Search results for 'Hardy Grant' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Grant Hardy (1998). The Analects of Confucius: A Literal Translation with an Introduction and Notes. Translated by Chichung Huang. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [REVIEW] Journal of Chinese Philosophy 25 (2):273-279.score: 150.0
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  2. George Parkin Grant (1995). George Grant in Conversation. Anansi.score: 150.0
    "Historian Ramsay Cook called George Grant one of Canadas two most important political thinkers in the twentieth century.
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  3. Grant Hardy (2011). Great Minds of the Eastern Intellectual Tradition. Great Courses.score: 150.0
    Disc 1. Life's great questions: Asian perspectives ; The Vedas and Upanishads: the beginning -- Disc 2. Mahavira and Jainism: extreme nonviolence ; The Buddha: the middle way -- Disc 3. The Bhagavad Gita: the way of action ; Confucius: in praise of sage-kings -- Disc 4. Laozi and Daoism: the way of nature ; The Hundred Schools of preimperial China -- Disc 5. Mencius and Xunzi: Confucius's successors ; Sunzi and Han Feizi: strategy and legalism -- Disc 6. Zarathustra (...)
     
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  4. Hardy Grant (1989). Geometry and Medicine: Mathematics in the Thought of Galen of Pergamum. Philosophia Mathematica (1):29-34.score: 120.0
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  5. Judith Grant (1993). Fundamental Feminism: Contesting the Core Concepts of Feminist Theory. Routledge.score: 60.0
    What makes feminist theory feminist? How did so many different feminisms come to exist? In Fundamental Feminism, Judith Grant addresses these questions by offering a critical exploration of the evolution of feminist theory and the state of feminist thinking today. Grant provides a lively assessment of the major problems of contemporary feminist thought and identifies a set of common assumptions that link the wide variety of feminist theories in existence. Fundamental Feminism calls for nothing less than a substantial (...)
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  6. Edward Grant (1981). Much Ado About Nothing: Theories of Space and Vacuum From the Middle Ages to the Scientific Revolution. Cambridge University Press.score: 60.0
    The primary objective of this study is to provide a description of the major ideas about void space within and beyond the world that were formulated between the fourteenth and early eighteenth centuries. The second part of the book - on infinite, extracosmic void space - is of special significance. The significance of Professor Grant's account is twofold: it provides the first comprehensive and detailed description of the scholastic Aristotelian arguments for and against the existence of void space; and (...)
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  7. Ruth Weissbourd Grant (1997). Hypocrisy and Integrity: Machiavelli, Rousseau, and the Ethics of Politics. University of Chicago Press.score: 60.0
    Questioning the usual judgements of political ethics, Ruth W. Grant argues that hypocrisy can actually be constructive while strictly principled behavior can be destructive. Hypocrisy and Integrity offers a new conceptual framework that clarifies the differences between idealism and fanaticism while it uncovers the moral limits of compromise. "Exciting and provocative. . . . Grant's work is to be highly recommended, offering a fresh reading of Rousseau and Machiavelli as well as presenting a penetrating analysis of hypocrisy and (...)
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  8. Colin Grant (2001). Altruism and Christian Ethics. Cambridge University Press.score: 60.0
    Separated from its anchorage in religion, ethics has followed the social sciences in seeing human beings as fundamentally characterized by self-interest, so that altruism is either naively idealistic or arrogantly self-sufficient. Colin Grant contends that, as a modern secular concept, altruism is a parody on the self-giving love of Christianity, so that its dismissal represents a social levelling that loses the depths that theology makes intelligible and religion makes possible. The Christian affirmation is that God is characterized (...)
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  9. M. J. Grant (2001). Serial Music, Serial Aesthetics: Compositional Theory in Post-War Europe. Cambridge University Press.score: 60.0
    Serial music was one of the most important aesthetic movements to emerge in post-war Europe, but its uncompromising music and modernist aesthetic has often been misunderstood. This book focuses on the controversial journal die Reihe, whose major contributors included Stockhausen, Eimert, Pousseur, Dieter Schnebel and G. M. Koenig, and discusses it in connection with many lesser-known sources in German musicology. It traces serialism's debt to the theories of Klee and Mondrian, and its relationship to developments in concrete art, modern poetry (...)
