Search results for 'Frank-Alexander Koch' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. F. Matthias Alexander (1974/1986). The Resurrection of the Body: The Essential Writings of F. Matthias Alexander. Distributed in the U.S. By Random House.score: 180.0
     
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  2. Richard M. Frank & James E. Montgomery (eds.) (2006). Arabic Theology, Arabic Philosophy: From the Many to the One: Essays in Celebration of Richard M. Frank. Peeters.score: 150.0
    In this volume, fourteen scholars, many of them contemporaries of Professor Frank, engage with his legacy with important and seminal works which take some of ...
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  3. Frank Cioffi & Peter Alexander (1974). Wishes, Symptoms and Actions. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 48:97 - 134.score: 140.0
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  4. Larry Alexander (2010). Waluchows —Living Tree Constitutionalism by Larry Alexander. Law and Philosophy 29 (1):93-99.score: 120.0
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  5. Edouard Machery, Jean-Louis Dessalles, Fiona Cowie & Jason Alexander (2010). Symposium on J.-L. Dessalles's Why We Talk (OUP, 2007): Precis by J.-L. Dessalles, Commentaries by E. Machery, F. Cowie, and J. Alexander, Replies by J.-L. Dessalles. [REVIEW] Biology and Philosophy 25 (5):851-901.score: 120.0
    This symposium discusses J.-L. Dessalles's account of the evolution of language, which was presented in Why we Talk (OUP 2007).
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  6. D. Frank (1996). Review. Alexander of Aphrodisias. Alexander of Aphrodisias, Quaestiones 2.16-3.15. R W Sharples (Tr). The Classical Review 46 (2):235-236.score: 120.0
  7. Thomas M. Alexander (2008). Hartley Burr Alexander: Humanistic Personalism and Pluralism. The Pluralist 3 (1):89 - 127.score: 120.0
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  8. Thomas M. Alexander (2008). The Life and Work of Hartley Burr Alexander. The Pluralist 3 (1):1 - 10.score: 120.0
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  9. Robert G. Frank & Judith H. Goetzl (1978). The J. H. B. Archive Report: The Alexander Forbes Papers. Journal of the History of Biology 11 (2):387 - 393.score: 120.0
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  10. Patrick Proctor Alexander (1866/1975). Mill and Carlyle: An Examination of Mr. John Stuart Mill's Doctrine of Causation in Relation to Moral Freedom with an Occasional Discourse on Sauerteig by Smelfungus [I.E. P. P. Alexander]. [REVIEW] Norwood Editions.score: 120.0
     
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  11. Thomas M. McCoog (2008). The Jesuits II: Cultures, Sciences, and the Arts, 1540-1773. Ed. John W. O'Malley, S.J., Gauvin Alexander Bailey, Steven J. Harris, and T. Frank Kennedy, S.J. [REVIEW] Heythrop Journal 49 (6):1079-1082.score: 36.0
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  12. E. S. Forster (1929). Some Translations and Other Books The Story of Aeneas: Virgil's Aeneid Translated Into English Verse. By H. S. Salt. Pp. Xv + 304. Cambridge: University Press, 1928. 8s. 6d. Net. The Aeneid of Virgil Translated, with an Introductory Essay. By Frank Richards, M.A. Pp. Xiv + 361. London: John Murray, 1928. 15s. Net. The Agamemnon of Aeschylus: An English Version. By Sir Henry Sharp. Pp. 73. Oxford: University Press, 1928. 2s. 6d. Net. Lusus Homerici. By Alexander Shewan. Pp. 55. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1928. 2s. 6d. Net. And Other Poems. By John Mavrogordato. Pp. 139. London: Cobden-Sanderson, 1927. 5s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (02):63-64.score: 36.0
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  13. P. M. Fraser (1989). Alexandria and Bactria Frank L. Holt: Alexander the Great and Bactria: The Formation of a Greek Frontier in Central Asia. (Mnemosyne Suppl. 104.) Pp. X + 114. Leiden, New York, Copenhagen and Cologne: Brill, 1988. Paper, Fl. 50/$25. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (02):292-293.score: 36.0
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  14. Susanne Bobzien (forthcoming). Alexander of Aphrodisias on Aristotle's Theory of the Stoic Indemonstrables. In M. Lee & M. Schiefsky (eds.), From Refutation to Assent: Strategies of Argument in Greek and Roman Philosophy. OUP.score: 18.0
    ABSTRACT: Alexander of Aphrodisias’ commentaries on Aristotle’s Organon are valuable sources for both Stoic and early Peripatetic logic, and have often been used as such – in particular for early Peripatetic hypothetical syllogistic and Stoic propositional logic. By contrast, this paper explores the role Alexander himself played in the development and transmission of those theories. There are three areas in particular where he seems to have made a difference: First, he drew a connection between certain passages from Aristotle’s Topics and (...)
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  15. J. A. Towey (2000). Alexander of Aphrodisias On Aristotle On Sense Perception. Duckworth.score: 18.0
    The first English translation of the commentary of Alexander of Aphrodisias on Aristotle's De Sensu.With notes.
     
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  16. Jonathan Barnes & Susanne Bobzien (1991). Alexander of Aphrodisias' on Aristotle's Prior Analytics 1.1-7. Duckworth.score: 18.0
    ABSTRACT: English translation of the 2nd/3rd century Peripatetic Philosopher's Alexander of Aphrodisias commentary on Aristotle's non-modal syllogistic, i.e. on one of the most influential logical texts of all times. -/- Volume includes introduction on Alexander of Aphrodisias and the early commentators, translation with notes and comments, appendices with a new translation of Aristotle's text, a summary of Aristotle's non-modal syllogistic and textual notes.
