Search results for 'Francis V. Adams' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Francis V. Adams & Marc K. Siegel (2009). Henderson's Equation (Review). Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 52 (3):475-476.score: 290.0
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  2. 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: 140.0
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  3. M. E. Adams, K. V. adaricheva, W. Dziobiak & A. V. Kravchenko (2004). Open Questions Related to the Problem of Birkhoff and Maltsev. Studia Logica 78 (1-2):357 - 378.score: 120.0
    The Birkhoff-Maltsev problem asks for a characterization of those lattices each of which is isomorphic to the lattice L(K) of all subquasivarieties for some quasivariety K of algebraic systems. The current status of this problem, which is still open, is discussed. Various unsolved questions that are related to the Birkhoff-Maltsev problem are also considered, including ones that stem from the theory of propositional logics.
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  4. J. Snyder, V. A. Crooks, K. Adams, P. Kingsbury & R. Johnston (2011). The 'Patient's Physician One-Step Removed': The Evolving Roles of Medical Tourism Facilitators. Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (9):530-534.score: 120.0
    Background: Medical tourism involves patients travelling internationally to receive medical services. This practice raises a range of ethical issues, including potential harms to the patient's home and destination country and risks to the patient's own health. Medical tourists often engage the services of a facilitator who may book travel and accommodation and link the patient with a hospital abroad. Facilitators have the potential to exacerbate or mitigate the ethical concerns associated with medical tourism, but their roles are poorly understood. -/- (...)
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  5. M. E. Adams, K. V. Adaricheva, W. Dziobiak & A. V. Kravchenko (2004). From the Editors. Studia Logica 78 (1-2).score: 120.0
  6. J. N. Adams (1980). V. De Angelis: Papiae Elementarium, Littera A, Vol. I A – Aequus, Vol. II Aequus – Anniferme. (Testi E Documenti Per Lo Studio Dell' Antichità, LVIII, 1–2). Pp. Lii + 100, 156. Milan: Cisalpino–La Goliardica, 1977–1978. Paper. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 30 (02):320-321.score: 120.0
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  7. A. E. Taylor, John Adams, P. E. Winter, F. C. S. Schiller, M. L., S. R., J. Waterlow, Francis Jones, B. Russell, E. M. Smith & A. D. Lindsay (1910). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 19 (75):422-442.score: 120.0
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  8. M. E. Adams & W. Dziobiak (1995). Joins of Minimal Quasivarieties. Studia Logica 54 (3):371 - 389.score: 60.0
    LetL(K) denote the lattice (ordered by inclusion) of quasivarieties contained in a quasivarietyK and letD 2 denote the variety of distributive (0, 1)-lattices with 2 additional nullary operations. In the present paperL(D 2) is described. As a consequence, ifM+N stands for the lattice join of the quasivarietiesM andN, then minimal quasivarietiesV 0,V 1, andV 2 are given each of which is generated by a 2-element algebra and such that the latticeL(V 0+V1), though infinite, still admits an easy and nice description (...)
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  9. John Adams (2004). Ecrits Politiques Et Philosophiques. Equipe "Identité Et Subjectivité," Université de Caen Basse-Normandie.score: 60.0
    v. 1. De Harvard à la Guerre de l'indépendance américaine (1756-1782) -- v. 2. De la Constitution fédérale à la retraite (1786-1816).