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  10. George Parkin Grant (1969). Time as History. [Toronto]Canadian Broadcasting Corp..score: 60.0
    In Time as History, a collection of his 1969 Massey lectures, George Grant reviews the thought of Nietzsche and concludes that the conception of time as history ...
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  11. James Grant (2013). The Critical Imagination. Oxford University Press.score: 60.0
    The Critical Imagination is a study of metaphor, imaginativeness, and criticism of the arts. Since the eighteenth century, many philosophers have argued that appreciating art is rewarding because it involves responding imaginatively to a work. Literary works can be interpreted in many ways; architecture can be seen as stately, meditative, or forbidding; and sensitive descriptions of art are often colourful metaphors: music can 'shimmer', prose can be 'perfumed', and a painter's colouring can be 'effervescent'. Engaging with art, like creating it, (...)
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  12. George Parkin Grant (1960). Philosophy in the Mass Age. New York, Hill and Wang.score: 60.0
    If Grant had not already been thinking the matter through for some time, he could not have prepared Philosophy in the Mass Age so quickly.
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  13. G. H. Hardy (1929). Mathematical Proof. Mind 38 (149):1-25.score: 30.0
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  14. Ruth W. Grant (2002). Political Theory, Political Science, and Politics. Political Theory 30 (4):577-595.score: 30.0
  15. Colin Grant (1991). Friedman Fallacies. Journal of Business Ethics 10 (12):907 - 914.score: 30.0
    Milton Friedman's article, The Social Responsibility of Business Is To Increase Its Profits, owes its appeal to the rhetorical devices of simplicity, authority, and finality. More careful consideration reveals oversimplification and ambiguity that conceals empirical errors and logical fallacies. It is false that business does, or would, operate exclusively in economic terms, that managers concentrate obsessively on profitability, and that ethics can be marginalized. These errors reflect basic contradictions: an apolitical political base, altruistic agents of selfishness, and good deriving from (...)
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  16. Donald C. Grant (2002). Becoming Conscious and Schizophrenia. Neuro-Psychoanalysis 4 (1):199-207.score: 30.0
  17. Brian Grant (2001). The Virtues of Common Sense. Philosophy 76 (2):191-209.score: 30.0
    I defend, in this paper, a version of a philosophy of common sense. I have use of some things from Reid's account of these matters, others from Wittgenstein's. Scepticism looms large—as do the questions of arguments for and examples of common sense. At least two different notions of common sense emerge, one of which has often been overlooked by philosophers.
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  18. Colin Grant (1999). Theodore Levitt's Marketing Myopia. Journal of Business Ethics 18 (4):397 - 406.score: 30.0
    Theodore Levitt criticizes John Kenneth Galbraith's view of advertising as artificial want creation, contending that its selling focus on the product fails to appreciate the marketing focus on the consumer. But Levitt himself not only ends up endorsing selling; he fails to confront the fact that the marketing to our most pervasive needs that he advocates really represents a sophisticated form of selling. He avoids facing this by the fiction that marketing is concerned only with the material level of existence, (...)
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  19. John Grant (1987). On Reading Collingwood's Principles of Art. Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 46 (2):239-248.score: 30.0
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  20. Robert Grant (2001). Fiction, Meaning, and Utterance. Inquiry 44 (4):389 – 403.score: 30.0
    A Gricean preamble concludes that though utterances have unintended meanings, those cannot be considered apart from their intended meanings. Intention distinguishes artworks from natural phenomena. To allocate an artwork to a genre, to accept its normal authorial boundaries and that its content is not random but chosen, is to concede intention's centrality. Wimsatt and Beardsley were right that meaning is public. But they think 'intention' is 'private' or 'unavailable'. However, it too is public, in the work. Fictions are utterances of (...)