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  17. R. I. Markus (1950). Alexander's Philosophy: The Emergence of Qualities. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 11 (September):58-74.score: 15.0
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  18. J. V. Bateman (1940). Professor Alexander's Proofs of the Spatio-Temporal Nature of Mind. Philosophical Review 49 (May):309-324.score: 15.0
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  19. Alexander of Lycopolis (1974). An Alexandrian Platonist Against Dualism: Alexander of Lycopolis' Treatise "Critique of the Doctrines of Manichaeus". Brill.score: 15.0
    Introduction 1. Alexander in Modern Scholarship; The Present Translation The anti-Manichaean treatise of Alexander of Lycopolis has for a long time been ...
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  20. Alexander M. Sidorkin (2012). Mad Hatters, Jackbooted Managers, and the Massification of Higher Education. Educational Theory 62 (4):487-500.score: 15.0
    In this review of three recent books on higher education, Alexander Sidorkin shows how the disinterested discourse that appears to be anticapitalist and anticommercial is actually a way of obtaining income from state subsidies. What links the books under review—Cary Nelson's No University Is an Island: Saving Academic Freedom, Frank Donoghue's The Last Professors: The Corporate University and the Fate of the Humanities, and Jennifer Washburn's University, Inc.: The Corporate Corruption of Higher Education—is their critical evaluation of the corporatization and (...)
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  21. Oleg Romanov, Alexander Polyhistor. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 15.0
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  22. William G. Lycan (2009). Serious Metaphysics: Frank Jackson's Defense of Conceptual Analysis. In Ian Ravenscroft (ed.), Minds, Ethics, and Conditionals: Themes From the Philosophy of Frank Jackson. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
  23. Stephen Finlay & Terence Cuneo (2008). Teaching & Learning Guide For: Moral Realism and Moral Nonnaturalism. Philosophy Compass 3 (3):570-572.score: 12.0
    Metaethics is a perennially popular subject, but one that can be challenging to study and teach. As it consists in an array of questions about ethics, it is really a mix of (at least) applied metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of language, and mind. The seminal texts therefore arise out of, and often assume competence with, a variety of different literatures. It can be taught thematically, but this sample syllabus offers a dialectical approach, focused on metaphysical debate over moral realism, which spans (...)
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  24. Katalin Balog (2001). Commentary on Frank Jackson's From Metaphysics to Ethics. [REVIEW] Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (3):645–652.score: 12.0
    Discussion of Frank Jackson’s a priori entailment thesis – which he employs to connect metaphysics and conceptual analysis. In From Metaphysics to Ethics. (2001) he develops this thesis within the two-dimensional framework and also proposes a formal argument for the existence of a priori truths. I argue that the two-dimensional framework doesn’t provide independent support for the a priori entailment thesis since one has to build into the framework assumptions as strong as the thesis itself. -/- .
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  25. H. G. Callaway (ed.) (2011). Alexander James Dallas: An Exposition of the Causes and Character of the War. An Annotated Edition. Dunedin Academic Press.score: 12.0
    Alexander James Dallas' An Exposition of the Causes and Character of the War was written as part of an effort by the then US government to explain and justify its declaration of war in 1812. However publication coincided with the ratification of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the War. The Exposition is especially interesting for the insight it provides into the self-constraint of American foreign policy and of the conduct of a war. The focus is on the foreign policy (...)
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  26. Alexander Pruss, Ex Nihilo Nihil Fit: Arguments New and Old for the Principle of Sufficient Reason Alexander R. Pruss November 1, 2002 1. Introduction. [REVIEW]score: 12.0
    “Ex nihilo nihil fit,” goes the classic adage: nothing comes from nothing. Parmenides used the Principle of Sufficient Reason to argue that there was no such thing as change: If there was change, why did it happen when it happened rather than earlier or later? “Nothing happens in vain, but everything for a reason and under necessitation,” claimed Leucippus. Saint Thomas insisted in the..
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  27. Robert Pippin, Self-Interpreting Selves: Comments on Alexander Nehamas's Nietzsche: Life as Literature.score: 12.0
    When Alexander Nehamas’s path-breaking, elegantly conceived and executed book, Nietzsche: Life as Literature, first appeared in 1985, the reception of Nietzsche in the Anglo-American philosophical community was still in its initial, hesitant stages, even after the relative success of Walter Kauffmann’s much earlier, 1950 book, Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Anti-Christ, and its postwar “decontamination” of Nietzsche after his appropriation by the Nazis.1 Arthur Danto’s 1964 book, Nietzsche as Philosopher, was also an important if somewhat isolated event, and there finally began to (...)
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  28. Carl Gillett (2006). Samuel Alexander's Emergentism. Synthese 153 (2):261-296.score: 12.0
    Samuel Alexander was one of the foremost philosophical figures of his day and has been argued by John Passmore to be one of ‘fathers’ of Australian philosophy as well as a novel kind of physicalist. Yet Alexander is now relatively neglected, his role in the genesis of Australian philosophy if far from widely accepted and the standard interpretation takes him to be an anti-physicalist. In this paper, I carefully examine these issues and show that Alexander has been badly, although understandably, (...)
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  29. Thomas Mormann (forthcoming). Frank’s Austrian Reading of the Aufbau. In Veronika Hofer & Michael Stöltzner (eds.), Philipp Frank: Vienna, Prague, Boston. Open Court.score: 12.0
  30. Alexander Bird (2008). Review of Alexander Bird, Nature's Metaphysics: Laws and Properties. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (6).score: 12.0
    This is a rewarding book. In terms of area, it has one foot firmly planted in metaphysics and the other just as firmly set in the philosophy of science. Nature's Metaphysics is distinctive for its thorough and detailed defense of fundamental, natural properties as essentially dispositional and for its description of how these dispositional properties are thus suited to sustain the laws of nature as (metaphysically) necessary truths.
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  31. Mark T. Nelson (2006). Moral Realism and Program Explanation. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 84 (3):417 – 428.score: 12.0
    Alexander Miller has recently considered an ingenious extension of Frank Jackson and Philip Pettit's account of 'program explanation' as a way of defending non-reductive naturalist versions of moral realism against Harman's explanatory criticism. Despite the ingenuity of this extension, Miller concludes that program explanation cannot help such moral realists in their attempt to defend moral properties. Specifically, he argues that such moral program explanations are dispensable from an epistemically unlimited point of view. I show that Miller's argument for this negative (...)
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  32. Ian Ravenscroft (ed.) (2009). Minds, Ethics, and Conditionals: Themes From the Philosophy of Frank Jackson. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
    An illustrious line-up of seventeen philosophers from the USA, the UK, and Australia present new essays on themes from the work of Frank Jackson, which bridges mind, language, logic, metaphysics, and ethics. Central to Jackson's work is an approach to metaphysical issues built on the twin foundations of supervenience and conceptual analysis. In the first part of the book six essays examine this approach and its application to philosophy of mind and philosophy of color. The second part focuses on Jackson's (...)
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  33. Anton Froeyman (2012). Frank Ankersmit and Eelco Runia: The Presence and the Otherness of the Past. Rethinking History 16 (3):393-415.score: 12.0
    This paper consists of two parts. In the first part, I give an in-depth comparison and analysis of the theories of Frank Ankersmit and Eelco Runia, in which I highlight their most important resemblances and differences. What both have in common is their notion of the presence of the past as a ‘presence in absence’. They differ, however, with respect to the character of this past and the role representation plays in making it present. Second, I also argue that for (...)
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  34. Carolyn Korsmeyer (2010). What Beauty Promises:: Reflections on Alexander Nehamas, Only a Promise of Happiness: The Place of Beauty in a World of Art. British Journal of Aesthetics 50 (2):193-198.score: 12.0
    Alexander Nehamas calls beauty a ‘promise of happiness’ and claims that it is an object of love. While this approach appealingly places beauty at the center of both artistic passion and everyday life, it also renders it riskily personal. This discussion raises two main questions to Nehamas. The first question regards the role of happiness in the concept of beauty, for many beautiful artworks seem to acknowledge the inevitability of sorrow rather than its opposite. The second question concerns how beauty (...)
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  35. Frank Jackson (1997). Naturalism and the Fate of the M-Worlds: Frank Jackson. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 71 (1):269–282.score: 12.0
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  36. Robert B. Todd (1976). Alexander of Aphrodisias on Stoic Physics: A Study of the De Mixtione with Preliminary Essays, Text, Translation and Commentary. Brill.score: 12.0
    PART ONE ALEXANDER OF APHRODISIAS— AN INTRODUCTION A study of a work by Alexander of Aphrodisias must be prefaced by some general introduction to the author ...
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  37. Alexander Pruss, How Not to Reconcile Evolution and Creation Alexander R. Pruss.score: 12.0
    It is widely accepted that divine creation of human beings is compatible with evolutionary theory, except perhaps in regard of the human soul, and that neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory provides an explanation of speciation and of complex features of organisms that undercuts Paley-style teleological arguments, whether or not the evolutionary mechanisms are truly random or deterministic. I will argue that a plausible understanding of the doctrine of creation of human beings is either logically or rationally incompatible with full evolutionary theory, even (...)
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  38. Gary M. Hamburg & Randall Allen Poole (eds.) (2010). A History of Russian Philosophy 1830-1930: Faith, Reason, and the Defense of Human Dignity. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    Machine generated contents note: List of contributors; Acknowledgments; Introduction: the humanist tradition in Russian philosophy G. M. Hamburg and Randall A. Poole; Part I. The Nineteenth Century: 1. Slavophiles, Westernizers, and the birth of Russian philosophical humanism Sergey Horujy; 2. Alexander Herzen Derek Offord; 3. Materialism and the radical intelligentsia: the 1860s Victoria S. Frede; 4. Russian ethical humanism: from populism to neo-idealism Thomas Nemeth; Part II. Russian Metaphysical Idealism in Defense of Human Dignity: 5. Boris Chicherin and human dignity (...)
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  39. Dan Zahavi (2012). Manfred Frank and Niels Weidtmann (Eds.): Husserl Und Die Philosophie des Geistes. Husserl Studies 28 (1):81-84.score: 12.0
    Manfred Frank and Niels Weidtmann (Eds.): Husserl und die Philosophie des Geistes Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-4 DOI 10.1007/s10743-011-9101-2 Authors Dan Zahavi, Center for Subjectivity Research, Department of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark Journal Husserl Studies Online ISSN 1572-8501 Print ISSN 0167-9848.
