Results for 'Iehoshua Perle'

277 found
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  1.  35
    Thinking Being: Introduction to Metaphysics in the Classical Tradition.Eric Perl - 2014 - Boston: Brill.
    In Thinking Being , Perl articulates central arguments and ideas regarding the nature of reality in Parmenides, Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus, and Thomas Aquinas, thematizing the indissoluble togetherness of thought and being, and focusing on continuity rather than opposition within this tradition.
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  2. Shifty Contextualism About Epistemics.Caleb Perl - 2017 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 4.
  3.  23
    Ineffable landscapes.Perle Besserman - 1999 - The European Legacy 4 (5):106-109.
    Keter: The Crown of God in Early Jewish Mysticism. By Arthur Green xi + 226 pp. $35 cloth. Mystic Tales From the Zohar. Translated and edited by Aryeh Wineman 161 pp. $12.95 paper. Apparitions of the Self: The Secret Autobiographies of a Tibetan Visionary. By Janet Gyatso xxiii + 360 pp. $39.50 cloth.
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  4.  6
    "Bien común" e "interés general" en la retórica de los poderes públicos: ¿conceptos intercambiables?Ginés S. Marco Perles - 2009 - Anuario Filosófico 42 (3):613-625.
    En este estudio se presentan las líneas directrices de una investigación que se propone analizar el sentido y el significado que se otorga a los conceptos de “bien común” e “interés general” en la retórica de los poderes públicos de nuestro tiempo. A continuación, trata de dar respuesta al interrogante de si ambos conceptos son perfectamente intercambiables en el debate público o, por el contrario, estamos ante conceptos que proceden de presupuestos antagónicos.
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  5. Introduction: Antipolitics or Antinomianism?Jeffrey M. Perl - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (3):317-323.
    In this introduction to part 3 of the Common Knowledge symposium “Antipolitics,” the journal's editor argues that, apart from sortition, the best guarantees of safety in a democracy are, first, to augment judicial oversight of all political processes and, second, to exclude politicians from the process of selecting judges. “There can never be too much judicial interference,” he writes, “in what politicians regard as their domain.” The author reached this conclusion during attempts by the newly elected Israeli government, in the (...)
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  6.  8
    Can AI-Based Decisions be Genuinely Public? On the Limits of Using AI-Algorithms in Public Institutions.Alon Harel & Gadi Perl - 2024 - Jus Cogens 6 (1):47-64.
    AI-based algorithms are used extensively by public institutions. Thus, for instance, AI algorithms have been used in making decisions concerning punishment providing welfare payments, making decisions concerning parole, and many other tasks which have traditionally been assigned to public officials and/or public entities. We develop a novel argument against the use of AI algorithms, in particular with respect to decisions made by public officials and public entities. We argue that decisions made by AI algorithms cannot count as public decisions, namely (...)
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  7.  10
    Editorial Note.Natalie Zemon Davis & Jeffrey M. Perl - 2002 - Common Knowledge 8 (2):364-365.
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  8.  16
    Seeing threats, sensing flesh: human–machine ensembles at work.Perle Møhl - 2021 - AI and Society 36 (4):1243-1252.
    Based on detailed descriptions of human–machine ensembles, this article explores how humans and machines work together to see specific things and unsee others, and how they come to co-configure one another. For seeing is not an automated function; whether one is a human or a machine, vision is gradually enskilled and mutually co-constituted. The analysis intersects three different ways of human–machine seeing to shed further light on the workings of each one: an airport, where facial recognition algorithms collaborate with border (...)
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  9. Postmodern disarmament.Jeffrey Perl - 2007 - In Santiago Zabala (ed.), Weakening philosophy: essays in honour of Gianni Vattimo. Ithaca: McGill-Queen's University Press.
     
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  10. Attributing error without taking a stand.Caleb Perl & Mark Schroeder - 2019 - Philosophical Studies 176 (6):1453-1471.
    Moral error theory is the doctrine that our first-order moral commitments are pervaded by systematic error. It has been objected that this makes the error theory itself a position in first-order moral theory that should be judged by the standards of competing first-order moral theories :87–139, 1996) and Kramer. Kramer: “the objectivity of ethics is itself an ethical matter that rests primarily on ethical considerations. It is not something that can adequately be contested or confirmed through non-ethical reasoning” [2009, 1]). (...)
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  11.  52
    Living Life Fully.Wendell Berry & Eric Perl - 2001 - The Chesterton Review 27 (1/2):218-223.
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  12.  3
    Postmodern Disarmament.Jeffrey Perl - 2007 - In Santiago Zabala (ed.), Weakening philosophy: essays in honour of Gianni Vattimo. Ithaca: McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 326-347.
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  13.  7
    Platon et Kant anticipations et correspondances.Hugo Perls - 1946 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 51 (4):315 - 334.
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  14. Platon. Sa conception du Kosmos.Hugo Perls - 1947 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 52 (1):86-87.
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  15.  19
    Postscript on Method: Editorial Note.Alick Isaacs & Jeffrey M. Perl - 2002 - Common Knowledge 8 (1):147-151.
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  16. Some Question-Begging Objections to Rule Consequentialism.Caleb Perl - 2023 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 101 (4):904-919.
    This paper defends views like rule consequentialism by distinguishing between two sorts of ideal world objections. It aims to show that one of those sorts of objections is question-begging. Its success would open up a path forward for such views.
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  17.  29
    Postcolonial Poland.Péter Nádas, Jeffrey M. Perl, Mikhail Epstein, Galin Tihanov, Clare Cavanagh, László F. Földényi, Erica Johnson Debeljak & Jeffrey C. Isaac - 2004 - Common Knowledge 10 (1):82-92.
  18.  21
    Platonic interpretations: selected papers from the sixteenth annual conference of the International Society for Neoplatonic Studies.John F. Finamore & Eric D. Perl (eds.) - 2019 - Bream, Lydney, Gloucestershire, UK: The Prometheus Trust, in association with the International Society for Neoplatonic Studies.
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  19. Solving the Ideal Worlds Problem.Caleb Perl - 2021 - Ethics 132 (1):89-126.
    I introduce a new formulation of rule consequentialism, defended as an improvement on traditional formulations. My new formulation cleanly avoids what Parfit calls “ideal world” objections. I suggest that those objections arise because traditional formulations incorporate counterfactual comparisons about how things could go differently. My new formulation eliminates those counterfactual comparisons. Part of the interest of the new formulation is as a model of how to reformulate structurally similar views, including various kinds of contractualism.
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  20. Might Moral Epistemologists Be Asking The Wrong Questions?Caleb Perl - 2020 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 100 (3):556-585.
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, EarlyView.
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  21.  21
    Introduction: Idées Fixes and Fausses Idées Claires.Mikhail Epstein & Jeffrey M. Perl - 2013 - Common Knowledge 19 (2):217-223.
    This essay, coauthored by the editor and a member of the editorial board of Common Knowledge, introduces the fifth installment of the journal's symposium “Fuzzy Studies,” which is about the “consequence of blur.” Beginning with a review of Enlightenment ideas about ideas — especially Descartes's argument that a mind “unclouded and attentive” can be “wholly freed from doubt” (Rules III, 5) — this essay then turns to assess the validity of counter-Enlightenment arguments, mostly Russian but also anglophone and French, against (...)
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  22.  9
    Grotte de Kitsos.Nicole Lambert, Catherine Perlès & Robert Jullien - 1972 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 96 (2):817-844.
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  23.  20
    Theophany: The Neoplatonic Philosophy of Dionysius the Areopagite.Eric D. Perl - 2007 - State University of New York Press.
    Situates Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite as a Neoplatonic philosopher in the tradition of Plotinus and Proclus.
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  24.  3
    Introduction: “The First Duty of Grown, Thinking People”.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2022 - Common Knowledge 28 (2):206-215.
    In this piece, the editor of Common Knowledge introduces a long-term project titled “Antipolitics: Symposium in Memory of György Konrád.” Konrád, who died in 2019, was a founding member of the Common Knowledge editorial board, and the symposium is meant to find present-day applications for the arguments of his book Antipolitics, published in 1982 in Hungarian. Although written under Cold War conditions and to that extent dated, the book is directed against politics and politicians as such: “What Machiavelli's Prince is (...)
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  25. Formulating Moral Error Theory.Caleb Perl - 2022 - Journal of Philosophy 119 (5):279-288.
    This paper shows how to formulate moral error theories given a contextualist semantics like the one that Angelika Kratzer pioneered, answering the concerns that Christine Tiefensee developed.
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  26.  10
    Regarding Change at Ise Jingū.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2019 - Common Knowledge 25 (1-3):220-232.
    This essay introduces the second of three installments of an “elegiac symposium” in Common Knowledge on figures and concepts devalued in what Thomas Kuhn refers to as “paradigm shifts.” The essay suggests that Kuhn’s idea is provincial, in three specified senses, and then goes on to show how differently Japanese culture regards and manages major change. The author of this introduction, who is also the journal’s editor, begins by evaluating a triptych of 1895 by Toshikata as a response to the (...)
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  27. A User’s Guide to Hybrid Tools.Caleb Perl - 2020 - Mind 129 (513):129-158.
    Hybrid metaethical theories have significant promise; they would have important upshots if they were true. But they also face severe problems. The problems are severe enough to make many philosophers doubt that they could be true. My ambition is to show that the problems are just instances of a highly general problem: a problem about what are sometimes called ‘intensional anaphora'. I'll also show that any adequate explanation of intensional anaphora immediately solves all the problems for the hybrid theorist. We (...)
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  28.  13
    Introduction.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (3):441-452.
    In this introduction to Part 1 of “Contextualism—the Next Generation: Symposium on the Future of a Methodology,” the editor of Common Knowledge, a “journal of left-wing Kuhnian opinion,” reports that the new symposium responds to contextualist criticism of the previous CK symposium, which was on xenophilia. The content of the earlier symposium met with objections, from contextualists, on the grounds of methodology, and the new symposium questions the methodology of contextualism for the limits that it places on content as well (...)
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  29.  17
    Xenophilia, Difference, and Indifference.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2018 - Common Knowledge 24 (2):234-238.
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  30. Empirical ignorance as defeating moral intuitions? A puzzle for rule consequentialists.Caleb Perl - 2019 - Analysis 79 (1):62-72.
    This paper develops an argument that, if rule consequentialism is true, it’s not possible to defend it as the outcome of reflective equilibrium. Ordinary agents like you and me are ignorant of too many empirical facts. Our ignorance is a defeater for our moral intuitions. Even worse, there aren’t enough undefeated intuitions left to defend rule consequentialism. The problem I’ll describe won’t be specific to rule consequentialists, but it will be especially sharp for them.
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  31. Gestalt Therapy: Excitement and Growth in the Human Personality.Frederick Perls, Ralph E. Hefferline & Paul Goodman - 1966 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 26 (4):597-598.
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  32. Presuppositions, Attitudes, and Why They Matter.Caleb Perl - 2020 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 98 (2):363-381.
    This paper introduces and defends a high-level generalization about the way that presupposition triggers interact with attitude verbs. This generalization tells us a great deal about what an adequa...
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  33. The Presence of the Paradigm: Immanence and Transcendence In Plato’s Theory of Forms.Eric D. Perl - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (2):339 - 362.
    DISCUSSIONS OF THE ONTOLOGICAL STATUS of Plato’s forms too often take for granted that immanence and transcendence are opposed to each other: if the forms are in instances then they are not separate from them, while if the forms are separate then they are not in instances. This assumption is sometimes associated with the theory that there is a change in Plato’s thought between the early or Socratic dialogues, in which forms are regarded as immanent, and the middle dialogues and (...)
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  34. A comprehensive update on CIDO: the community-based coronavirus infectious disease ontology.Yongqun He, Hong Yu, Anthony Huffman, Asiyah Yu Lin, Darren A. Natale, John Beverley, Ling Zheng, Yehoshua Perl, Zhigang Wang, Yingtong Liu, Edison Ong, Yang Wang, Philip Huang, Long Tran, Jinyang Du, Zalan Shah, Easheta Shah, Roshan Desai, Hsin-hui Huang, Yujia Tian, Eric Merrell, William D. Duncan, Sivaram Arabandi, Lynn M. Schriml, Jie Zheng, Anna Maria Masci, Liwei Wang, Hongfang Liu, Fatima Zohra Smaili, Robert Hoehndorf, Zoë May Pendlington, Paola Roncaglia, Xianwei Ye, Jiangan Xie, Yi-Wei Tang, Xiaolin Yang, Suyuan Peng, Luxia Zhang, Luonan Chen, