Search results for 'Elizabeth M. Harlow' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Elizabeth M. Harlow (1992). The Human Face of Nature: Environmental Values and the Limits of Nonanthropocentrism. Environmental Ethics 14 (1):27-42.score: 290.0
    While some form of nonanthropocentrism is a defining feature of environmental ethics, there are at least four senses in which the value of nature might be said to be humanly independent, and these are often conflated. I argue that the strongest of these four (Roiston’s “autonomous intrinsic value”) may require classic ontological commitments which are no longer historically open to uso However, if we take seriously the language dependent view of nature suggested by post-Wittgensteinian epistemology, we find paradoxically that this (...)
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  2. Mary Harlow (2000). M. Wyke (Ed.): Gender and the Body in the Ancient Mediterranean . Pp. Ix + 219, Ills. Oxford: Blackwell, 1998. Paper, £12.99. ISBN: 0-631-20524-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (01):354-.score: 120.0
  3. Keith Bradley (2003). The Roman Life Course M. Harlow, R. Laurence: Growing Up and Growing Old in Ancient Rome. A Life Course Approach . Pp. VIII + 184, Ills, Pls. London and New York: Routledge, 2002. Paper, £14.99. Isbn: 0-415-20201-9 (0-415-20200-0 Hbk). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 53 (01):168-.score: 42.0
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  4. Larissa Bonfante (2007). Cleland (L.), Harlow (M.), Llewellyn-Jones (L.) (Edd.) The Clothed Body in the Ancient World. Pp. Xvi + 192, Ills. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2005. Paper, £28. ISBN: 978-1-84217-165-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 57 (01):234-.score: 36.0
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  5. Duane M. Rumbaugh (1997). The Psychology of Harry F. Harlow: A Bridge From Radical to Rational Behaviorism. Philosophical Psychology 10 (2):197 – 210.score: 15.0
    Harry Harlow is credited with the discovery of learning set, a process whereby problem solving becomes essentially complete in a single trial of training. Harlow described that process as one that freed his primates from arduous trial-and-error learning. The capacity of the learner to acquire learning sets was in positive association with the complexity and maturation of their brains. It is here argued that Harlow's successful conveyance of learning-set phenomena is of historic significance to the philosophy of (...)
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