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  40. Michael Barber (2006). Philosophy and Reflection: A Critique of Frank Welz's Sociological and “Processual” Criticism of Husserl and Schutz. Human Studies 29 (2):141 - 157.score: 12.0
    Frank Welz’s Kritik der Lebenswelt undertakes a sociology of knowledge criticism of the work of Edmund Husserl and Alfred Schutz that construes them as developing absolutist, egological systems opposed to the “processual” worldview prominent since the modern rise of natural science. Welz, though, misunderstands the work of Schutz and Husserl and neglects how their focus on consciousness and eidetic features pertains to the kind of reflection that one must undertake if one would avoid succumbing to absolutism, that uncovers the presuppositions (...)
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  41. James Good (2008). Dewey's “Permanent Hegelian Deposit”: A Reply to Hickman and Alexander. Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 44 (4):pp. 577-602.score: 12.0
    I respond to the comments by Larry Hickman and Thomas Alexander about my book, A Search for Unity in Diversity: The “Permanent Hegelian Deposit” in the Philosophy of John Dewey . I focus on four issues: 1) Precisely how do I prefer to characterize Dewey’s debt to Hegel? 2) How do I justify my admittedly controversial reading of Dewey’s World War I criticisms of Hegel? 3) Where do I believe Dewey found ideas in Hegel that led him to articulate the (...)
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  42. Steven Weinstein, Review of "Space, Time, and Stuff", Frank Arntzenius, OUP 2012. [REVIEW]score: 12.0
    Review of "Space, Time, and Stuff" by Frank Arntzenius.
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  43. Andreas Kemmerling (2007). "The Property of Being Red": On Frank Jackson's Opacity Puzzle and His New Theory of the Content of Colour Experience. Erkenntnis 66 (1-2):187 - 202.score: 12.0
    Frank Jackson has a new objectivist and representationalist account of the content of colour-experience. I raise several objections both against the account itself and, primarily, against how he tries to support it. He argues that the new account enables us to see what is wrong with the so-called Opacity Puzzle. This alleged puzzle is an argument in which a seemingly implausible conclusion is derived from three premises of which seem plausible to an representationalist. Jackson.
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  44. Hans Joas (1988). The Antinomies of Neofunctionalism: A Critical Essay on Jeffrey Alexander. Inquiry 31 (4):471 – 494.score: 12.0
    Since the beginning of the ?eighties of the present century, a circle of relatively young American sociologists who are followers of Jeffrey Alexander are making energetic and spectacular efforts to supply sociology with a uniform and comprehensive theoretical framework by continuing Talcott Parsons' lifework. The present article is an appreciation of Alexander's achievements in the justification of a general sociological theory (especially a theory of action and social order) while pointing to objections that can be raised against the character of (...)
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  45. David Sloan Wilson (1999). A Critique of R.D. Alexander's Views on Group Selection. Biology and Philosophy 14 (3).score: 12.0
    Group selection is increasingly being viewed as an important force in human evolution. This paper examines the views of R.D. Alexander, one of the most influential thinkers about human behavior from an evolutionary perspective, on the subject of group selection. Alexander's general conception of evolution is based on the gene-centered approach of G.C. Williams, but he has also emphasized a potential role for group selection in the evolution of individual genomes and in human evolution. Alexander's views are internally inconsistent and (...)
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  46. Alexander Pruss, Recombinations, Alien Properties and Laws of Nature Alexander R. Pruss March 16, 2002.score: 12.0
    A recombinationist like the earlier Armstrong (1989) claims that logically possible worlds are recombinations of items found in the actual world, with some items reduplicated if need be and others deleted. An immediate consequence of this is that if an..
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  47. Thomas E. Uebel (2000). Logical Empiricism and the Sociology of Knowledge: The Case of Neurath and Frank. Philosophy of Science 67 (3):150.score: 12.0
    Logical Empiricism is commonly regarded as uninterested in, if not hostile to sociological investigations of science. This paper reconstructs the views of Otto Neurath and Philipp Frank on the legitimacy and relevance of sociological investigations of theory choice. It is argued that while there obtains a surprising degree of convergence between their programmatic pronouncements and the Strong Programme, the two types of project nevertheless remain distinct. The key to this differences lies in the different assessment of a supposed dilemma facing (...)
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  48. Jennifer Bajorek (2011). Jane Alexander's Anti-Anthropomorphic Photographs. Angelaki 16 (1):79 - 96.score: 12.0
    This essay sets out from a reading of two photomontage projects by South African artist Jane Alexander, ?Adventure Centre? (2000) and ?Survey: Cape of Good Hope? (2005?09), one of Alexander's ongoing ?survey? projects, and remarks on the overwhelming impulse on the part of critics and interpreters to anthropomorphize the figures appearing in the photomontage images. It goes on to explore the hypothesis that Alexander's work in fact resists or refuses these attempts at anthropomorphization, and that this resistance is connected with (...)
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  49. R. W. Sharples (2005). Alexander of Aphrodisias on Universals: Two Problematic Texts. Phronesis 50 (1):43 - 55.score: 12.0
    Two texts that raise problems for Alexander of Aphrodisias' theory of universals are examined. "De anima" 90.2-8 appears to suggest that universals are dependent on thought for their existence; this raises questions about the status both of universals and of forms. It is suggested that the passage is best interpreted as indicating that universals are dependent on thought only for their being recognised as universals. The last sentence of "Quaestio" 1.11 seems to assert that if the universal did not exist (...)
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  50. Jérôme Dokic (2003/2002). Frank Ramsey: Truth and Success. Routledge.score: 12.0
    This book provides a much-needed critical introduction to the main doctrines of Frank Ramsey's work and assesses their contemporary significance.
