Search results for 'Gert Hummel' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Gert Hummel (ed.) (1989). God and Being: The Problem of Ontology in the Philosophical Theology of Paul Tillich: Contributions Made to the Ii. International Paul Tillich Symposium Held in Frankfurt 1988. Gruyter.score: 120.0
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  2. Gert Hummel (1990). \'New Creation\' - the Chtistioan Symbol of Universalism and Our Steps Towards Its Realization. Dialectics and Humanism 17 (3):9-21.score: 120.0
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  3. Bernard Gert, Charles M. Culver & K. Danner Clouser (2000). Common Morality Versus Specified Principlism: Reply to Richardson. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 25 (3):308 – 322.score: 60.0
    In his article 'Specifying, balancing and interpreting bioethical principles' (Richardson, 2000), Henry Richardson claims that the two dominant theories in bioethics - principlism, put forward by Beauchamp and Childress in Principles of Bioethics , and common morality, put forward by Gert, Culver and Clouser in Bioethics: A Return to Fundamentals - are deficient because they employ balancing rather than specification to resolve disputes between principles or rules. We show that, contrary to Richardson's claim, the major problem with principlism, either (...)
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  4. Bernard Gert (2004). Common Morality: Deciding What to Do. Oxford University Press.score: 60.0
    Moral problems do not always come in the form of great social controversies. More often, the moral decisions we make are made quietly, constantly, and within the context of everyday activities and quotidian dilemmas. Indeed, these smaller decisions are based on a moral foundation that few of us ever stop to think about but which guides our every action. Here distinguished philosopher Bernard Gert presents a clear and concise introduction to what he calls "common morality" -- the moral system (...)
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  5. Bernard Gert (1998). Morality: Its Nature and Justification. Oxford University Press.score: 60.0
    This book offers the fullest and most sophisticated account of Gert's influential moral theory, a model first articulated in the classic work The Moral Rules: A New Rational Foundation for Morality, published in 1970. In this final revision, Gert makes clear that the moral rules are only one part of an informal system that does not provide unique answers to every moral question but does always provide a range of morally acceptable options. A new chapter on reasons includes (...)
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  6. Joshua Gert (2004). Brute Rationality: Normativity and Human Action. Cambridge University Press.score: 60.0
    Joshua Gert presents a new account of normative practical reasons and the way in which they contribute to the rationality of action. He argues that, rather than simply "counting in favor of" action, normative reasons play two logically distinct roles--that of requiring action and that of justifying action. Gert's book will appeal to a range of readers interested in practical reasoning in particular, and moral theory more generally.
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  7. Bernard Gert (1997). Bioethics: A Return to Fundamentals. Oxford University Press, USA.score: 60.0
    An updated and expanded successor to Culver and Gert's Philosophy in Medicine, this book integrates moral philosophy with clinical medicine to present a comprehensive summary of the theory, concepts, and lines of reasoning underlying the ...
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  8. Bernard Gert (1988). Morality: A New Justification of the Moral Rules. Oxford University Press.score: 60.0
    This volume is a revised, enlarged, and broadened version of Gert's classic 1970 book, The Moral Rules. Advocating an approach he terms "morality as impartial rationality," Gert here presents a full discussion of his moral theory, adding a wealth of new illuminating detail to his analysis of the concepts--rationality/irrationality, good/evil, and impartiality--by which he defines morality. He constructs a "moral system" that includes rules prohibiting the kinds of actions that cause evil, procedures for determining when violation of the (...)
     
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  9. Bernard Gert (1967). Hobbes and Psychological Egoism. Journal of the History of Ideas 28 (4):503-520.score: 30.0
    Hobbes has served for both philosophers and political scientists as the paradigm case of someone who held an egoistic view of human nature. In this article I shall attempt to show that the almost unanimous view that Hobbes held psychological egoism is mistaken, and further that Hobbes's political theory does not demand an egoistic psychology, but on the contrary is incompatible with psychological egoism. I do not maintain that Hobbes was completely consistent; in fact, I shall show that there was (...)
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  10. Bernard Gert (1990). A Critique of Principlism. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 15 (2).score: 30.0
    The authors use the term "principlism" to refer to the practice of using "principles" to replace both moral theory and particular moral rules and ideals in dealing with the moral problems that arise in medical practice. The authors argue that these "principles" do not function as claimed, and that their use is misleading both practically and theoretically. The "principles" are in fact not guides to action, but rather they are merely names for a collection of sometimes superficially related matters for (...)