     
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  10. A. L. Peck (1940). Francis Adams, The Genuine Works of Hippocrates, Translated From the Greek. Introduction by E. C. Kelly, M.D. Pp. Viii +384; 8 Plates. London: Baillière, Tindall, & Cox, 1939. Cloth, 135. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 54 (02):112-113.score: 36.0
  11. H. J. Rose (1926). Italic Hut Urns and Hut Cemeteries: A Study in the Early Iron Age of Latium and Etruria. By W. R. Bryan. (Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome, Vol. IV.) Pp. Xiv + 204. 25 Illustrations in 7 Plates. Rome: Sindicato Italiano Arti Grariche (for the American Academy), 1925.The Faliscans in Prehistoric Times. By Louise Adams Holland. (Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome, Vol. V.) Pp. Viii + 162. 13 Plates. Rome: Sindicato Italiano Arti Grafiche (for the American Academy), 1925. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 40 (04):138-.score: 36.0
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  12. J. Kupfer (2010). Ojciec empiryzmu: Roger, nie Francis (przeł. Adam K. Gogacz). Hybris 1.score: 14.0
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  13. Michael Lynch & Ruth McNally, "Science", "Sens Commun" Et Preuve ADN:Une Controverse Judiciaire a Propos de la Comprehension Publique de la Science.score: 14.0
    This paper examines the English case, Regina v Adams in which the difference between "scientific reason" and "common sense" was explicitly at stake in the use of DNA evidence. In its decision the Appellate Court reinstated a boundary between "scientific" and "common sense" evidence, arguing that this boundary was necessary to preserve the jury's role as trier of fact. The paper's discussion of the court's work of demarcation addresses the unresolved problems with the place of probability estimates in jury (...)
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  14. Noriaki Iwasa (2011). Sentimentalism and the Is-Ought Problem. Croatian Journal of Philosophy 11 (33):323-352.score: 12.0
    Examining the moral sense theories of Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, and Adam Smith from the perspective of the is-ought problem, this essay shows that the moral sense or moral sentiments in those theories alone cannot identify appropriate morals. According to one interpretation, Hume's or Smith's theory is just a description of human nature. In this case, it does not answer the question of how we ought to live. According to another interpretation, it has some normative implications. In this case, (...)
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  15. Greg Bamford (1989). Popper, Refutation and 'Avoidance' of Refutation. Dissertation, The University of Queenslandscore: 12.0
    Popper's account of refutation is the linchpin of his famous view that the method of science is the method of conjecture and refutation. This thesis critically examines his account of refutation, and in particular the practice he deprecates as avoiding a refutation. I try to explain how he comes to hold the views that he does about these matters; how he seeks to make them plausible; how he has influenced others to accept his mistakes, and how some of the ideas (...)
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  16. Harvey Friedman, New Borel Independence Results.score: 12.0
    S. Adams, W. Ambrose, A. Andretta, H. Becker, R. Camerlo, C. Champetier, J.P.R. Christensen, D.E. Cohen, A. Connes. C. Dellacherie, R. Dougherty, R.H. Farrell, F. Feldman, A. Furman, D. Gaboriau, S. Gao, V. Ya. Golodets, P. Hahn, P. de la Harpe, G. Hjorth, S. Jackson, S. Kahane, A.S. Kechris, A. Louveau,, R. Lyons, P.-A. Meyer, C.C. Moore, M.G. Nadkarni, C. Nebbia, A.L.T. Patterson, U. Krengel, A.J. Kuntz, J.-P. Serre, S.D. Sinel'shchikov, T. Slaman, Solecki, R. Spatzier, J. Steel, D. Sullivan, (...)
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  17. Jaroslav Peregrin, Jan Dejnožka: The Ontology of the Analytic Tradition and its Origins (Realism and Identity in Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein and Quine), Littlefield Adams Books, Maryland, 1996.score: 12.0
    Existuje překvapivě málo knih, které by se pokoušely o syntetizující pohled na analytickou filosofii. Je ovšem pravda, že ve druhé polovině našeho století se soubor filosofů, kteří se k analytické filosofii hlásí nebo kteří k ní bývají řazeni, stává natolik různorodý, že se jakákoli syntéza stává problematickou; překvapivě málo syntetizujících prací existuje ale i o ‘klasické’ analytické filosofii, to jest o analytické filosofii období zhruba od konce devatenáctého století do poloviny století dvacátého. Dejnožkova kniha je jednou z těch mála, které (...)