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  21. Ruth W. Grant (2002). The Ethics of Incentives: Historical Origins and Contemporary Understandings. Economics and Philosophy 18 (1):111-139.score: 30.0
    Increasingly in the modern world, incentives are becoming the tool we reach for when we wish to bring about change. In government, in education, in health care, between and within institutions of all sorts, incentives are offered to steer people's choices in certain directions. But despite the increasing interest in ethics and economics, the ethics of the use of incentives has raised very little concern. From a certain point of view, this is not surprising. When incentives are viewed from the (...)
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  22. James Hardy (1997). Three Problems for the Singularity Theory of Truth. Journal of Philosophical Logic 26 (5):501-520.score: 30.0
    In this paper I present three problems for Simmons singularity theory of truth as he presents it in Universality and the Liar. I begin with a brief overview of the theory and then present the three problems I see for it.The first problem shows that the singularity theory is in conflict with our ordinary notion of truth. I present a set of sentences that the singularity theory evaluates differently than does our pretheoretic concept of truth.
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  23. C. K. Grant (1957). Certainty, Necessity and Aristotle's Sea Battle. Mind 66 (264):522-531.score: 30.0
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  24. Iain Hamilton Grant (2005). The "Eternal and Necessary Bond Between Philosophy and Physics". Angelaki 10 (1):43 – 59.score: 30.0
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  25. Colin Grant (2002). Whistle Blowers: Saints of Secular Culture. Journal of Business Ethics 39 (4):391 - 399.score: 30.0
    Neither the corporate view of whistle blowers as tattle-tales and traitors, nor the more sympathethic understanding of them as tragic heroes battling corrupt or abused systems captures what is at stake in whistle blowing at its most distinctive. The courage, determination and sacrifice of the most ardent whistle blowers suggests that they only begin to be appreciated when they are seen as the saints of secular culture. Although some whistle blowers may be attempting to deflect attention from their own deficiencies (...)
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  26. Richard Mullen, Lew Hardy & Andrew Tattersall (2005). The Effects of Anxiety on Motor Performance: A Test of the Conscious Processing Hypothesis. Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology 27 (2):212-225.score: 30.0
  27. Ruth W. Grant & Jeremy Sugarman (2004). Ethics in Human Subjects Research: Do Incentives Matter? Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 29 (6):717 – 738.score: 30.0
    There is considerable confusion regarding the ethical appropriateness of using incentives in research with human subjects. Previous work on determining whether incentives are unethical considers them as a form of undue influence or coercive offer. We understand the ethical issue of undue influence as an issue, not of coercion, but of corruption of judgment. By doing so we find that, for the most part, the use of incentives to recruit and retain research subjects is innocuous. But there are some instances (...)
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  28. Edward Grant (2004). Scientific Imagination in the Middle Ages. Perspectives on Science 12 (4):394-423.score: 30.0
    : Following Aristotle, medieval natural philosophers believed that knowledge was ultimately based on perception and observation; and like Aristotle, they also believed that observation could not explain the "why" of any perception. To arrive at the "why," natural philosophers offered theoretical explanations that required the use of the imagination. This was, however, only the starting point. Not only did they apply their imaginations to real phenomena, but expended even more intellectual energy on counterfactual phenomena, both extracosmic and intracosmic, extensively discussing, (...)
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  29. Sarah Hardy & Rebecca Kukla (1999). A Paramount Narrative: Exploring Space on the Starship Enterprise. Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (2):177-191.score: 30.0
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  30. Ruth W. Grant (1994). Integrity and Politics: An Alternative Reading of Rousseau. Political Theory 22 (3):414-443.score: 30.0
  31. Dean E. Allmon & James Grant (1990). Real Estate Sales Agents and the Code of Ethics: A Voice Stress Analysis. Journal of Business Ethics 9 (10):807 - 812.score: 30.0
    This study evaluates responses to the Real Estate Ethical Code. Voice Stress Analysis (VSA) is used to evaluate the responses of real estate sales people to ethically-based questions. The process and the responses given enabled the authors to gain insight into pressure-causing ethical situations and to explore new uses of VSA. Some respondents were stressed while following the ethical code guidelines. Others showed no stress about breaking the formal code. The study reaffirms that the presence of formal ethical guidelines does (...)
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  32. Edward Grant (2001). God and Reason in the Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press.score: 30.0
    Between 1100 and 1600, the emphasis on reason in the learning and intellectual life of Western Europe became more pervasive and widespread than ever before in the history of human civilization. Of crucial significance was the invention of the university around 1200, within which reason was institutionalized and where it became a deeply embedded, permanent feature of Western thought and culture. It is therefore appropriate to speak of an Age of Reason in the Middle Ages, and to view it as (...)
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  33. Edward Grant (1984). Were There Significant Differences Between Medieval and Early Modern Scholastic Natural Philosophy? The Case for Cosmology. Noûs 18 (1):5-14.score: 30.0
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  34. Edward Grant (1993). Jean Buridan and Nicole Oresme on Natural Knowledge. Vivarium 31 (1):84-105.score: 30.0
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  35. W. Matthews Grant (2007). Must a Cause Be Really Related to its Effect? The Analogy Between Divine and Libertarian Agent Causality. Religious Studies 43 (1):1-23.score: 30.0
    According to a classical teaching, God is not really related to creatures even by virtue of creating them. Some have objected that this teaching makes unintelligible the claim that God causally accounts for the universe, since God would be the same whether the universe existed or not. I defend the classical teaching, showing how the doctrine is implied by a popular cosmological argument, showing that the objection to it would also rule out libertarian agent causality, and showing that the objection (...)
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  36. Robert Grant (1998). Not Enough, or Thinking Degree Zero. Inquiry 41 (4):477 – 496.score: 30.0
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  37. John Rawls, Stephen Toulmin, G. J. Warnock, B. E. King, R. F. Holland & C. K. Grant (1955). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 64 (255):421-432.score: 30.0
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  38. Isaiah Berlin, P. F. Strawson, R. Rhees, F. E. Sparshott, Michael Scriven, R. F. Holland, Jonathan Harrison, H. G. Alexander, C. A. Mace, J. L. Evans, D. A. Rees, W. Mays, C. K. Grant, Basil Mitchell & G. C. J. Midgley (1952). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 61 (243):405-439.score: 30.0
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  39. J. Gosling, Alan R. White, John Arthur Passmore, William Kneale, Don Locke, C. K. Grant, Thomas McPherson, Peter Nidditch, Martha Kneale, A. C. Ewing & W. F. Hicken (1965). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 74 (293):126-153.score: 30.0
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  40. David Grant (2009). The Mythological State and its Empire. Routledge.score: 30.0
    Probing the work of key political thinkers from Hobbes to Rawls, this book examines the state as a real, mythological entity. This groundbreaking work explores the contradictions of our views towards, and interactions with the state and will be of interest to scholars of sociology, politics, philosophy and law.
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  41. Eugene W. Grant & Lowell S. Broom (1988). Attitudes Toward Ethics: A View of the College Student. Journal of Business Ethics 7 (8):617 - 619.score: 30.0
    This study investigated the differences in responses of undergraduate business students to an ethical dilemma. Demographic characteristics were collected on the respondents and profiled as a means of examining common bases for decision. The authors found that certain demographic characteristics appear to be predictors of ethical decision behavior of future businessmen.
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  42. Valerie J. Grant (1998). Dominance Runs Deep. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (3):376-377.score: 30.0
    Seen in its historical context, Mazur & Booth's (M&B's) target article may come to be viewed as a turning point in the study of the biological basis of human behavior in general, and dominance in particular. To facilitate further research, suggestions are offered for making the definition of dominance more precise. From an evolutionary point of view, the testosterone-dominance link may be as important in women as it is in men.
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  43. C. K. Grant (1949). Promises. Mind 58 (231):359-366.score: 30.0
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  44. L. Hardy (2003). Probability Theories in General and Quantum Theory in Particular. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B 34 (3):381-393.score: 30.0
    We consider probability theories in general. In the first part of the paper, various constraints are imposed and classical probability and quantum theory are recovered as special cases. Quantum theory follows from a set of five reasonable axioms. The key axiom which gives us quantum theory rather than classical probability theory is the continuity axiom, which demands that there exists a continuous reversible transformation between any pair of pure states. In the second part of this paper, we consider in detail (...)
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  45. C. K. Grant (1956). Akrasia and the Criteria of Assent to Practical Principles. Mind 65 (259):400-407.score: 30.0
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  46. Sara Grant (1999). Śaṅkarācārya's Concept of Relation. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.score: 30.0
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  47. John Grant & V. S. Subrahmanian (2000). Applications of Paraconsistency in Data and Knowledge Bases. Synthese 125 (1-2):121-132.score: 30.0
    The study of paraconsistent logic as a branch of mathematics and logic has been pioneered by Newton da Costa. With the growing advent of distributed and often inconsistent databases over the last ten years, there has been growing interest in paraconsistency amongst researchers in databases and knowledge bases. In this paper, we provide a brief survey of work in paraconsistent databases and knowledge bases affected by Newton da Costa's important and lasting contributions to the field.
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  48. Robert Grant (1992). The Politics of Equilibrium. Inquiry 35 (3 & 4):423 – 446.score: 30.0
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  49. Jim Hardy (2003). Review of Byeong-Uk Yi, Understanding the Many. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2003 (2).score: 30.0
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  50. Friedhelm Hardy (1979). The Philosopher as Poet — a Study of Vedântadeśika's Dehalîśastuti. Journal of Indian Philosophy 7 (3):277-325.score: 30.0
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  51. Robert Grant (1997). Fetishizing the Unseen. Inquiry 40 (4):439 – 455.score: 30.0
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  52. Myrna Reid Grant (1992). Gibraltar Killings: British Media Ethics. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 7 (1):31 – 40.score: 30.0
    Governmental response to the 1988 Thames Television documentary Death on the Rock, on the killing of three IRA operatives in Gibraltar, provides a case study for the examination of the British government's alleged attempts at media control. The Stalker affair further suggests this policy. Media restraints in Britain are numerous, including articles in the Emergency Provisions Act, the Prevention of Terrorism Act, the Offenses Against the State Act, and the new Broadcasting Act. It is argued that individual citizens are being (...)
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  53. Richard E. Grant & Michael Boylan (2006). Just End-of-Life Policies and Patient Dignity. American Journal of Bioethics 6 (5):32 – 33.score: 30.0
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  54. Brian Grant (1980). Knowledge, Luck and Charity. Mind 89 (354):161-181.score: 30.0
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  55. Lindsey Grant (2003). Sustainability and Governmental Foresight. World Futures 59 (3 & 4):287 – 299.score: 30.0
    "Sustainability" is a popular term right now, but it needs considerable clarification, particularly as to whether growth itself is sustainable. Moreover, it is a meaningless abstraction unless ways are found of bringing it into political decisions. "Foresight" is the name of the process needed to bring lateral and long-term perspectives into those decisions and thus offer some hope of achieving sustainability. It has a long history but few successes. This article explores the obstacles to taking that step and ways in (...)
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  56. L. B. Grant (1956). The Importance of Psychical Research. Mind 65 (258):231-240.score: 30.0
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  57. Joy Hardy (2002). Levinas and Environmental Education. Educational Philosophy and Theory 34 (4):459–476.score: 30.0
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  58. Stephen Toulmin, M. Dummett, P. B. Medawar, J. O. Urmson, G. J. Warnock, C. K. Grant, Antony Flew, Mary Scrutton, A. C. Ewing, R. C. Cross, Richard Robinson, D. J. Allan, L. Minio-Paluello, D. P. Henry & H. J. N. Horsburgh (1954). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 63 (249):100-123.score: 30.0
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  59. W. Charlton, Aurel Kolnai, C. K. Grant, Martin Hollis, J. M. Hinton, P. L. Mott, K. K. Baublys, Y. N. Chopra, G. R. Grice, R. F. Atkinson, Christine Atkinson & Stuart C. Brown (1973). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 82 (327):452-479.score: 30.0
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  60. C. K. Grant (1952). Freewill: A Reply to Professor Campbell. Mind 61 (243):381-385.score: 30.0
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  61. Robert Grant (1995). Must New Worlds Also Be Good? Inquiry 38 (1 & 2):123 – 141.score: 30.0
    The activities analysed by Spinosa et al., viz entrepreneurship, citizen action, and cultural leadership, are all central to the American experience. They have a common phenomenological structure and a common purpose, which is to ?disclose new worlds?, i.e. so to reconfigure the collective perceptions as to bring about ?large?scale cultural and historical changes?. Each, more or less unselfconsciously, is an exercise of skill, an expression of freedom, and a building of solidarity through the recovery or discovery of human meanings. I (...)
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  62. C. K. Grant (1956). On Using Language. Philosophical Quarterly 6 (25):327-343.score: 30.0
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  63. C. K. Grant (1955). Some Comments on 'the Age of the Universe'. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 6 (23):248-251.score: 30.0
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  64. Philip W. Grant (1977). Strict-Π11 Predicates on Countable and Cofinality Ω Transitive Sets. Journal of Symbolic Logic 42 (2):161 - 173.score: 30.0
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  65. Michael Anderson, Walid Gomaa, John Grant & Don Perlis, Active Logic Semantics for a Single Agent in a Static World.score: 30.0
    Artificial Intelligence, in press. Abstract: For some time we have been developing, and have had significant practical success with, a time-sensitive, contradiction-tolerant logical reasoning engine called the active logic machine (ALMA). The current paper details a semantics for a general version of the underlying logical formalism, active logic. Central to active logic are special rules controlling the inheritance of beliefs in general (and of beliefs about the current time in particular), very tight controls on what can be derived from direct (...)
     
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  66. Silvana Ferreira Bento, Ellen Hardy & Maria José Duarte Osis (2008). Process for Obtaining Informed Consent: Women's Opinions. Developing World Bioethics 8 (3):197-206.score: 30.0
    In Brazil, every study involving human beings is required to produce an informed consent form that must be signed by study participants: this is stated in Resolution 196/96. 1 Consent must be obtained through a specific structured process. Objective: To present the opinions of women regarding how the process of obtaining informed consent should be conducted when women are invited to participate in studies on contraceptive methods. Subjects and Methods: Eight focus groups were conducted, involving a total of 51 women (...)
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  67. C. D. Broad, Richard Robinson, H. B. Acton, George E. Hughes, T. D. Weldon, Mario M. Rossi, A. C. Ewing, C. J. Holloway, J. P. Corbett, C. W. K. Mundle, W. B. Gallie, W. Mays, A. H. Armstrong, C. K. Grant & I. M. Cromble (1949). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 58 (229):101-130.score: 30.0
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  68. James Canvin, Susan Grant, Primrose Freestone, Istvan Toth, Mirella Trinei, Kishor Modha, Dominique Cellier & Vic Norris (1998). Rapid Growth Mutants of Escherichia Coli. Acta Biotheoretica 46 (2).score: 30.0
    If rapid growth (rap) mutants of Escherichia coli could be obtained, these might prove a valuable contribution to fields as diverse as growth rate control, biotechnology and the regulation of the bacterial cell cycle. To obtain rap mutants, a dnaQ mutator strain was grown for four and a half days continuously in batch culture. At the end of the selection period, there was no significant change in growth rate. This result means that selecting rap mutants may require an alternative strategy (...)
