Search results for 'Gordon L. Clark' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Gordon L. Clark (2000). Moral Sentiments and Reciprocal Obligations: The Case for Pension Fund Investment in Community Development. Ethics, Place and Environment 3 (1):7 – 24.score: 290.0
    Squeezed between increasing entitlement expenditures and static or declining real revenues, state-funded urban development is increasingly perceived as an unaffordable luxury. At the same time, the power and significance of the banking sector is giving way to new kinds of financial institutions that have little or no interest in community development. Not surprisingly, it is often argued that pension funds ought to be more sensitive to community needs. However, some analysts argue that pension funds are properly only the agents of (...)
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  2. Stephen R. L. Clark (2006). G.K.Chesterton: Thinking Backward, Looking Forward. Templeton Foundation Press.score: 260.0
    Offering a detailed study of early 20th-century essayist, poet, novelist, political campaigner, and theologian G.K. Chesterton, author Stephen R.L. Clark ...
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  3. Stephen R. L. Clark (1991). God's World and the Great Awakening. Oxford University Press.score: 260.0
    In this book, Stephen R.L. Clark defends the primary faith of humankind, that there is a real world which is more than a shadow of our desires and fancies, and which can be discovered through right reason. Focusing on the way in which we can "turn aside" to the Truth from the normal delusions of self-concern, Clark offers a properly worked, Platonic metaphysics as the key to identifying that reality. This book is the final volume of Limits and (...)
     
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  4. Stephen R. L. Clark (2012). T.L.S. Sprigge, The Importance of Subjectivity: Selected Essays in Metaphysics and Ethics, Ed. B. McHenry Leemon. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 2010, Xi + 356 Pp., £47. ISBN: 978-0-19-959154-1. [REVIEW] Philosophy 87 (02):310-315.score: 210.0
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  5. Stephen R. L. Clark (2013). Dougherty (Ed.) Evidentialism and its Discontents (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011). Pp. Xii + 335. £45.00 (Hbk). ISBN 978 0 19 956350 0. Clark & VanArragon (Eds) Evidence and Religious Belief (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011). Pp. X + 214. £35.00 (Hbk), £24.94 (Kindle). ISBN 9780 19 960371 8. [REVIEW] Religious Studies 49 (1):134-139.score: 210.0
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  6. Andy Clark (1988). Superman and the Duck/Rabbit: A Reply to Gordon and Bringsjord. Analysis 48 (January):54-57.score: 180.0
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  7. David Gordon (1988). Clark on Tracing Mental Images. Analysis 48 (January):50-51.score: 180.0
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  8. Stephen R. L. Clark (1995). How to Live Forever: Science Fiction and Philosophy. Routledge.score: 150.0
    Immortality has long preoccupied everyone from alchemists to science fiction writers. In this intriguing investigation, Stephen Clark contends that the genre of science fiction writing enables the investigation of philosophical questions about immortality without the constraints of academic philosophy. He shows how fantasy accounts of phenomena such as resurrection, outer body experience, reincarnation or life extending medicines can be related to philosophy in interesting ways. Reading Western myths such as that of vampire, he examines the ways fear and hopes (...)
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  9. Stephen R. L. Clark (1999). The Political Animal: Biology, Ethics, and Politics. Routledge.score: 150.0
    In The Political Animal Stephen Clark investigates the political nature of the human animal. Based on biological science and traditional ethics, he probes into areas of inquiry that are usually ignored by traditional political theory. He suggests that properly informed political philosophy must take the role of women and children more seriously, and must be prepared to face up to the ethnocentric and domineering tendencies of the human animal.
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  10. Stephen R. L. Clark (2000). Biology and Christian Ethics. Cambridge University Press.score: 150.0
    This stimulating and wide-ranging book mounts a profound enquiry into some of the most pressing questions of our age, by examining the relationship between biological science and Christianity. The history of biological discovery is explored from the point of view of a leading philosopher and ethicist. What effect should modern biological theory and practice have on Christian understanding of ethics? How much of that theory and practice should Christians endorse? Can Christians, for example, agree that biological changes are not governed (...)