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  18. Paul Russell (1991). Book Review:Virtue by Consensus: The Moral Philosophy of Hutcheson, Hume and Adam Smith. V. M. Hope. [REVIEW] Ethics 101 (4):873-.score: 12.0
  19. Richard S. Briggs (2009). Reading Scripture with the Church: Toward a Hermeneutic for Theological Interpretation. By A. K. M. Adam, Stephen E. Fowl, Kevin J. Vanhoozer, Francis Watson Tradition, Scripture, and Interpretation: A Sourcebook of the Ancient Church (Evangelical Ressourcement: Ancient Sources for the Church's Future). Ed. D. H. Williams Sacred Scripture: The Disclosure of the Word. By Francis Martin The Language of Symbolism: Biblical Theology, Semantics, and Exegesis. By Pierre Grelot. [REVIEW] Heythrop Journal 50 (1):119-120.score: 12.0
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  20. Ian T. E. Boyd (1996). The Problem of Self-Destroying Sin in John Milton's Samson Agonistes. Faith and Philosophy 13 (4):487-507.score: 12.0
    In this paper, I argue that John Milton, in his tragedy Smason Agonistes, raises and offers a solution to a version of the problem of evil raised by Marilyn McCord Adams. Sections I and II are devoted to the presentation of Adams’s version of the problem and its place in the current discussion of the problem of evil. In section III, I present Milton’s version of the problem as it is raised in Samson Agonistes. The solution Milton offers (...)
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  21. V. C. Hopkins (1947). The Pale Isolation of Henry Adams. Thought 22 (4):590-593.score: 12.0
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  22. Michele Moody-Adams (2003). The Legacy of Plessy V. Ferguson. In Tommy Lee Lott & John P. Pittman (eds.), A Companion to African-American Philosophy. Blackwell Pub..score: 12.0
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  23. Luke O'Sullivan, The late Catherine Fuller & Philip Schofield (eds.) (2006). The Correspondence of Jeremy Bentham: Volume 12: July 1824 to June 1828. Clarendon Press.score: 12.0
    This twelfth volume of Correspondence contains authoritative and fully annotated texts of all known letters sent both to and from Bentham between July 1824 and June 1828. The 301 letters, most of which have never before been published, have been collected from archives, public and private, in Britain, the United States of America, Switzerland, France, Japan, and elsewhere, as well as from the major collections of Bentham Papers at University College London Library and the British Library. -/- In mid-1824 Bentham (...)
     
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  24. John Francis Adams Taylor (1964). Design and Expression in the Visual Arts. New York, Dover Publications.score: 12.0
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  25. Stanley Tweyman (ed.) (1996). Hume on Miracles. Thoemmes.score: 12.0
    This is the first volume of a two-volume set containing the most important secondary literature on Hume on Religion (Volume 2, to be published in August 1996, deals with general remarks on Hume and Natural Religion). Focusing on responses to the Essay on Miracles , the material included in this volume ranges from 1751 to 1883. Authors include: T. Rutherford, William Adams, John Leland, George Campbell, Revd. S. Vince, John Hollis, Revd. James Somerville, Dr. Wately, Revd. A. C. L. (...)
     
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  26. V. Hope (1989). Virtue by Consensus: The Moral Philosophy of Hutcheson, Hume, and Adam Smith. Oxford University Press.score: 8.0
    Some of the most important achievements in the field of empiricist ethics were made by the School of Moral Sentiment, comprising Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, and Adam Smith. This book throws new light on their consensus theory of virtue. Hope works some of their ideas into a merit theory of rights applicable to conventional rights, defends ethical cognitivism, and analyzes pleasure.
     
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  27. Francis Hutcheson, An Essay on the Nature and Conduct of the Passions and Affections, with Illustrations on the Moral Sense.score: 7.0
    An Essay on the Nature and Conduct of the Passions and Affections, with Illustrations on the Moral Sense (1728), jointly with Francis Hutcheson’s earlier work Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue (1725), presents one of the most original and wide-ranging moral philosophies of the eighteenth century. These two works, each comprising two semi-autonomous treatises, were widely translated and vastly influential throughout the eighteenth century in England, continental Europe, and America. -/- The two works had (...)
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  28. Samuel Fleischacker (2004). On Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations: A Philosophical Companion. Princeton University Press.score: 7.0
    Adam Smith was a philosopher before he ever wrote about economics, yet until now there has never been a philosophical commentary on the Wealth of Nations . Samuel Fleischacker suggests that Smith's vastly influential treatise on economics can be better understood if placed in the light of his epistemology, philosophy of science, and moral theory. He lays out the relevance of these aspects of Smith's thought to specific themes in the Wealth of Nations , arguing, among other things, that Smith (...)