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  11. Bernard Gert (2010). Moral Disagreement Concerning Abortion. Diametros 26:23-43.score: 30.0
    I use the example of abortion to show that there are some unresolvable moral disagreements. I list four sources of unresolvable moral disagreement: 1) differences in the rankings of the basic evils of death, pain, disability, loss of freedom, and loss of pleasure, 2) differences in the interpretation of moral rules, 3) ideological differences in the view of human nature and human societies, and 4) differences concerning who is impartially protected by the moral rules. It is this last difference that (...)
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  12. Joshua Gert (2006). Problems for Moral Twin Earth Arguments. Synthese 150 (2):171 - 183.score: 30.0
    Terry Horgan and Mark Timmons have recently presented a series of papers in which they argue against what has come to be called the ‘new wave’ moral realism and moral semantics of David Brink, Richard Boyd, Peter Railton, and a number of other philosophers. The central idea behind Horgan and Timmons’s criticism of these ‘new wave’ theories has been extended by Sean Holland to include the sort of realism that drops out of response-dependent accounts that make use of an analogy (...)
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  13. Joshua Gert (2008). Michael Smith and the Rationality of Immoral Action. Journal of Ethics 12 (1):1 - 23.score: 30.0
    Although it goes against a widespread significant misunderstanding of his view, Michael Smith is one of the very few moral philosophers who explicitly wants to allow for the commonsense claim that, while morally required action is always favored by some reason, selfish and immoral action can also be rationally permissible. One point of this paper is to make it clear that this is indeed Smith’s view. It is a further point to show that his way of accommodating this claim is (...)
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  14. Joshua Gert (2009). Colour, Emotion and Objectivity. Analysis 69 (4):714-721.score: 30.0
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  15. Joshua Gert (2009). Toward an Epistemology of Certain Substantive a Priori Truths. Metaphilosophy 40 (2):214-236.score: 30.0
    Abstract: This article explains and motivates an account of one way in which we might have substantive a priori knowledge in one important class of domains: domains in which the central concepts are response-dependent. The central example will be our knowledge of the connection between something's being harmful and the fact that it is irrational for us to fail to be averse to that thing. The idea is that although the relevant responses (basic aversion in the case of harm, and (...)
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  16. Derek C. Penn, Patricia W. Cheng, Keith J. Holyoak, John E. Hummel & Daniel J. Povinelli (2009). There is More to Thinking Than Propositions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (2):221-223.score: 30.0
  17. Joshua Gert (2007). Normative Strength and the Balance of Reasons. Philosophical Review 116 (4):533-562.score: 30.0
  18. Joshua Gert (2009). Response-Dependence and Normative Bedrock. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 79 (3):718-742.score: 30.0
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  19. Joshua Gert (2008). Vague Terms, Indexicals, and Vague Indexicals. Philosophical Studies 140 (3):437 - 445.score: 30.0
    Jason Stanley has criticized a contextualist solution to the sorites paradox that treats vagueness as a kind of indexicality. His objection rests on a feature of indexicals that seems plausible: that their reference remains fixed in verb phrase ellipsis. But the force of Stanley’s criticism depends on the undefended assumption that vague terms, if they are a special sort of indexical, must function in the same way that more paradigmatic indexicals do. This paper argues that there can be more than (...)
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  20. Joshua Gert (2006). A Realistic Colour Realism. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 84 (4):565 – 589.score: 30.0
    Whether or not one endorses realism about colour, it is very tempting to regard realism about determinable colours such as green and yellow as standing or falling together with realism about determinate colours such as unique green or green31. Indeed some of the most prominent representatives of both sides of the colour realism debate explicitly endorse the idea that these two kinds of realism are so linked. Against such theorists, the present paper argues that one can be a realist about (...)
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  21. Joshua Gert (2008). Putting Particularism in its Place. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 89 (3):312-324.score: 30.0
    Abstract: The point of this paper is to undermine the support that particularism in the domain of epistemic reasons might seem to give to particularism in the domain of practical reasons. In the epistemic domain, there are two related notions: truth and the rationality of belief. Epistemic reasons are related to the rationality of belief, and not directly to truth. In the domain of practical reasons, however, the role of truth is taken by the notion of objective rationality. Practical reasons (...)
