sandra B. Rosenthal (2011). The Process of Pragmatism: Some Wide-Ranging Implications. The Pluralist 6 (3).score: 30.0
    The uprootedness of experience from its ontological embeddedness in a natural world is at the core of much contemporary philosophy which, like pragmatism, aims to reject foundationalism in all its forms. All hold positions that, in varying ways, there is a bedrock basis on which to build an edifice of knowledge, something objective that justifies rational arguments concerning what is the single best position for making available or picturing the structure of reality as it exists independently of our various contextually (...)
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  71. Gianfranco Dalla Barba, Victor Rosenthal & Yves-Marie Visetti (2002). The Nature of Mental Imagery: How Null is the “Null Hypothesis”? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (2):187-188.score: 30.0
    Is mental imagery pictorial? In Pylyshyn's view no empirical data provides convincing support to the “pictorial” hypothesis of mental imagery. Phenomenology, Pylyshyn says, is deeply deceiving and offers no explanation of why and how mental imagery occurs. We suggest that Pylyshyn mistakes phenomenology for what it never pretended to be. Phenomenological evidence, if properly considered, shows that mental imagery may indeed be pictorial, though not in the way that mimics visual perception. Moreover, Pylyshyn claims that the “pictorial hypothesis” is flawed (...)
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  72. David M. Rosenthal (1995). Self-Knowledge and Moore's Paradox. Philosophical Studies 77 (2-3):195 - 209.score: 30.0
  73. David Rosenthal, The Mind and its Expression.score: 30.0
    MS., for an Eastern Division APA Author-Meets-Critics Session on Dorit Bar-On, Speaking My Mind: Expression and Self-Knowledge, Baltimore, December 2007.
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  74. Rogene A. Buchholz & Sandra B. Rosenthal (2005). The Spirit of Entrepreneurship and the Qualities of Moral Decision Making: Toward a Unifying Framework. Journal of Business Ethics 60 (3):307 - 315.score: 30.0
    At the heart of entrepreneurship are imagination, creativity, novelty, and sensitivity. It takes these qualities to develop a new product or service and bring it to market, to envision the possible impacts a new product may make and come up with novel and creative solutions to problems that may arise. These qualities go to make up what could be called the spirit of entrepreneurship, a spirit that involves the ability to handle the experimental nature of entrepreunerial activity. These same qualities (...)
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  75. David M. Rosenthal (1987). Intentionality. Midwest Studies in Philosophy 10 (1):151-184.score: 30.0
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  76. Sandra B. Rosenthal (1987). The Pragmatic a Priori: Lewis and Dewey. Southern Journal of Philosophy 25 (1):109-121.score: 30.0
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  77. David Rosenthal, Reflections on Five Questions: Autobiographical and Disciplinary.score: 30.0
    in Mind and Consciousness: Five Questions, ed. Patrick Grim, New York and London: Automatic Press, forthcoming.
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  78. Sandra B. Rosenthal (1980). Pragmatism and Phenomenology: A Philosophic Encounter. Grüner.score: 30.0
    INTRODUCTION In the philosophic world today, and especially within the context of the emerging American scene, pragmatism and phenomenology can each ...
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  79. David M. Rosenthal (2004). Review: The Nature of Consciousness. [REVIEW] Mind 113 (451):581-588.score: 30.0
  80. Michael A. Rosenthal (2001). Spinoza's Dogmas of the Universal Faith and the Problem of Religion. Philosophy and Theology 13 (1):53-72.score: 30.0
    I argue that in the seven “dogmas of the universal faith,” which are introduced in chapter XIV of the Theological-Political Treatise, Spinoza reinterprets the traditional view of a minimal credo required for salvation. The dogmas are dialectical propositions that are true insofar as they are practically useful. Instead of obtaining salvation for the soul, the dogmas aid in the preservation of the body, particularly through the regulation of religion within the state. I show that reading the dogmas in light of (...)
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  81. Rogene A. Buchholz & Sandra B. Rosenthal (2008). The Unholy Alliance of Business and Science. Journal of Business Ethics 78 (1-2):199 - 206.score: 30.0
    This paper will build on a recent article appearing in the Harvard Business Review that blamed the alleged crisis in management education on the scientific model that has been adopted as the sole means of gaining knowledge about human behavior and organizations. The solution, they argue, is for business schools to realize that business management is not a scientific discipline but a profession, and deal with the things a professional education requires. We will expand on this article and discuss its (...)
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  82. David M. Rosenthal (2000). Introspection and Self-Interpretation. Philosophical Topics 28 (2):201-33.score: 30.0
  83. Abigail L. Rosenthal (2006). Moral Competence and Bernard Williams. Philosophy 81 (2):255-277.score: 30.0
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  84. Sandra B. Rosenthal & Patrick L. Bourgeois (1987). Peirce, Merleau-Ponty, and Perceptual Experience: A Kantian Heritage. International Studies in Philosophy 19 (3):33-42.score: 30.0
    Not only does peirce's theory of meaning as dispositional or as habit contain parallels with merleau-ponty's view of meaning in the structure of human behavior, but also both peirce and merleau-ponty alike attack reductivistic theories of perception. within this context, the present paper focuses on the use of kantian schemata in the philosophies of peirce and merleau-ponty, but to the extent that such incorporations are consistent with trends in pragmatism and phenomenology in general, it will reveal points of encounter not (...)