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  51. Daniel J. Hoolsema (2004). Manfred Frank, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, and Jean-Luc Nancy: Prolegomena to a French-German Dialogue. Critical Horizons 5 (1):137-164.score: 12.0
    This essay works to set up a debate between the German philosopher Manfred Frank and the French philosophers Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and Jean-Luc Nancy. At stake in the debate is the concept of freedom. The essay begins by explaining Frank's subject-based concept of freedom and then it presents the perfectly opposed non-subjective ontological concept of freedom that Lacoue-Labarthe and Nancy forward. In the end, in the interest of threading a way through this impasse, and following the cue of these three philosophers, (...)
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  52. Eileen Crist & Alfred I. Tauber (2000). Selfhood, Immunity, and the Biological Imagination: The Thought of Frank MacFarlane Burnet. Biology and Philosophy 15 (4).score: 12.0
    The language of self and nonself has had a prominent place inimmunology. This paper examines Frank Macfarlane Burnet's introductionof the language of selfhood into the science. The distinction betweenself and nonself was an integral part of Burnet's biological outlook– of his interest in the living organism in its totality, itsactivities, and interactions. We show the empirical and conceptualwork of the language of selfhood in the science. The relation betweenself and nonself tied into Burnet's ecological vision of host-parasiteinteraction. The idiom of (...)
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  53. Alexander (2001). Alexander of Aphrodisias on the Cosmos. Brill Academic Pub.score: 12.0
  54. Luis Xavier López-Farjeat (2007). Determinism and Free Will in Alexander of Aphrodisias and the Arabic Tradition. Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 81:161-177.score: 12.0
    The Arabic tradition knew Alexander’s treatises On Fate and On Providence. Alexander criticizes the Stoic determinism with some peripatetic arguments. In those treatises we can find, at least, two positions: the peripatetic and “libertarian” position represented by Alexander, and Stoic determinism. A very similar discussion can be found in Islamic tradition. As S. Van den Bergh has insisted, Islamic theological schools had some Stoic influences. One of the issues in which we can find some common views is, precisely, the problem (...)
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  55. Kevin L. Flannery (1995). Ways Into the Logic of Alexander of Aphrodisias. E.J. Brill.score: 12.0
    Ways into the Logic of Alexander of Aphrodisias is intended to give an overview of the logic of Alexander of Aphrodisias (fl. early third century A D). Since ...
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  56. Matthew McMurray (2012). Alexander Raven Thomson, Philosopher of the British Union of Fascists. The European Legacy 17 (1):33 - 59.score: 12.0
    This study surveys the career and political philosophy of Alexander Raven Thomson, one of Sir Oswald Mosley's lieutenants in the British Union of Fascists (BUF), the largest party on the extreme right in Britain in the interwar era. It explores key issues relating to the BUF, such as: What type of society did Thomson and the Blackshirts wish to establish in Britain? Who were some of the major domestic and international intellectual influences on him and the BUF? Was the BUF (...)
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  57. Teresa Obolevitch (2010). Negative Theology and Science in the Thought of Semyon Frank. Studies in East European Thought 62 (1).score: 12.0
    Semën Frank (1877–1950) considered the Universe as the “all-unity.” According to him, everything is a part of the all-unity, which has a divine character. God is present in the world, but his nature is incomprehensible. In this article I analyze two consequences of Frank’s panentheistic view of the relation between science and theology. Firstly, the limits of scientific knowledge allow recognition of the mystery of the world and the transcendence of God. Secondly, Frank claimed that nature is a “trace” of (...)
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  58. Alexander Pruss, Cooperation with Past Evil and Use of Cell-Lines Derived From Aborted Fetuses Alexander R. Pruss May 25, 2004.score: 12.0
    The production of a number of vaccines involves the use of cell-lines originally derived from fetuses directly aborted in the 1960s and 1970s. Such cell-lines, indeed sometimes the very same ones, are important to on-going research, including at Catholic institutions. The cells currently used are removed by a number of decades and by a significant number of cellular generations from the original cells. Moreover, the original cells extracted from the bodies of the aborted fetuses were transformed to produce the cell (...)
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  59. Emily Thomas (forthcoming). Space, Time, and Samuel Alexander. British Journal for the History of Philosophy:1-21.score: 12.0
    Super-substantivalism is the thesis that space is identical to matter; it is currently under discussion ? see Sklar (1977, 221?4), Earman (1989, 115?6) and Schaffer (2009) ? in contemporary philosophy of physics and metaphysics. Given this current interest, it is worth investigating the thesis in the history of philosophy. This paper examines the super-substantivalism of Samuel Alexander, an early twentieth century metaphysician primarily associated with (the movement now known as) British Emergentism. Alexander argues that spacetime is ontologically fundamental and it (...)
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  60. John Collier, Critical Notice of Richard D. Alexander, The Biology of Moral Systems, New York: Aldine de Gruyter 1987. Pp. Xxi+301.score: 12.0
    Richard Alexander's second book on biology and morality is a continuation and amplification of the project he reported on in Darwinism and Human Affairs1. The Biology of Moral Systems is more abstract than the earlier book. It does not broach any new empirical ground, but puts Alexander's views into a broader context of philosophical and sociological discussions of morality. It discusses and criticizes alternative philosophical and biological views of morality, and presents his views on the significance of biology to moral (...)