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  22. Joshua Gert (2010). Color Constancy and the Color/Value Analogy. Ethics 121 (1).score: 30.0
    This article explains and defends the existence of value constancy, understood on the model of color constancy. Color constancy involves a phenomenal distinction between the transient color appearances of objects and the unchanging colors that those objects appear to have. The existence of value constancy allows advocates of response-dependent accounts of value to reject the question “What is the uniquely appropriate attitude to have toward this evaluative property?” as containing a false uniqueness assumption. Rejecting this assumption allows response-dependent accounts of (...)
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  23. Joshua Gert (2003). Internalism and Different Kinds of Reasons. Philosophical Forum 34 (1):53–72.score: 30.0
  24. Joshua Gert (2004). Value and Parity. Ethics 114 (3):492-510.score: 30.0
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  25. Bernard Gert (2010). F. M. Kamm, Intricate Ethics: Rights, Responsibilities, and Permissible Harms (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007) Pp. X + 509. [REVIEW] Utilitas 22 (2):234-238.score: 30.0
  26. Joshua Gert (2003). Requiring and Justifying: Two Dimensions of Normative Strength. Erkenntnis 59 (1):5 - 36.score: 30.0
    Many contemporary accounts of normative reasons for action accord a single strength value to normative reasons. This paper first uses some examples to argue against such views by showing that they seem to commit us to intransitive or counterintuitive claims about the rough equivalence of the strengths of certain reasons. The paper then explains and defends an alternate account according to which normative reasons for action have two separable dimensions of strength: requiring strength, and justifying strength. Such an account explains (...)
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  27. Joshua Gert (2013). Color Constancy and Dispositionalism. Philosophical Studies 162 (2):183-200.score: 30.0
    This article attempts to do two things. The first is to make it plausible that any adequate dispositional view of color will have to associate colors with complex functions from a wide range of normal circumstances to a wide range of (simultaneously) incompatible color appearances, so that there will be no uniquely veridical appearance of any given color. The second is to show that once this move is made, dispositionalism is in a position to provide interesting answers to some of (...)
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  28. Joshua Gert (2002). Korsgaard's Private-Reasons Argument. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 64 (2):303-324.score: 30.0
    In The Sources of Normativity, Christine Korsgaard presents and defends a neo-Kantian theory of normativity. Her initial account of reasons seems to make them dependent upon the practical identity of the agent, and upon the value the agent must place on her own humanity. This seems to make all reasons agent-relative. But Korsgaard claims that arguments similar to Wittgenstein's private-language argument can show that reasons are in fact essentially agent-neutral. This paper explains both of Korsgaard's Wittgensteinian arguments, and shows why (...)
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  29. Bernard Gert, The Definition of Morality. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 30.0
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  30. Joshua Gert (2005). Neo-Sentimentalism and Disgust. Journal of Value Inquiry 39:345-352.score: 30.0
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  31. Joshua Gert (2003). Brute Rationality. Noûs 37 (3):417–446.score: 30.0
  32. Bernard Gert (1965). Hobbes, Mechanism, and Egoism. Philosophical Quarterly 15 (61):341-349.score: 30.0
  33. Joshua Gert (2010). Color Constancy, Complexity, and Counterfactual. Noûs 44 (4):669-690.score: 30.0
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  34. Joshua Gert (2005). A Functional Role Analysis of Reasons. Philosophical Studies 124 (3):353 - 378.score: 30.0
    One strategy for providing an analysis of practical rationality is to start with the notion of a practical reason as primitive. Then it will be quite tempting to think that the rationality of an action can be defined rather simply in terms of ‘the balance of reasons’. But just as, for many philosophical purposes, it is extremely useful to identify the meaning of a word in terms of the systematic contribution the word makes to the meanings of whole sentences, this (...)