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  69. George Crowder & Henry Hardy (eds.) (2007). The One and the Many: Reading Isaiah Berlin. Prometheus Books.score: 30.0
  70. Alexander Grant (1877/1978). Aristotle. Folcroft Library Editions.score: 30.0
     
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  71. John Grant (1978). Confirmation of Empirical Theories by Observation Sets. Philosophia 8 (2-3):367-380.score: 30.0
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  72. George Parkin Grant (1974/1985). English-Speaking Justice. University of Notre Dame Press.score: 30.0
     
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  73. C. K. Grant (1952). Free Will: A Reply to Professor Campbell's Is 'Free Will' a Pseudo-Problem?. Mind 61 (July):381-385.score: 30.0
     
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  74. Colin Grant (1988). Giving Ethics the Business. Journal of Business Ethics 7 (7):489 - 495.score: 30.0
    The criminal conviction of Amway Corporation for evasion of Canadian customs duties not only belies the high ethical profession of its president, Richard DeVos, but his reissuing of the book which makes this profession, without mentioning the conviction, supports the view that ultimately ethics and business are pulling in opposite directions.
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  75. Robert Grant (2003). Imagining the Real: Essays on Politics, Ideology and Literature. Palgrave Macmillan.score: 30.0
    Throughout its ten related essays, Imagining the Real contrasts our abstract imaginings about the human world with the imaginative insights provided by art and experience. It questions, variously, the relevance of game theory and sociobiology to politics the supposed intrinsic values of liberal freedom, cultural change, and democratic action and the claims of Marxism, deconstruction and "Theory" generally to be non-ideological. More positively, it reinterprets fiction as a specific invitation to imagine, and celebrates Shakespeare, L.H. Myers and Beckett as truly (...)
     
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  76. Patrick Grant (1992). Literature and Personal Values. St. Martin's Press.score: 30.0
     
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  77. George Grant (2000). Legacy of Truth. Highland Books.score: 30.0
     
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  78. Valerie J. Grant (2005). Medical Advances Reduce Risk of Behaviours Related to High Sociosexuality. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (2):286-287.score: 30.0
    Although statistically significant correlations have been found among political, economic, and social indices, on the one hand, and measures of sociosexuality, on the other, it is likely that these correlations are second-order effects. Underpinning the reproductive freedom associated with higher sociosexuality are factors more closely related to biology, namely, easy access to safe, effective contraception and reproductive medical care.
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  79. Claire Grant (2007). Number and Government. In Michael D. A. Freeman & Ross Harrison (eds.), Law and Philosophy. Oxford University Press.score: 30.0
     
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  80. C. K. Grant (1955). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 64 (255):427-432.score: 30.0
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  81. C. K. Grant (1949). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 58 (229):427-432.score: 30.0
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  82. C. K. Grant (1954). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 63 (249):427-432.score: 30.0
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  83. C. K. Grant (1952). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 61 (243):427-432.score: 30.0
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  84. Patrick Grant (1996). Personalism and the Politics of Culture: Readings in Literature and Religion From the New Testament to the Poetry of Northern Ireland. St. Martin's Press.score: 30.0
     
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  85. Michael Grant (2003). Philosophical (Horror) Investigations: On the Question of the Horror Film. In Steven Jay Schneider & Daniel Shaw (eds.), Dark Thoughts: Philosophic Reflections on Cinematic Horror. Scarecrow Press.score: 30.0
     
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  86. Vernon W. Grant (1974). The Roots of Religious Doubt and the Search for Security. New York,Seabury Press.score: 30.0
     
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  87. W. Matthews Grant (2006). The Science of God: An Introduction to Scientific Theology. Review of Metaphysics 60 (1):166-168.score: 30.0
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  88. Barbara Hardy (1964). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] British Journal of Aesthetics 4 (1).score: 30.0
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  89. Barbara Hardy (1963). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] British Journal of Aesthetics 3 (1).score: 30.0
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  90. G. H. Hardy (1970). Bertrand Russell and Trinity. London,Cambridge U.P..score: 30.0
  91. Ben Hardy, Table of Content and Introduction.score: 30.0
    See the table of content and introduction of my forthcoming book, Cognitive Decision-Making.