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  29. John Kilcullen, Adam Smith: The Moral Sentiments.score: 7.0
    Adam Smith was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland, in 1723 (Source on Smith's life: E G West, Adam Smith ). He entered Glasgow University in 1737, aged 14. This university still followed some practices of the medieval universities, for example in admitting students at age 14. Its professors still took fees directly from students: that had been the original practice in medieval universities, but in more famous universities rich people had endowed colleges within the university, which paid lecturers' salaries. The Glasgow (...)
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  30. Andrew Stewart Skinner (1996). A System of Social Science: Papers Relating to Adam Smith. Clarendon Press.score: 7.0
    The second edition of this guide to Adam Smith's system of thought has been fully updated to reflect recent developments in Smith scholarship and Professor Skinner's experience of teaching Smith to a student audience. The material from the first edition has been extensively rewritten, and four new chapters have been added, covering Smith's essays on the exercise of human understanding, and his relationship to Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, and Sir James Steuart. -/- Professor Skinner places Smith's system of social, (...)
     
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  31. V. Koubek & J. Sichler (2004). On Relative Universality and Q-Universality. Studia Logica 78 (1-2):279 - 291.score: 6.0
    Adams and Dziobiak proved that any finite-to-finite universal quasivariety must be Q-universal, and then asked whether a somewhat weaker hypothesis could lead to the same conclusion. We show that their original hypothesis cannot be weakened to its naturally extreme form.
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  32. William John Bosenbrook & Hayden V. White (eds.) (1968). The Uses of History. Detroit, Wayne State University Press.score: 5.0
    Adam Smith and the philosophy of anti-history, by J. Weiss.--Towards a dissolution of the ontological argument, by A. C. Danto.--Romanticism, historicism, realism: toward a period concept for early 19th century intellectual history, by H. V. White.--History and humanity: the Proudhonian vision, by A. Noland.--Hintze and the legacy of Ranke, by M. Covensky.--Objections to metaphysics, by J. Cobitz.--The term expressionism in the visual arts, by V. H. Miesel.--Karl Löwith's anti-historicism, by B. Riesterer.--Antonio Gramsci; Marxism and the Italian intellectual tradition, by J. (...)
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  33. Jon Rick (2007). Hume's and Smith's Partial Sympathies and Impartial Stances. Journal of Scottish Philosophy 5 (2):135-158.score: 4.0
    The moral psychology of sympathy is the linchpin of the sentimentalist moral theories of both David Hume and Adam Smith. In this paper, I attempt to diagnose the critical differences between Hume's and Smith's respective accounts of sympathy in order to argue that Smithian sympathy is more properly suited to serve as a basis for impartial moral evaluations and judgments than is Humean sympathy. By way of arguing this claim, I take up the problem of overcoming sympathetic partiality in the (...)
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  34. Adam Rieger (2002). Paradox Without Basic Law V: A Problem with Frege’s Ontology. Analysis 62 (276):327–330.score: 4.0
  35. Adam J. Rock, Jessica M. Wilson, Luke J. Johnston & Janelle V. Levesque (2008). Ego Boundaries, Shamanic-Like Techniques, and Subjective Experience: An Experimental Study. Anthropology of Consciousness 19 (1):60-83.score: 4.0
    The subjective effects and therapeutic potential of the shamanic practice of journeying is well known. However, previous research has neglected to provide a comprehensive assessment of the subjective effects of shamanic-like journeying techniques on non-shamans. Shamanic-like techniques are those that demonstrate some similarity to shamanic practices and yet deviate from what may genuinely be considered shamanism. Furthermore, the personality traits that influence individual susceptibility to shamanic-like techniques are unclear. The aim of the present study was, thus, to investigate experimentally the (...)