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  35. Joshua Gert & Michael McKenna (2008). Review of Normativity and the Will by R. Jay Wallace. [REVIEW] Philosophical Quarterly 58 (232):559–563.score: 30.0
  36. Bernard Gert (1986). Wittgenstein's Private Language Arguments. Synthese 68 (3):409-39.score: 30.0
  37. Joshua Gert (2008). What Colors Could Not Be: An Argument for Color Primitivism. Journal of Philosophy 105 (3):128-155.score: 30.0
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  38. Bernard Gert (1995). Moral Impartiality. Midwest Studies in Philosophy 20 (1):102-128.score: 30.0
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  39. Heather J. Gert (1995). Family Resemblances and Criteria. Synthese 105 (2):177-190.score: 30.0
    In §66 ofPhilosophical Investigations Wittgenstein looks for something common to various games and finds only an interconnecting network of resemblances. These are family resemblances. Sympathetic as well as unsympathetic readers have interpreted him as claiming that games form a family in virtue of these resemblances. This assumes Wittgenstein inverted the relation between being a member of a family and bearing family resemblances to others of that family. (The Churchills bear family resemblances to one another because they belong to the same (...)
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  40. Bernard Gert & Timothy J. Duggan (1979). Free Will as the Ability to Will. Noûs 13 (2):197-217.score: 30.0
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  41. Bernard Gert (1969). Justifying Violence. Journal of Philosophy 66 (19):616-628.score: 30.0
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  42. Joshua Gert & Alfred Mele (2005). Lenman on Externalism and Amoralism: An Interplanetary Exploration. Philosophia 32 (1-4):275-283.score: 30.0
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  43. Heather J. Gert (1990). Rights and Rights Violators: A New Approach to the Nature of Rights. Journal of Philosophy 87 (12):688-694.score: 30.0
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  44. Bernard Gert (1999). Common Morality and Computing. Ethics and Information Technology 1 (1):53-60.score: 30.0
    This article shows how common morality can be helpful in clarifying the discussion of ethical issues that arise in computing. Since common morality does not always provide unique answers to moral questions, not all such issues can be resolved, however common morality does provide a clear answer to the question whether one can illegally copy software for a friend.
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  45. Joshua Gert (2002). Expressivism and Language Learning. Ethics 112 (2):292-314.score: 30.0
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  46. Joshua Gert (2012). Internalism and Hyperexternalism About Reasons. Journal of Ethics 16 (1):15-34.score: 30.0
    Alan Goldman’s Reasons from Within is one of the most thorough recent defenses of what might be called ‘orthodox internalism’ about practical reasons. Goldman’s main target is an opposing view that includes a commitment to the following two theses: (O) that there are such things as objective values, and (E) that these values give rise to external reasons. One version of this view, which we can call ‘orthodox externalism’, also includes a commitment to the thesis (I) that rational people will (...)
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  47. Bernard Gert (2005). Moral Arrogance and Moral Theories. Philosophical Issues 15 (1):368–385.score: 30.0
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  48. John W. Hennessey & Bernard Gert (1985). Moral Rules and Moral Ideals: A Useful Distinction in Business and Professional Practice. Journal of Business Ethics 4 (2):105 - 115.score: 30.0
    The distinction between moral rules and moral ideals is presented and explained in various ways. The authors propose that people in business are required to obey the moral rules and have a choice with respect to ideals. Thus, they are not in a different position from that of anyone else in society.Four case studies are presented and discussed. The analytical approaches used by the authors' students are summarized and evaluated. The moral rules/ideals paradigm is described as helping discussants of the (...)
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  49. Bernard Gert (2006). Bioethics: A Systematic Approach. Oxford University Press.score: 30.0
    This book is the result of over 30 years of collaboration among its authors. It uses the systematic account of our common morality developed by one of its authors to provide a useful foundation for dealing with the moral problems and disputes that occur in the practice of medicine. The analyses of impartiality, rationality, and of morality as a public system not only explain why some bioethical questions, such as the moral acceptability of abortion, cannot be resolved, but also provide (...)
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  50. Joshua Gert (2005). Breaking the Law of Desire. Erkenntnis 62 (3):295-319.score: 30.0
    This paper offers one formal reason why it may often be inappropriate to hold, of two conflicting desires, that the first must be weaker than, stronger than, or of the same strength as the second. The explanation of this fact does not rely on vagueness or epistemological problems in determining the strengths of desires. Nor does it make use of the problematic notion of incommensurability. Rather, the suggestion is that the motivational capacities of many desires might best be characterized by (...)