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  92. I. T. Ramsey, Everett W. Hall, H. H. Price, D. R. Cousin & C. K. Grant (1955). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 64 (253):110-122.score: 30.0
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  93. Norman A. Solomon & Rebecca A. Grant (1983). Canadian Trade Unionism and Wage Parity for Women: Putting the Principle Into Practice. Journal of Business Ethics 2 (3):213 - 219.score: 30.0
    This article examines the conceptual impact of equal pay legislation on Canadian trade unionism. Ambiguous, largely voluntary, legislation poses major challenges to unions negotiating wage parity for their members. Furthermore, the movement finds itself caught between conflicting responsibilities as champion of the underpaid and protector of traditional interests. The authors examine this challenge within the context of the historic development, and fundamental principles of trade unionism. They conclude that many of the conflicts discussed arise directly from established union practices and (...)
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  94. C. H. Whiteley, C. K. Grant, Alan Montefiore, Ronald W. Hepburn, H. J. Paton, P. H. Nowell-Smith, A. D. Woozley & J. A. Faris (1959). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 68 (272):556-574.score: 30.0
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  95. Z. Wiesenfeld-Hallin, H. Aldskogius, G. Grant, J.-X. Hao, T. Hökfelt & X.-J. Xu (1997). Central Inhibitory Dysfunctions: Mechanisms and Clinical Implications. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (3):420-425.score: 30.0
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  96. James Grant (2010). The Dispensability of Metaphor. British Journal of Aesthetics 50 (3):255-272.score: 20.0
    Many philosophers claim that metaphor is indispensable for various purposes. What I shall call the ‘Indispensability Thesis’ is the view that we use at least some metaphors to think, to express, to communicate, or to discover what cannot be thought, expressed, communicated, or discovered without metaphor. I argue in this paper that support for the Indispensability Thesis is based on several confusions. I criticize arguments presented by Stephen Yablo, Berys Gaut, Richard Boyd, and Elisabeth Camp for the Indispensability Thesis, and (...)
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  97. James Grant (2011). Metaphor and Criticism BSA Prize Essay, 2010. British Journal of Aesthetics 51 (3):237-257.score: 20.0
    The prevalence of colourful metaphors and figurative language in critics’ descriptions of artworks has long attracted attention. Talk of ‘liquid melodies’, ‘purple prose’, ‘soaring arches’, and the use of still more elaborate figurative descriptions, is not uncommon. My aim in this paper is to explain why metaphor is so prevalent in critical description. Many have taken the prevalence of art-critical metaphors to reveal something important about aesthetic experience and aesthetic properties. My focus is different. I attempt to determine what metaphor (...)
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  98. Ray Brassier, Iain Hamilton Grant, Graham Harman & Quentin Meillassoux (2007). Speculative Realism. Collapse:306-449.score: 20.0
  99. James Grant (2012). The Value of Imaginativeness. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 90 (2):275-289.score: 20.0
    The aim of this paper is to explain why imaginativeness is valuable. Recent discussions of imaginativeness or creativity (which I regard as the same property) have paid relatively little attention to this important question. My discussion has three parts. First, I elucidate the concept of imaginativeness by providing three conditions a product or act must satisfy in order to be imaginative. This account enables us to explain, among other things, why imaginativeness is associated with inspiration, why it is associated with (...)
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  100. Edward Grant (2010). The Nature of Natural Philosophy in the Late Middle Ages. Catholic University of America Press.score: 20.0
    When did modern science begin? -- Science and the medieval university -- The condemnation of 1277, God's absolute power, and physical thought in the late Middle Ages -- God, science, and natural philosophy in the late Middle Ages -- Medieval departures from Aristotelian natural philosophy -- God and the medieval cosmos -- Scientific imagination in the Middle Ages -- Medieval natural philosophy : empiricism without observation -- Science and theology in the Middle Ages -- The fate of ancient Greek natural (...)
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