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  11. S. R. L. Clark (1991). Book Review : Ethics After Babel, by Jeffrey Stout. Cambridge, James Clarke, 1990. Xiv + 338 Pp. 9.95. [REVIEW] Studies in Christian Ethics 4 (2):92-93.score: 150.0
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  12. Stephen R. L. Clark (1989). Civil Peace and Sacred Order. Oxford University Press.score: 150.0
    This book is an ambitious and challenging restatement of traditional political philosophy. The first of a three-volume series, Limits and Renewals, the book is concerned with the nature of political society, particularly with the errors and faulty arguments that have been used to support a "liberal modernist" view of the state and our political system. Clark argues that political modernism, which is determinedly secular and untraditional, has been a destructive influence on religion and our understanding of community living. In (...)
     
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  13. Stephen R. L. Clark (1990). A Parliament of Souls. Oxford University Press.score: 150.0
    This second volume in the Limits and Renewals trilogy is an attempt to restate a traditional philosophy of mind, drawing on philosophical and poetical resources that are often neglected in modern and postmodern thought, and emphasizing the moral and political implications of differing philosophies of mind and value. Clark argues that without the traditional concept of the soul, we have little reason to believe that rational thought and individual autonomy are either possible or desirable. The particular topics covered include (...)
     
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  14. Stpehen R. L. Clark (2007). How Alien Are Animals? In Pierfrancesco Basile & Leemon B. McHenry (eds.), Consciousness, Reality and Value: Essays in Honour of T.L.S. Sprigge. Ontos.score: 150.0
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  15. Gordon Haddon Clark (1964). The Philosophy of Science and Belief in God. Nutley, N.J.,Craig Press.score: 150.0
    THE AUTHOR ARGUES THAT THE ASSERTION THAT EXPERIENCE DENIES THE REALITY OF THE SUPERNATURAL WORLD IS ERRONEOUS. RATHER, CLARK INSISTS THAT THE BIBLICAL REPORT OF CREATION AS REPORTED IN GENESIS IS PROBABLY A MORE RELIABLE SCIENTIFIC ACCOUNT. THE "BEST GENERAL PHILOSOPHY," THE AUTHOR ARGUES, "IS THE REVELATIONAL PHILOSOPHY OF CHRISTIAN THEISM." (BP).
     
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  16. Alison Bailey, Jan M. Boxill, Emmett L. Bradbury, Maudemarie Clark, Samir J. Haddad & Colin M. Patrick (2003). Book Notes. [REVIEW] Ethics 113 (4):923-928.score: 140.0
    It's surprising that contemporary moral philosophers have not thought more about food. The rapidly expanding industrialized landscape of modern western agribusiness raises moral concerns about large-scale livestock production, the increased usage of genetically modified crops, and the effects these now common practices may have on long-term environmental and human health. Here Pence argues that biotechnology is more helpful than harmful, on the ground that it will abate world hunger. Positioning himself as an "impartialbioethicist" he sets about the task of sorting (...)
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  17. L. Obolensky, T. Clark, G. Matthew & M. Mercer (2010). A Patient and Relative Centred Evaluation of Treatment Escalation Plans: A Replacement for the Do-Not-Resuscitate Process. Journal of Medical Ethics 36 (9):518-520.score: 140.0
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  18. Stephen R. L. Clark (2000). The Evolution of Language: Truth and Lies. Philosophy 75 (3):401-421.score: 120.0
    There is both theoretical and experimental reason to suppose that no-one could ever have learned to speak without an environment of language-users. How then did the first language-users learn? Animal communication systems provide no help, since human languages aren't constituted as a natural system of signs, and are essentially recursive and syntactic. Such languages aren't demanded by evolution, since most creatures, even intelligent creatures, manage very well without them. I propose that representations, and even public representations like sculptures, precede full (...)
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  19. Stephen R. L. Clark (1987). How to Believe in Fairies. Inquiry 30 (4):337 – 355.score: 120.0
    To believe in fairies is not to believe in rare Lepidoptera or the like, within a basically materialistic context. It is to take folk?stories seriously as accounts of the ?dreamworld?, the realm of conscious experience of which our ?waking world? is only a province, to acknowledge and make real to ourselves the presence of spirits that enter our consciousness as moods of love or alienation, wild joy or anger. In W. B. Yeats's philosophy fairies are the moods and characters of (...)