     
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  61. George B. Kauffman (2012). Alexander Y. Grosberg and Alexei R. Khokhlov: Giant Molecules: Here, There, and Everywhere, 2nd Edn. Foundations of Chemistry 14 (2):185-186.score: 12.0
    Alexander Y. Grosberg and Alexei R. Khokhlov: Giant molecules: here, there, and everywhere, 2nd edn Content Type Journal Article Category Book Review Pages 1-2 DOI 10.1007/s10698-011-9134-9 Authors George B. Kauffman, Department of Chemistry, California State University, Fresno, Fresno, CA 93740-8034, USA Journal Foundations of Chemistry Online ISSN 1572-8463 Print ISSN 1386-4238.
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  62. Frank Keil, Derek E Lyons, Laurie R Santos and Frank C Keil.score: 12.0
    uniquely human ability. We are thus left with a fascinating question: if not imitation, what are mirror neurons for? Recent..
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  63. A. Lubowski-Jahn (2011). A Comparative Analysis of the Landscape Aesthetics of Alexander von Humboldt and John Ruskin. British Journal of Aesthetics 51 (3):321-333.score: 12.0
    This article compares Alexander von Humboldt's and John Ruskin's writings on landscape art and natural landscape. In particular, Humboldt's conception of a habitat's essence as predominantly composed of vegetation as well as judgment of tropical American nature as the realm of nature of the highest aesthetic enjoyment is examined in the context of Ruskin's aesthetic theory. The magnitude of Humboldt's contribution to the natural sciences seems to have clouded our appreciation of his prominent status in the field of art history. (...)
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  64. Alexander Pruss, Programs, Bugs, DNA and a Design Argument Alexander R. Pruss May 27, 2004.score: 12.0
    I argue that an examination of the analogy between the notion of a bug and that of a genetic defect supports an analogy not just between a computer program and DNA, but between a computer program designed by a programmer and DNA. This provides an analogical teleological argument for the existence of a highly intelligent designer.
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  65. Alexander Pruss, The Cosmos as a Work of Art Alexander R. Pruss November 22, 2004.score: 12.0
    The cosmos is filled with evil that seemingly has no redeeming value. Granted, some evils do lead to greater goods, sometimes goods that could not exist without the evils. Thus, the exercise of courage is a good that requires either an actual evil to stand firm in the face of or the illusion of an evil—and an illusion is a kind of evil, too. But many evils appear to serve no such purpose. Philosophers call an evil that a supremely good (...)
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  66. Andreas Daum (2011). Alexander von Humboldt: Counternarrative of a Dissenter? Metascience 20 (3):577-579.score: 12.0
    Alexander von Humboldt: Counternarrative of a dissenter? Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11016-010-9514-0 Authors Andreas W. Daum, History Department, 570 Park Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  67. Julia Voss & Sahotra Sarkar (2003). Depictions as Surrogates for Places: From Wallace's Biogeography to Koch's Dioramas. Philosophy and Geography 6 (1):59 – 81.score: 12.0
    Habitat dioramas depicting ecological relations between organisms and their natural environments have become the preferred mode of museum display in most natural history museums in North America and Europe. Dioramas emerged in the late nineteenth century as an alternative mode of museum installation from taxonomically arranged cases. We suggest that this change was closely connected to the emergence of a biogeographical framework rooted in evolutionary theory and positing the existence of distinct biogeographical zones. We tie the history of dioramas to (...)
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  68. Gerald Holton (2006). Philipp Frank at Harvard University: His Work and His Influence. Synthese 153 (2):297 - 311.score: 12.0
    The physicist–philosopher Philipp Frank’s work and influence, especially during his last three decades, when he found a refuge and a position in America, deserve more discussion than has been the case so far. In what follows, I hope I may call him Philipp – having been first a graduate student in one of his courses at Harvard University, then his teaching assistant sharing his offices, then for many years his colleague and friend in the same Physics Department, and finally, doing (...)
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  69. Elisabeth Nemeth, Philosophy of Science and Democracy. Some Reflections on Philipp Frank"s "Relativity €“ a Richer Truth".score: 12.0
    Philipp Frank"s book Relativity – a richer truth1 shows something we do not find very often after World War 2: a philosopher of science acting as a public intellectual. Taking part in the Conference on Science, Philosophy and Religion, Philipp Frank intervened in the public debate about the causes of Nazism and how to defend democracy and liberalism against totalitarian ideas and politics. Could philosophy of science contribute to such a struggle? Philipp Frank thought it could, he (...)
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  70. Herbert Pieper (2005). Alexander von Humboldt Und Die Berufung Jacob Jacobis an Die Wiener Universität. NTM International Journal of History and Ethics of Natural Sciences, Technology and Medicine 13 (3):137-155.score: 12.0
    On February 5, 1850, the Austrian emperor Franz Josef appointed C.G. Jacob Jacobi to the position of full professor at the University of Vienna. Thanks to the efforts of Alexander von Humboldt, however, the world-famous Prussian mathematician remained in Berlin and continued in his position as a salaried member of the Academy of Sciences.This paper describes the history of Jacobi’s appointment in Vienna and his ultimate rejection of it.
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  71. Alexander Razin (2000). Interview with Alexander Zinoviev. Philosophy Now 26:45-47.score: 12.0
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  72. Sharples (2005). Alexander of Aphrodisias on Universals: Two Problematic Texts. Phronesis 50 (1):43-55.score: 12.0
    Two texts that raise problems for Alexander of Aphrodisias' theory of universals are examined. "De anima" 90.2-8 appears to suggest that universals are dependent on thought for their existence; this raises questions about the status both of universals and of forms. It is suggested that the passage is best interpreted as indicating that universals are dependent on thought only for their being recognised as universals. The last sentence of "Quaestio" 1.11 seems to assert that if the universal did not exist (...)
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  73. Alexander von Schoenborn (1995). Frank Schalow, the Renewal of the Heidegger-Kant Dialogue. Southwest Philosophy Review 11 (2):309-314.score: 12.0
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  74. Ronald Lee Zigler (1998). The Four Domains of Moral Education: The Contributions of Dewey, Alexander and Goleman to a Comprehensive Taxonomy. Journal of Moral Education 27 (1):19-33.score: 12.0
    Abstract This paper seeks to place a neglected dimension of John Dewey's work into its proper context??and in so doing define four domains of moral education. An examination of the influence of F. Matthias Alexander on Dewey reveals that these writers clearly anticipated the research and ideas which Daniel Goleman has recently sought to popularise in his book Emotional Intelligence.Among Goleman's conclusions is the recommendation that the education of moral character needs to consciously address the development of ?emotional habits? and (...)
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  75. Ralph Lydic & Helen A. Baghdoyan (2000). Koch's Postulates Confirm Cholinergic Modulation of Rem Sleep. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (6):966-966.score: 12.0
    Robert Koch (1843–1910) discovered the causal agents for tuberculosis, cholera, and anthrax. The 1905 Nobel Prize acknowledged Koch's criteria for identifying the causal agent of an infectious disease. These criteria remain useful and the data reviewed below show that the cholinergic contributions to REM sleep control are confirmed by Koch's postulates. [Hobson et al.].
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  76. Frank H. Knight (1943). Book Review:Religion, Science and Society in the Modern World. Alexander D. Lindsay. [REVIEW] Ethics 54 (1):60-.score: 12.0
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  77. Lisa M. Heldke (1990). A Response to Donald Koch's "Recipes, Cooking and Conflict". Hypatia 5 (1):165 - 170.score: 12.0
    This paper addresses Koch's concern about whether a coresponsible theorist can engage in inquiry with a theorist who is "beyond the pale." On what grounds, he asks, can a coresponsible inquirer argue against one who uses a racist, sexist, or classist model for inquiry? I argue that, in such situations, the coresponsible inquirer brings to inquiry both a theoretical framework, or "attitude," and a set of practical concerns which manifest that attitude.
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  78. Charles W. Kegley (1959). Reflections on Philipp Frank's Philosophy of Science. Philosophy of Science 26 (1):35-40.score: 12.0
    Recent writings of Professor Frank raise basic questions concerning the nature of science and its relations to social, political, theological and metaphysical issues. This paper concentrates on several of these questions. What determines the acceptance of an hypothesis in the sciences? Is it explanation of the facts and confirmation by experimentation or is it the capacity of a theory to guide human conduct? Professor Frank's espousal of the latter criterion raises the question of whether this criterion can clearly be applied. (...)
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  79. Frank Keil, Frank C. Keil, Ph.D.score: 12.0
    At the most general level I am interested in how we come to make sense of the world around us. Much of this research involves asking how intuitive explanations and understandings emerge in development and how they are related to notions of cause, mechanism and agency. These relations are linked to broader questions of what concepts are, how they change with development and increasing expertise and how they are structured in adults.
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  80. Kathleen E. Powderly (2000). Patient Consent and Negotiation in the Brooklyn Gynecological Practice of Alexander J.C. SKENE: 1863-1900. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 25 (1):12 – 27.score: 12.0
    The prevailing view in bioethics is that the relationship between doctors and their patients was largely a silent one before the landmark court decisions of the twentieth century. Some have proposed that this was not always the case. This paper provides historical evidence of consent and negotiation in one nineteenth century gynecological practice. The Clinical Records and writings of Dr. Alexander J.C. Skene, who practiced in Brooklyn, New York from 1863 to 1900, have been examined for evidence of discussion, (...)
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  81. Alexander Pruss, Functionalism and the Number of Minds Alexander R. Pruss January 27, 2004.score: 12.0
    I argue that standard functionalism leads to absurd conclusions as to the number of minds that would exist in the universe if persons were duplicated. Rather than yielding the conclusion that making a molecule-by-molecule copy of a material person would result in two persons, it leads to the conclusion that three persons, or perhaps only one person, would result. This is absurd and standard functionalism should be abandoned. Social varieties of functionalism fare no better, though there is an Aristotelian variety (...)
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  82. Anne Rörig (2009). Personale Seinsweisen Bei S. L. Frank: Schnittstellen Zwischen Anthropologie Und Ontologie. Studies in East European Thought 61 (2/3):221 - 232.score: 12.0
    This article strives to combine conceptions of the person by Semën Frank. From his early critical Marxist works to his metaphysical personalism and late Christian anthropology, he covered normative-ethical, transcendent-epistemological, and "total unity'—ontological questions in equal measure. This diversity will be synthesized in comparisons of his personalist and ontological thought. The text will highlight Frank's different schemes of personal modes of being, i.e. correlations between the 'I-thou' relationship and the absolute being, and move on to contrast his concepts of ontological (...)
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  83. Alexander (1983). Alexander of Aphrodisias on Fate: Text, Translation, and Commentary. Duckworth.score: 12.0
     
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  84. Andrew E. Benjamin & Peter Osborne (eds.) (2000). Walter Benjamin's Philosophy: Destruction and Experience. Clinamen Press.score: 12.0
    Why read Walter Benjamin today? There as many answers to this question as there are "Walter Benjamins"--Benjamin as critic, Benjamin as modernist, Benjamin as marxist, Benjamin as Jew. . . . Yet it is Benjamin as philosopher that in one way or another stands behind all these. This collection explores, in Adorno's description, Benjamin's "philosophy directed against philosophy." The essays cover all aspects of Benjamin's writings, from his early work in the philosophy of art and language, through his cultural criticism, (...)
     
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  85. Frank Thilly (1929). Book Review:Ethics. Frank Chapman Sharp. [REVIEW] Ethics 39 (2):235-.score: 12.0
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  86. Frank Granger (1918). Eastern Versions of the Romance of Alexander Die Chadhirlegende Und der Alexanderroman. By I. Friedlaender. Pp. Xxiv + 338. Berlin: Teubner. M. 12. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 32 (3-4):73-74.score: 12.0
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  87. Frank Granger (1910). The Romance of Alexander Der Griechische Alexanderroman. Von Adolf Ausfeld. Nach des Verfassers Tode Herausgegeben von Wilhelm Kroll. Leipzig: Teubner. 1907. 8vo. Pp. Xii+251. M. 8. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 24 (02):70-.score: 12.0
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  88. John Hart (2010). Terence Hutchison and Frank Knight: A Reappraisal of Their 1940–1941 Exchange. Journal of Economic Methodology 17 (4):359-373.score: 12.0
    The person arguably most responsible for the view of Hutchison as the positivist who introduced positivism into economics was Frank Knight. I argue that Knight in 1940 failed to demonstrate that Hutchison was a positivist, at least in the narrow logical positivist sense of the term. By questioning Knight's charge, I aim to challenge the conventional wisdom that identifies ?Hutchison? with ?positivism?. The paper is then a first step in the argument that positivism, even in 1938, played only an (...)
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  89. Tomáš Hlobil (2009). Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten: Ästhetik. Estetika 46 (1).score: 12.0
    A review of Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten‘s Ästhetik. Latin-German edition. Trans., preface, notes, indexes by Dagmar Mirbach. 2 vols (vol. 1, pp. LXXX, 1--595; vol. 2, pp. IX, 596--1305). Hamburg: Felix Meiner Verlag, 2007, ISBN 3787317732. This is the first complete German translation of the two volumes of Baumgarten’s Aesthetics from 1750 and 1758.
     
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  90. Frank Jackson, Kelby Mason & Steve Stich (2009). Folk Psychology and Tacit Theories : A Correspondence Between Frank Jackson and Steve Stich and Kelby Mason. In David Braddon-Mitchell & Robert Nola (eds.), Conceptual Analysis and Philosophical Naturalism. Mit Press.score: 12.0
     
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  91. Alexander Bryan Johnson (1947). Alexander Bryan Johnson's a Treatise on Language, Ed. Berkeley, Univ. Of California Press.score: 12.0
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  92. Brother Alexander Joseph (1947). Alexander Hamilton. Thought 22 (1):164-165.score: 12.0
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  93. Frank Margonis (2010). Review of Alexander Sidorkin, Labor of Learning: Market and the Next Generation of Educational Reform. [REVIEW] Studies in Philosophy and Education 29 (6):569-576.score: 12.0
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  94. Alexander P. D. Mourelatos, Victor Miles Caston & Daniel W. Graham (eds.) (2002). Presocratic Philosophy: Essays in Honour of Alexander Mourelatos. Ashgate.score: 12.0
  95. Frank M. Oppenheim (1991). Lonergan's Retrieval of the Notion of Human Being: Clarifications of and Reflections on the Argument of Insight, Chapters 1-18. By Frank Paul Braio. [REVIEW] The Modern Schoolman 69 (1):69-70.score: 12.0
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  96. Frank M. Oppenheim (1977). "Progress and the Crisis of Man," by Frank J. Yartz, Alan L. Larson, and David J. Hassel, S.J. The Modern Schoolman 55 (1):123-124.score: 12.0
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  97. Evan I. Schwartz (2009). Finding Oz: How L. Frank Baum Discovered the Great American Story. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.score: 12.0
    Finding Oz tells the remarkable story behind one of the world’s most enduring and best-loved books. Offering profound new insights into the true origins and meaning of L. Frank Baum’s 1900 masterwork, it delves into the personal turmoil and spiritual transformation that fueled Baum’s fantastical parable of the American Dream. Before becoming an impresario of children’s adventure tales, the J. K. Rowling of his age, Baum failed at a series of careers and nearly lost his soul before setting out on (...)
     
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  98. Alexander M. Sidorkin (2010). Response to Frank Margonis' Review of Labor of Learning: Market and the Next Generation of Educational Reform. Studies in Philosophy and Education 29 (6):577-578.score: 12.0
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  99. Alexander Frank Skutch (1985). Life Ascending. University of Texas Press.score: 12.0
     
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  100. Benjamin Smart & Stephen Barker (2013). The Ultimate Argument Against Dispositional Monist Accounts of Laws. Analysis 72 (4):714-723.score: 9.0
    Alexander Bird argues that David Armstrong’s necessitarian conception of physical modality and laws of nature generates a vicious regress with respect to necessitation. We show that precisely the same regress afflicts Bird’s dispositional-monist theory, and indeed, related views, such as that of Mumford and Anjum. We argue that dispositional monism is basically Armstrongian necessitarianism modified to allow for a thesis about property identity.
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