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  36. Daniel Callahan (2006). Medicine and the Market: Equity V. Choice. Johns Hopkins University Press.score: 4.0
    Much has been written about medicine and the market in recent years. This book is the first to include an assessment of market influence in both developed and developing countries, and among the very few that have tried to evaluate the actual health and economic impact of market theory and practices in a wide range of national settings. Tracing the path that market practices have taken from Adam Smith in the eighteenth century into twenty-first-century health care, Daniel Callahan and Angela (...)
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  37. Alexander Broadie, Scottish Philosophy in the 18th Century. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 4.0
    Philosophy was at the core of the eighteenth century movement known as the Scottish Enlightenment. The movement included major figures, such as Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, Adam Smith, Thomas Reid and Adam Ferguson, and also many others who produced notable works, such as Gershom Carmichael, George Turnbull, George Campbell, James Beattie, Alexander Gerard, Henry Home (Lord Kames) and Dugald Stewart. I discuss some of the leading ideas of these thinkers, though paying less attention than I otherwise would to Hume, (...)
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  38. K. A. Mohyeldin Said (ed.) (1990). Modelling the Mind. Oxford University Press.score: 4.0
    This collection by a distinguished group of philosophers, psychologists, and physiologists reflects an interdisciplinary approach to the central question of cognitive science: how do we model the mind? Among the topics explored are the relationships (theoretical, reductive, and explanatory) between philosophy, psychology, computer science, and physiology; what should be asked of models in science generally, and in cognitive science in particular; whether theoretical models must make essential reference to objects in the environment; whether there are human competences that are resistant, (...)
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  39. A. M. Adam (1995). Book Reviews : Julian Martin, Francis Bacon: The State and the Reform of Natural Philosophy. Cambridge University Press, New York, 1992. Pp. 236. $49.95. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 25 (1):131-135.score: 4.0
  40. Brayton Polka (forthcoming). The Fall of Adam and Eve: A Transformative Critique of Culture. Taylor and Francis.score: 4.0
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  41. Susan Power Bratton (1988). The Original Desert Solitaire: Early Christian Monasticism and Wilderness. Environmental Ethics 10 (1):31-53.score: 4.0
    Roderick Nash’s conc1usion in Wilderness and the American Mind that St. Francis “stood alone in a posture of humility and respect before the natural world” is not supported by thorough analysis of monastic literature. Rather St. Francis stands at the end of a thousand-year monastic tradition. Investigation of the “histories” and sayings of the desert fathers produces frequent references to the environment, particularly to wildlife. In stories about lions, wolves, antelopes, and other animals, the monks sometimes exercise spiritual (...)
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  42. David V. Meconi (2007). The Body in St Maximus the Confessor: Holy Flesh, Wholly Deified. By Adam G. Cooper. Heythrop Journal 48 (2):288–289.score: 4.0
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  43. Joyce Oldham Appleby (ed.) (1996). Knowledge and Postmodernism in Historical Perspective. Routledge.score: 4.0
    Knowledge and Postmodernism in Historical Perspective offers answers to the questions, what is postmodernism? and what exactly are the characteristics of the modernism that postmodernism supercedes? This comprehensive reader chronicles the western engagement with the nature of knowledge during the past four centuries while providing the historical context for the postmodernist thought of Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Richard Rorty and Hayden White, and the challenges their ideas have posed to our conventional ways of thinking, writing and knowing. From the science (...)
     
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  44. Michelle Blohm (2011). The Feminine and Masculine as Principles of Ascent in the Itinerarium Mentis in Deum. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 85 (1):25-42.score: 4.0
    Bonaventure in his Itinerarium mentis in Deum traces the mystical journey of the spiritual wayfarer from the state of man posterior to the Fall of Adam and Eveto union with the Trinity as a partaker of the inter-Trinitarian love life. This journey takes the form of an ascent characterized by a Procline and Augustinian influenced ontology. I argue that the first two levels of the three-tiered ascent are understood ontologically as feminine and masculine principles, or evaluative metaphors, and mirror the (...)