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  85. Michael A. Rosenthal (2007). Spinoza's Theologico-Political Treatise: Exploring 'the Will of God'. Journal of the History of Philosophy 45 (2):334-335.score: 30.0
  86. David Rosenthal, Aristotle on Thought.score: 30.0
    The main goal of Deborah Modrak's penetrating and compelling discussion is to show that Aristotle subscribed "to an integrated model of perceptual and noetic functions" (268). Using Aristotle's phrase (Γ4, 429b13, 21), Modrak describes the integrated model as the view that "the noetic faculty is the perceptual faculty differently disposed" (283). She notes that this interpretation faces certain difficulties, but argues forcefully and incisively that it can nonetheless be sustained.
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  87. David M. Rosenthal (1997). Apperception, Sensation, and Dissociability. Mind and Language 2 (2):206-23.score: 30.0
    Recent writing on consciousness has increasingly stressed ways in which the terms.
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  88. David M. Rosenthal (2000). Addendum to Introduction. In Materialism and the Mind-Body Problem. Hackett.score: 30.0
    Mind-body materialism is at its most inviting in the context of trying to give a unified treatment of the natural world. And the principle challenge it faces is to do justice to the distinguishing features of mental phenomena, which set them off from nonmental, physical reality. This challenge it not easy to meet. In 1971 I suggested that the difficulty in meeting it makes especially appealing the eliminative materialism of Feyerabend and Rorty. If adopting the materialist view that mental (...)
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  89. David Rosenthal (2002). Moore's Paradox and Crimmins's Case. Analysis 62 (274):167-171.score: 30.0
    Moore’s paradox occurs with sentences, such as (1) It’s raining and I don’t think it’s raining. which are self-defeating in a way that prevents one from making an asser- tion with them.1 But Mark Crimmins has given us a case of a sentence that is syntactically just like (1) but is nonetheless assertible. Suppose I know somebody, and know or have excellent reason to believe that I know that very person under some other guise. I do not know what that (...)
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  90. David M. Rosenthal, State Consciousness and What It's Like.score: 30.0
  91. Michaela Rosenthal (2003). Spinoza's Republican Argument for Toleration. Journal of Political Philosophy 11 (3):320–337.score: 30.0
  92. Michael A. Rosenthal (2001). Tolerance as a Virtue in Spinoza's. Journal of the History of Philosophy 39 (4).score: 30.0
  93. David M. Rosenthal (1973). Talking About Thinking. Philosophical Studies 24 (September):283-308.score: 30.0
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  94. Michael A. Rosenthal (2005). ‘The Black, Scabby Brazilian’: Some Thoughts on Race and Early Modern Philosophy. Philosophy and Social Criticism 31 (2):211-221.score: 30.0
    When Spinoza described his dream of a ‘black, scabby Brazilian’, was the image indicative of a larger pattern of racial discrimination? Should today’s readers regard racist comments and theories in the texts of 17th- and 18th-century philosophers as reflecting the prejudices of their time or as symptomatic of philosophical discourse? This article discusses whether a critical discussion of race is itself a form of racism and whether supposedly minor prejudices are evidence of a deeper social pathology. Given historical hindsight, we (...)
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  95. Sandra B. Rosenthal (2005). The Ontological Grounding of Diversity: A Pragmatic Overview. Journal of Speculative Philosophy 19 (2):107-119.score: 30.0
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  96. Sandra B. Rosenthal (2003). A Time for Being Ethical: Levinas and Pragmatism. Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (3):192-203.score: 30.0
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  97. Michael A. Rosenthal (2003). Persuasive Passions: Rhetoric and the Interpretation of Spinozas Theological-Political Treatise. Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 85 (3):249-268.score: 30.0
  98. David Rosenthal & JeeLoo Liu, The Nature of Consciousness Handout.score: 30.0
    1. To refute this theory: consciousness is intrinsic to being an intentional or sensory mental state; one cannot understand what it is for states to have sensory or intentional character without knowing what it is for those states to be conscious.
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  99. D. Rosenthal (2000). Content, Interpretation, and Consciousness. Protosociology 14:67-84.score: 30.0
  100. David M. Rosenthal, Consciousness, Plans, and Language: Commentary on Bridgeman on Consciousness.score: 30.0
    There is much in Bridgeman's account that I find congenial and compelling, especially appealing is Bridgeman's application of his thesis to the tie between consciousness and language. Nonetheless, I want to raise some questions about whether the tie he finds between plans and consciousness actually does hold. Not all memory and attention is conscious. Although attention and accessing of memories are required to execute plans, we need not be at all conscious of the relevant states of memory and attention. Nor (...)
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