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  51. Heather J. Gert, Linda Radzik & and Michael Hand (2004). Hampton on the Expressive Power of Punishment. Journal of Social Philosophy 35 (1):79–90.score: 30.0
    In her later writings Jean Hampton develops an expressive theory of punishment she takes to be retributivist. Unlike Feinberg, Hampton claims wrongdoings as well as punishments are expressive. Wrongdoings assert that the victim is less valuable than victimizer. On her view we are obligated to punish because we are obligated to respond to this false assertion. Punishment expresses the moral truth that victim and wrongdoer are equally valuable. We argue that Hampton's argument would work only if she held that exerting (...)
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  52. Joshua Gert (2007). Moral Reasons and Rational Status. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (5):pp. 171-196.score: 30.0
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  53. Heather J. Gert (1999). The Death Penalty and Victims' Rights: Legal Advance Directives. Journal of Value Inquiry 33 (4):457-473.score: 30.0
  54. Heather J. Gert (2002). The Standard Meter by Any Name is Still a Meter Long. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (1):50-68.score: 30.0
    In §50 of Philosophical Investigations Wittgenstein wrote the sentence, "There is one thing of which one can say neither that it is one metre long, nor that it is not one metre long, and that is the standard metre in Paris." Although some interpreters have claimed that Wittgenstein's statement is mistaken, while others have proposed various explanations showing that this must be correct, none have questioned the fact that he intended to assert that it is impossible to describe the standard (...)
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  55. Bernard Gert (1965). Imagination and Verifiability. Philosophical Studies 16 (3):44-47.score: 30.0
  56. Bernard Gert & Charles M. Culver (1979). The Justification of Paternalism. Ethics 89 (2):199-210.score: 30.0
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  57. Joshua Gert (2002). Avoiding the Conditional Fallacy. Philosophical Quarterly 52 (206):88-95.score: 30.0
    Over-simple internalist accounts of practical reasons imply that we cannot have reasons to become more rational, because they claim that we have a reason to φ only if we would have some desire to φ if we were fully rational. But if we were fully rational, we would have no desire to become more rational. Robert Johnson has recently argued that in their attempts to avoid this problem, existing versions of internalism yield reasons which do not have an appropriate connection (...)
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  58. Bernard Gert (1967). Can a Brain Have a Pain? Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 27 (March):432-436.score: 30.0
  59. Bernard M. Gert (1991). Genetic Disorders and the Ethical Status of Germ-Line Gene Therapy. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 16 (6).score: 30.0
    Recombinant DNA technology will soon allow physicians an opportunity to carry out both somatic cell- and Germ-Line gene therapy. While somatic cell gene therapy raises no new ethical problems, gene therapy of gametes, fertilized eggs or early embryos does raise several novel concerns. The first issue discussed here relates to making a distinction between negative and positive eugenics; the second issue deals with the evolutionary consequences of lost genetic diversity. In distinguishing between positive and negative eugenics, the concept of malady (...)
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  60. Bernard Gert & Charles M. Culver (1976). Paternalistic Behavior. Philosophy and Public Affairs 6 (1):45-57.score: 30.0
  61. Bernard Gert (1990). Rationality, Human Nature, and Lists. Ethics 100 (2):279-300.score: 30.0
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  62. Bernard Gert (1999). Acting Irrationally Versus Acting Contrary to What is Required by Reason. Journal of Social Philosophy 30 (3):379–386.score: 30.0
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  63. J. Gert (2012). Moral Worth, Supererogation, and the Justifying/Requiring Distinction. Philosophical Review 121 (4):611-618.score: 30.0
    Julia Markovits has recently argued for what she calls the ‘Coincident Reasons Thesis’: the thesis that one’s action is morally worthy if and only if one’s motivating reasons for acting mirror, in content and strength, the reasons that explain why the action ought, morally, to be performed. This thesis assumes that the structure of motivating reasons is sufficiently similar to the structure of normative reasons that the required coincidence in content and strength is a genuine possibility. But because motivating reasons (...)
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  64. Heather J. Gert (2003). Review: Wittgenstein's Copernican Revolution: The Question of Linguistic Idealism. [REVIEW] Mind 112 (447):526-528.score: 30.0
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  65. Joshua Gert (2001). Skepticism About Practical Reasons Internalism. Southern Journal of Philosophy 39 (1):59-77.score: 30.0
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  66. Bernard Gert (1989). Book Review:Desert. George Sher. [REVIEW] Ethics 99 (2):426-.score: 30.0
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  67. Bernard Gert (2004). Comments on Cahn's "the Happy Immoralist". Journal of Social Philosophy 35 (1):18–19.score: 30.0
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  68. Bernard Gert (2001). Précis of Morality: Its Nature and Justification. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (2):421–426.score: 30.0
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  69. Bernard Gert (1988). The Law of Nature as the Moral Law. Hobbes Studies 1 (1):26-44.score: 30.0
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  70. Bernard Gert (1998). Virtues and Moral Rules — a Reply. Philosophia 26 (3-4):489-494.score: 30.0
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  71. John E. Hummel (2010). Symbolic Versus Associative Learning. Cognitive Science 34 (6):958-965.score: 30.0
    Ramscar and colleagues (2010, this volume) describe the “feature-label-order” (FLO) effect on category learning and characterize it as a constraint on symbolic learning. I argue that FLO is neither a constraint on symbolic learning in the sense of “learning elements of a symbol system” (instead, it is an effect on nonsymbolic, association learning) nor is it, more than any other constraint on category learning, a constraint on symbolic learning in the sense of “solving the symbol grounding problem.”.
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  72. Daniel C. Krawczyk, Keith J. Holyoak & John E. Hummel (2004). Structural Constraints and Object Similarity in Analogical Mapping and Inference. Thinking and Reasoning 10 (1):85 – 104.score: 30.0
    Theories of analogical reasoning have viewed relational structure as the dominant determinant of analogical mapping and inference, while assigning lesser importance to similarity between individual objects. An experiment is reported in which these two sources of constraints on analogy are placed in competition under conditions of high relational complexity. Results demonstrate equal importance for relational structure and object similarity, both in analogical mapping and in inference generation. The human data were successfully simulated using a computational analogy model (LISA) that treats (...)
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  73. Bernard Gert (1979). Hobbes's Account of Reason. Journal of Philosophy 76 (10):559-561.score: 30.0
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  74. Joshua Gert (2004). Intentional Action and Nearly Certain Success. Ratio 17 (2):150–158.score: 30.0
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  75. Stephen D. Mallary, Bernard Gert & Charles M. Culver (1986). Family Coercion and Valid Consent. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 7 (2).score: 30.0
    Coercion is commonly said to invalidate consent, and that is always true if the source of the coercion is the physician. However, if it is a family member who coerces the patient to consent, the resultant consent may be quite valid and treatment should proceed.
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  76. Bernard Gert (1993). Defending Irrationality and Lists. Ethics 103 (2):329-336.score: 30.0
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  77. Bernard Gert (2008). Review of Quentin Skinner, Hobbes and Republican Liberty. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (7).score: 30.0
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  78. Joshua Gert (2006). The Color of Mirrors. American Philosophical Quarterly 43 (4):369 - 377.score: 30.0
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  79. Heather J. Gert (1997). Wittgenstein on Description. Philosophical Studies 88 (3):221-243.score: 30.0
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  80. Bernard Gert (2006). Making the Morally Relevant Features Explicit: A Response to Carson Strong. Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 16 (1):59-71.score: 30.0
    : Carson Strong criticizes the application of my moral theory to bioethics cases. Some of his criticisms are due to my failure to make explicit that both the irrationality or rationality of a decision and the irrationality or rationality of the ranking of evils are part of morally relevant feature 3. Other criticisms are the result of his not using the two-step procedure in a sufficiently rigorous way. His claim that I come up with a wrong answer depends upon his (...)
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  81. Joshua Gert (2007). Reply to Tenenbaum. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (3):463-476.score: 30.0
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  82. B. Gert & C. M. Culver (2009). Sex, Immorality, and Mental Disorders. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 34 (5):487-495.score: 30.0
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  83. John E. Hummel & Philip J. Kellman (1998). Finding the Pope in the Pizza: Abstract Invariants and Cognitive Constraints on Perceptual Learning. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (1):30-30.score: 30.0
    Schyns, Goldstone & Thibaut argue that categorization experience results in the learning of new perceptual features that are not derivable from the learner's existing feature set. We explore the meaning and implications of this “nonderivability” claim and relate it to the question of whether perceptual invariants are learnable, and if so, what might be entailed in learning them.
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  84. Bernard Gert (1999). Morally Relevant Features. Metaphilosophy 30 (1&2):13-24.score: 30.0
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  85. Joshua Gert (2005). A Light Theory with Heavy Burdens. Philosophical Studies 126 (1):57 - 70.score: 30.0
    In “ A Light Theory of Color”, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and David Sparrow argue that color is neither a primary quality of objects, nor a disposition that objects have, nor a property of our visual fields. Rather, according to the view they present, color is a property of light. The present paper aims to show, first, that the light theory is vulnerable to many of the very same objections that Sinnott-Armstrong and Sparrow raise against rival views. Second, the paper argues that (...)
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  86. Joshua Gert (2006). Mistaken Expressions. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 36 (4):459-479.score: 30.0
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  87. Bernard Gert (2001). Replies to Three Critics. Journal of Value Inquiry 35 (4):455-476.score: 30.0
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  88. J. Gert (2013). Yuck! The Nature and Moral Significance of Disgust, by Daniel Kelly. Mind 121 (484):1077-1080.score: 30.0
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  89. Bernard Gert (2006). A Reply to Carson Strong. Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 16 (2):195-197.score: 30.0
    : Carson Strong's reply to my response to his article demonstrates what happens when there is unacknowledged disagreement about the facts of a case or about the meaning of the terms used to describe those facts. I hope that our dialogue will help reduce this disagreement.
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  90. Bernard Gert (2001). Hobbes on Language, Metaphysics, and Epistemology. Hobbes Studies 14 (1):40-58.score: 30.0
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  91. Bernard Gert (1979). The Passions. Metaphilosophy 10 (2):175–189.score: 30.0
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  92. Keith J. Holyoak & John E. Hummel (2008). No Way to Start a Space Program: Associationism as a Launch Pad for Analogical Reasoning. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (4):388-389.score: 30.0
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  93. Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, The Will to Be Free.score: 30.0
    The practical superiority of markets over governments has become readily apparent. Only the most dogmatic of state apologists continue to deny this obvious fact—at least with respect to the production of many goods and services. Free-market economists and libertarians go much further, of course. They affirm the market’s superiority in nearly all realms. Yet only a handful of anarchocapitalists, most notably Murray Rothbard, have dared claim that a free market could also do a better job of providing protection from foreign (...)
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  94. Leonidas A. A. Doumas, Keith J. Holyoak & John E. Hummel (2006). The Problem with Using Associations to Carry Binding Information. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (1):74-75.score: 30.0
    van der Velde & de Kamps argue for the importance of considering the binding problem in accounts of human mental representation. However, their proposed solution fails as a complete account because it represents the bindings between roles and their fillers through associations (or connections). In addition, many criticisms leveled by the authors towards synchrony-based bindings models do not hold.
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  95. Timothy Duggan & Bernard Gert (1967). Voluntary Abilities. American Philosophical Quarterly 4 (2):127 - 135.score: 30.0
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  96. Bernard Gert (2001). Avoiding Moral Cynicism. Teaching Ethics 1 (1):1-17.score: 30.0
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  97. Bernard Gert (1992). A Sex Caused Inconsistency in Dsm-III-R: The Definition of Mental Disorder and the Definition of Paraphilias. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 17 (2):155-171.score: 30.0
    The DSM-III-R definition of mental disorder is inconsistent with the DSM-III-R definition of paraphilias. The former requires the suffering or increased risk of suffering some harm while the latter allows that deviance, by itself, is sufficient to classify a behavioral syndrome as a paraphilia. This inconsistency is particularly clear when examining the DSM-III-R account of a specific paraphilia, Transvestic Fetishism. The author defends the DSM-III-R definition of mental disorder and argues that the DSM-III-R definition of paraphilias should be changed. He (...)
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  98. Joshua Gert (2003). Two Concepts of Rationality. Southern Journal of Philosophy 41 (3):367-398.score: 30.0
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  99. Bernard Gert (2011). The Usefulness of a Comprehensive Systematic Moral Theory. Teaching Ethics 12 (1):25-38.score: 30.0
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  100. Heather J. Gert (1995). Viability. International Journal of Philosophical Studies 3 (1):133 – 142.score: 30.0
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