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  45. V. Merolle, Robin Dix & Eugene Heath (2006). The Manuscripts of Adam Ferguson.score: 4.0
  46. L. A. Selby-Bigge (1897/1965). British Moralists. New York, Dover Publications.score: 4.0
    v. 1. Essays on ethics by the Earl of Shaftesbury, Frances Hutcheson ; Samuel Butler ; Adam Smith ; Jeremy Bentham - v. 2. Essays by Samuel Clarke ; John Balguy ; Richard Price ; John Brown ; John Clarke ; Ralph Cudworth ; John Gay ; Thomas Hobbes ; Henry Home Kames ; John Locke ; John Mandeville ; William Paley ; William Wollaston.
     
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  47. Philip Stokes (2002/2003). Philosophy, 100 Essential Thinkers. Enchanted Lion.score: 4.0
    The Great Philosophers, From Thales of Miletus (ca. 620-540 b.c.), "The first natural scientist and analytical philosopher in Western intellectual history," to W.V.O. Quine (1908-2000): "Only science can tell us the truth about the world" Philosophy is a thorough and accessible introduction to the Western intellectual tradition, covering philosophical, scientific, and religious thought over a period of 2,500 years. Offering brief summaries of the work of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, as well as Copernicus, Machiavelli, Galileo, Spinoza, Voltaire, Adam Smith, Mary (...)
     
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  48. Stanley Tweyman (ed.) (2000). Early Modern Philosophy V. Caravan Books.score: 4.0
    Machine generated contents note: Selected Papers from Presentations at the Sixth Conference of the International Society for Studies in European Ideas (ISSEI), University of Haifa, Israel, 16-21 August 1998 -- An Answer to the Question 'What Is Counter-Enlightenment?' -- Graeme Garrard, Cardiff University -- Spinoza's Response to the Enlightenment Tradition -- David A. Freeman, Washburn University -- Hermeneutics, Contextualization and Historicity: From Hegel to -- Ricoeur, through the Neo-Kantians and Phenomenology -- Joseph M. de Torre, University of Asia and the (...)
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  49. Marie V. Williams (1912). The Vitality of Platonism and Other Essays The Vitality of Platonism and Other Essays. By James Adam, Late Fellow and and Senior Tutor of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Edited by His Wife, Adela Marion Adam, 1 Vol. 8vo. Pp. 242. Cambridge: University Press, 1911. 7s. 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 26 (07):224-225.score: 4.0
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  50. Adam Wyner & Rinke Hoekstra (2012). A Legal Case OWL Ontology with an Instantiation of Popov V. Hayashi. Artificial Intelligence and Law 20 (1):83-107.score: 4.0
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  51. Adam Etinson, Human Rights, Claimability, and the Uses of Abstraction.score: 2.0
    Human rights culture has often been accused of a certain imbalance. For instance, it is often said that the practitioners of human rights (i.e., lawyers, politicians, judges, legislators, intellectual advocates, activists, etc.) are too quick to proclaim the existence of rights and too slow to define or allocate attendant duties. In this article, I address one complaint of this sort: the so-called “claimability objection” to human rights. My central aim is to unearth some of the conceptual complexity underlying that objection. (...)
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  52. LouDen Dries & Adam H. Lewenberg (1995). T-Convexity and Tame Extensions. Journal of Symbolic Logic 60 (1):74 - 102.score: 2.0
    Let T be a complete o-minimal extension of the theory of real closed fields. We characterize the convex hulls of elementary substructures of models of T and show that the residue field of such a convex hull has a natural expansion to a model of T. We give a quantifier elimination relative to T for the theory of pairs (R, V) where $\mathscr{R} \models T$ and V ≠ R is the convex hull of an elementary substructure of R. We deduce (...)
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  53. Adam Olszewski (2010). Kilka uwag o kryterium Quine'a. Filozofia Nauki 1.score: 2.0
    The aim of the paper is to evaluate the usefulness of W.V.O. Quine's criterion for establishing the ontological commitments of a theory. At the outset, Quine's conception is reconstructed. It is argued that Quine does not provide a particularly clear exposition of the procedure of establishing ontological commitments. It is further maintained that - on a persuasive interpretation - one should distinguish several concepts associated with Quine's conception. These are: ontology, domain tolerated by an ontology, ontological commitments type 1 (categorical), (...)
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