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  20. Romane L. Clark (1988). Self Knowledge and Self Consciousness: Thoughts About Oneself. Topoi 7 (March):47-55.score: 120.0
    You and I reach for a dollar bill on the floor, each saying “I saw it first.” The content of what we say is identically the same. How then is your claim referred to you and mine to me? We argue that the reference of self-ascriptions is effected by the occasion of the occurrence of the first-person indexical rather than by the content of the thought or assertion which then occurs. That this is true has further implications for exotic, self-fulfilling (...)
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  21. Stephen R. L. Clark (2003). Non-Personal Minds. In Minds and Persons: Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement: 53. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.score: 120.0
  22. Stephen R. L. Clark (2004). Progress and the Argument From Evil. Religious Studies 40 (2):181-192.score: 120.0
    The argument from evil, though it is the most effective rhetorical argument against orthodox theism, fails to demonstrate its conclusion, since we are unavoidably ignorant whether there is more evil than could possibly be justified. That same ignorance infects any claims to discern a divine purpose in nature, as well as recent attempts at a broadly Irenaean theodicy. Evolution is not, on neo-Darwinian theory, intellectually, morally, or spiritually progressive in the way that some religious thinkers have supposed. To suppose so, (...)
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  23. Stephen R. L. Clark (2008). Deconstructing the Laws of Logic. Philosophy 83 (1):25-53.score: 120.0
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  24. Stephen R. L. Clark (1996). Minds, Memes, and Multiples. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 3 (1):21-28.score: 120.0
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  25. S. R. L. Clark (2005). Review: Can a Darwinian Be a Christian? The Relationship Between Science and Religion. [REVIEW] Mind 114 (455):773-777.score: 120.0
  26. Stephen R. L. Clark (1982). God's Law and Morality. Philosophical Quarterly 32 (129):339-347.score: 120.0
  27. Stephen R. L. Clark (2011). Plato's Philosophers: The Coherence of the Dialogues. [REVIEW] British Journal for the History of Philosophy 19 (4):811 - 815.score: 120.0
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy, Volume 19, Issue 4, Page 811-815, July 2011.
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  28. Stephen R. L. Clark (1983). Waking-Up: A Neglected Model for the Afterlife. Inquiry 26 (2):209 – 230.score: 120.0
    An inquiry into the possibility that life?after?death be understood as waking from a shared dream into the real world. Attempts to outlaw the possibility that ?really? we are, e.g., vat?brains are shown to lead to unwelcome, anti?realist conclusions about either the world or consciousness. The unsatisfactory nature of empirically observable (Humean) causal connections suggests that real causes may be found beyond the world of our present experience. Though such a story cannot now be proved to be true, we are entitled (...)
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  29. Stephen R. L. Clark (1987). Animal Rights. The Classical Review 37 (02):224-.score: 120.0
  30. Gordon H. Clark (1944). The Theory of Time in Plotinus. Philosophical Review 53 (4):337-358.score: 120.0
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  31. Stephen R. L. Clark (1993). Minds, Memes, and Rhetoric. Inquiry 36 (1-2):3-16.score: 120.0
    Dennett's Consciousness Explained presents, but does not demonstrate, a fully naturalized account of consciousness that manages to leave out the very consciousness he purports to explain. If he were correct, realism and methodological individualism would collapse, as would the very enterprise of giving reasons. The metaphors he deploys actually testify to the power of metaphoric imagination that can no more be identified with the metaphors it creates than minds can be identified with memes. That latter equation, of minds with meme?complexes, (...)
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  32. Stephen R. L. Clark (1972). The Use of `Man's Function' in Aristotle. Ethics 82 (4):269-283.score: 120.0
  33. Stephen R. L. Clark (2010). How to Become Unconscious. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 85 (67):21-44.score: 120.0
  34. Stephen R. L. Clark (1979). The Rights of Wild Things. Inquiry 22 (1-4):171 – 188.score: 120.0
    It has been argued that if non-human animals had rights we should be obliged to defend them against predators. I contend that this either does not follow, follows in the abstract but not in practice, or is not absurd. We should defend non-humans against large or unusual dangers, when we can, but should not claim so much authority as to regulate all the relationships of wild things. Some non-human animals are members of our society, and the rhetoric of 'the land (...)
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  35. Gordon H. Clark (1942). Plotinus' Theory of Sensation. Philosophical Review 51 (4):357-382.score: 120.0
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  36. Stephen R. L. Clark (2010). Review of Michael Ruse, Science and Spirituality: Making Room for Faith in the Age of Science. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (8).score: 120.0
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  37. Dale L. Clark (2009). Aesop's Fox: Consequentialist Virtue Meets Egocentric Bias. Philosophical Psychology 22 (6):727 – 737.score: 120.0
    In her book Uneasy Virtue, Julia Driver presents an account of motive or trait utilitarianism, one that has been taken as “the most detailed and thoroughly defended recent formulation” of consequential virtue ethics. On Driver's account character traits are morally virtuous if and only if they generally lead to good consequences for society. Various commentators have taken Driver to task over this account of virtue, which she terms “pure evaluational externalism.” They object that, on Driver's account of virtue, it could (...)
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  38. Stephen R. L. Clark (2000). Have Biologists Wrapped Up Philosophy? Inquiry 43 (2):143 – 165.score: 120.0
    An examination of the currently fashionable thesis that scientists, and especially biologists in the wake of the Darwinian Revolution, can now solve the problems that traditional philosophers have only talked about. Past philosophers, for example during the Enlightenment, have themselves made use of contemporary, scientific techniques and theories. The present claim may only be another such move, to be welcomed by philosophers who would distinguish themselves from rhetoricians. Others may prefer to stake out the merely human or subjective world as (...)
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  39. Stephen R. L. Clark (1999). Living High and Letting Die: Our Illusion of Innocence by Peter Unger. Oxford University Press: New York & Oxford, 1996, 199pp; ISBN 0195075897 £35.00; 0195108590 £13.50. [REVIEW] Philosophy 74 (1):122-139.score: 120.0
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  40. Stephen R. L. Clark (2009). Plotinian Dualisms and the "Greek" Ideas of Self. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 36 (4):554-567.score: 120.0
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  41. Stephen R. L. Clark (1983). Sexual Ontology and Group Marriage. Philosophy 58 (224):215-.score: 120.0
  42. Stephen R. L. Clark (1987). God's Law and Chandler. Philosophical Quarterly 37 (147):203-208.score: 120.0
  43. Romane L. Clark (1993). Seeing and Inferring. Philosophical Papers 22 (2):81-96.score: 120.0
  44. Stephen R. L. Clark (1994). The Possible Truth of Metaphor. International Journal of Philosophical Studies 2 (1):19 – 30.score: 120.0
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  45. Stephen R. L. Clark (2002). Feyerabend's Conquest of Abundance. Inquiry 45 (2):249 – 267.score: 120.0
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  46. Stephen R. L. Clark (2009). The Verge of Philosophy . By John Sallis. University of Chicago Press: Chicago, 2007. 144 Pp. [REVIEW] Philosophy 84 (1):156-158.score: 120.0
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  47. Stephen R. L. Clark (2002). Review: Religious Commitment and Secular Reason. [REVIEW] Mind 111 (443):639-643.score: 120.0
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  48. Gillian Clark (1993). F. Ruggiero (Ed.): Atti Dei Martiri Scilitani: Introduzione, Testo, Traduzione, Testimonianze E Commento. (Atti dell'Accademia Nazionale Dei Lincei Classe di Scienze Morali, Storiche E Filologiche, Memorie IX. 1.2.) Pp. 100. Rome: Accademia Nazionale Dei Lincei, 1991. Paper, L. 15,000. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (02):432-.score: 120.0
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  49. Stephen R. L. Clark (2003). Tolstoy on Aesthetics: What is Art? By H. O. Mounce (Ashgate: Aldershot, 2001), Pp Viii + 115, £Xxxx, ISBN 0 7546 0488 8. [REVIEW] Philosophy 78 (2):289-307.score: 120.0
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  50. Stephen R. L. Clark (2002). The Covenant with All Living Creatures. In Mark J. Cartledge & David Mills (eds.), Covenant Theology: Contemporary Approaches.score: 120.0
    Philosophers are usually expected to argue only from premises acceptable to a secular audience, in ways that require no special commitment beyond that to the value of argument itself. As a philosopher, I see no particular reason to deny myself the opportunity to argue from other, more `sectarian', premises, in ways now unfamiliar to an unbelieving nation. In so doing I may (as theistical philosophers often do) sound more traditional than many theologians.
     
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  51. Stephen R. L. Clark (1998). Dangerous Conservatives: A Reply to Daniel Dombrowski. Sophia 37 (2).score: 120.0
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  52. Stephen R. L. Clark (1984). God, Good, and Evil. In J. Houston (ed.), Is It Reasonable to Believe in God? Handsel Press.score: 120.0
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  53. Stephen R. L. Clark (1985). Hume, Animals and the Objectivity of Morals. Philosophical Quarterly 35 (139):117-133.score: 120.0
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  54. Stephen R. L. Clark (2005). Deference, Degree and Selfhood. Philosophy 80 (2):249-260.score: 120.0
    The world we lost, and now barely understand, was one where everyone knew her place, and her attendant duties. Civilized groups were the likeliest to insist on a diversity of rôle and rule. Primitive societies are ones where there are rather fewer such distinctions. Slaves and merchants offered a way of being outside the orders, and from the older point of view, the life of slaves and merchants is exactly what the ‘liberal’ ideal entails. No one can count on her (...)
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  55. S. R. L. Clark (1992). Human Dignity and Animal Well-Being. Journal of Medical Ethics 18 (3):165-166.score: 120.0
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  56. Gordon H. Clark (1949). Plotinus on the Eternity of the World. Philosophical Review 58 (2):130-140.score: 120.0
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  57. Stephen R. L. Clark (2010). Therapy and Theory Reconstructed: Plato and His Successors. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 85 (66):83-.score: 120.0
  58. Stephen R. L. Clark (1997). What Ryle Meant by 'Absurd'. Cogito 11 (2):79-88.score: 120.0
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  59. Stephen R. L. Clark (1985). The Expanding Circle: Ethics and Sociobiology By Peter Singer Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1981, Xiv+190 Pp., £6.95The Shaping of Man: Philosophical Aspects of Sociobiology By Roger Trigg Oxford: Blackwell, 1982, Xx+186 Pp., £12.50, £6.95 Paper. [REVIEW] Philosophy 60 (233):411-.score: 120.0
  60. Robert E. D. Clark & L. R. Squire (1998). Classical Conditioning and Brain Systems: The Role of Awareness. Science 280:77-81.score: 120.0
  61. Stephen R. L. Clark (1996). How Chesterton Read History. Inquiry 39 (3 & 4):343 – 358.score: 120.0
    Chesterton was a serious and even excellent philosopher, whose reputation has suffered because his style was so striking, and his conversion to Catholicism so unpopular with Whiggish Britons. He had many ?politically incorrect? opinions, but those ?faults? were symptoms of a greater virtue, his insistence that ?the whole object of history is to make us realize that humanity can be great and glorious, under conditions quite different and even contrary to our own?. His desire for a United Europe was not (...)
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  62. Bowman L. Clark (1985). Individuals and Points. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 26 (1):61-75.score: 120.0
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  63. Stephen R. L. Clark (1989). Aristotle's Classification of Animals. Biology and the Conceptual Unity of the Aristotelian Corpus. Journal of the History of Philosophy 27 (2):300-302.score: 120.0
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  64. Stephen R. L. Clark (1999). A New Stoicism by Lawrence C. Becker. Princeton University Press: Princeton, New Jersey, 1998, 272pp; ISBN 0 691 01660 7 £22.50. [REVIEW] Philosophy 74 (1):122-139.score: 120.0
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  65. Stephen R. L. Clark (2002). Emotion and Peace of Mind: From Stoic Agitation to Christian Temptation by Richard Sorabji, Clarendon Press: Oxford 2000. Pp. XII+499pp., £30.00, ISBN 019-8250053. [REVIEW] Philosophy 77 (1):125-141.score: 120.0
  66. Gillian Clark (1992). 'History of Women', or 'Women's History'? Georges Duby, Michelle Perrot (Edd.): Histoire Desfemmes En Occident, I: L'Antiquité (Sous la Direction de Pauline Schmitt Pantel). Pp. 590; 69 Illustrations. Plon, 1991. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 42 (01):124-126.score: 120.0
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  67. Stephen R. L. Clark (2009). Plotinus: Charms and Countercharms. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 84 (65):215-.score: 120.0
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  68. Stephen R. L. Clark (1983). Animal Rights and Human Morality. Environmental Ethics 5 (2):185-188.score: 120.0
  69. Stephen R. L. Clark (1987). Animal Rights Daniel A. Dombrowski: The Philosophy of Vegetarianism. Pp. Iv+188. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1984. $20.00 (Paper, 9.95). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 37 (02):224-225.score: 120.0
  70. Christina A. Clark (2010). Non-Verbal Communication (M. L.) Catoni Schemata. Comunicazione Non Verbale Nella Grecia Antica. (Studi 2.) Pp. X + 375, Ills. Pisa: Edizioni Della Normale, 2005. Paper, €40. ISBN: 978-88-7642-157-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 60 (01):178-.score: 120.0
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  71. Romane L. Clark (1987). Objects of Consciousness. Philosophical Perspectives 1:481-500.score: 120.0
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  72. Stephen R. L. Clark (2010). Plotinus on Number (S.) Slaveva-Griffin Plotinus on Number. Pp. Xii + 176. New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. Cased £39.99, US$74, ISBN: 978-0-19-537719-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 60 (01):91-.score: 120.0
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  73. Stephen R. L. Clark (2003). Review: The Wisdom of Aristotle. [REVIEW] Mind 112 (448):777-780.score: 120.0
  74. James W. Manns, R. Clark & L. R. Squire (2000). Awareness Predicts the Magnitude of Single-Cue Trace Eyeblink Conditioning. Hippocampus 10 (2):181-186.score: 120.0
  75. Mary Midgley & Stephen R. L. Clark (1980). The Absence of a Gap Between Facts and Values. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 54:207 - 240.score: 120.0
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  76. Gillian Clark (2002). D. Magini (Ed.): Plutarco. Del Mangiare Carne. Trattati Sugli Animali . Pp. 296. Milan: Adelphi, 2001. Paper, L. 25,000. ISBN: 88-459-1629-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 52 (02):376-.score: 120.0
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  77. Stephen R. L. Clark (2008). I Knew Him by His Voice. Philosophy Now 67:13-16.score: 120.0
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  78. Stephen R. L. Clark (1983). III. Morals, Moore, and Maclntyre. Inquiry 26 (4):425 – 445.score: 120.0
    Maclntyre's claim that contemporary moral language is, by traditional standards, merely chaotic somewhat exaggerates our chaos, and traditional order. He accuses. Moore and his disciples in particular of using moral language merely as propaganda, failing, like other critics, to reckon with the Platonic context of Moore's argument and the reasons why Goodness is an idea that rational inquiry should not abandon. Genuine moral action is done as the right thing, that produces more that is good than any alternative. Plato's model (...)
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  79. Gordon H. Clark (1952). Questions on Kant. The Review of Metaphysics 5 (3):473 - 476.score: 120.0
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  80. Gordon H. Clark (1934). Spontaneity and Monstrosity in Aristotle. The New Scholasticism 8 (1):31-45.score: 120.0
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  81. Stephen R. L. Clark (2003). Constructing Persons: The Psychopathology of Identity. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 10 (2):157-159.score: 120.0
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  82. Stephen R. L. Clark (1986). Icons, Sacred Relics, Obsolescent Plant. Journal of Applied Philosophy 3 (2):201-210.score: 120.0
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  83. Stephen R. L. Clark (1996). Riots at Brightlingsea. Journal of Applied Philosophy 13 (1):109-112.score: 120.0
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  84. Stephen R. L. Clark (1987). Animals, Ecosystems and the Liberal Ethic. The Monist 70 (1):114-133.score: 120.0
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  85. Gordon H. Clark (1935). Aristotle's Theory of the Infinite. The New Scholasticism 9 (1):90-90.score: 120.0
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  86. Stephen R. L. Clark (1991). Taylor's Waking Dream: No One's Reply. Inquiry 34 (2):195 – 215.score: 120.0
    Taylor recognizes the problems posed by the ideals of disengaged reason and the affirmation of ?ordinary life? for unproblematic commitment to other ideals of universal justice and the like. His picture of ?the modern identity? neglects too much of present importance and he is too disdainful of Platonic realism to offer a convincing solution. The romantic expressivism that he seeks to re?establish as an important moral resource can only avoid destructive effects if it is taken in its original and Platonic (...)
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  87. S. E. L. Clark (1996). Book Reviews : The Hungry Soul: Eating and the Perfecting of Our Nature, by Leon R. Kass. New York, Free Press, (London, Simon & Schuster) 1994. Xviii+248 Pp. Hb. 19.95. [REVIEW] Studies in Christian Ethics 9 (2):100-102.score: 120.0
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  88. Stephen R. L. Clark (1993). Book Review : Anarchy and Christianity by Jacques Ellul, Translated by G. W. Bromiley. Grand Rapids, Michigan, Eerdmans, 1988. Vi + 110pp. No Price. [REVIEW] Studies in Christian Ethics 6 (1):52-55.score: 120.0
  89. S. R. L. Clark (2005). Book Review: Lying: An Augustinian Theology of Duplicity. [REVIEW] Studies in Christian Ethics 18 (3):151-153.score: 120.0
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  90. Stephen R. L. Clark (1992). Orwell and the Anti-Realists. Philosophy 67 (260):141-.score: 120.0
  91. Stephen R. L. Clark (1978). Animal Wrongs. Analysis 38 (3):147 - 149.score: 120.0
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  92. Stephen R. L. Clark (1999). Decent Conduct Toward Animals: A Traditional Approach. Teorema 18 (3):61-83.score: 120.0
    The Bishop of Questoriana has recently asked for a pontifical document ‘furnishing a doctrinal foundation of love and respect for life existing on the earth’. Mainstream moralists have urged, since the Axial Era, that it is human life that most demands love and respect. We realize and perfect our own humanity by recognizing humanity in every other, of whatever creed or race. Realizing that biological species are not natural kinds, more recent moralists have hoped to found moral decency either on (...)
     
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  93. Kelly James Clark (2007). Joel B. Green and Stuart L. Palmer: In Search of the Soul. Faith and Philosophy 24 (3):346-350.score: 120.0
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  94. Christina Clark (2003). Myth and Gender in Modern Culture L. E. Doherty: Gender and the Interpretation of Classical Myth . Pp. 192. London: Duckworth, 2001. Paper, £9.99. Isbn: 0-7156-3042-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 53 (01):236-.score: 120.0
  95. Gillian Clark (1991). Maidenhead and Womanhood Renato Uglione (Ed.): La Donna Nel Mondo Antico. Atti Del II Convegno Nazionale di Studi, Torino 18–19–20 Aprile 1988. (Atti Dei Convegni Della Delegazione Torinese Dell' Associazione Italiana di Cultura Classica.) Pp. 275; 11 Pages of Photographs of Participants. Turin: Regione Piemonte Assessorato Alla Cultura, 1989. Paper, L. 25,000. Giulia Sissa (Translated by Arthur Goldhammer): Greek Virginity. (Revealing Antiquity, 3.) Pp. V + 240; 1 Illustration. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 1990 (Originally Published 1987). £19.95. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 41 (01):162-164.score: 120.0
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  96. Stephen R. L. Clark (1989). On Wishing There Were Unicorns. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 90:247 - 265.score: 120.0
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  97. S. Boraei, C. Clark & L. Frith (2008). Labioplasty in Girls Under 18 Years of Age: An Unethical Procedure? Clinical Ethics 3 (1):37-41.score: 120.0
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  98. Stephen R. L. Clark (1996). Commentary on "Multiple Personality and Moral Responsibility&Quot. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 3 (1):55-57.score: 120.0
  99. Stephen R. L. Clark (1997). A Plotinian Account of Intellect. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 71 (3):421-432.score: 120.0
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  100. Albert C. Clark (1927). Cicero and Asconius Jules Humbert: Contribution à l'Étude des Sources d'Asconius Dans Ses Relations des Débats Judiciares. 15 Frs. Les Plaidoyers Écrits Et les Plaidoiries Réelles de Cicéron. 25 Frs. Paris: Les Presses Universitaires de France, 1925. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 41 (02):74-76.score: 120.0
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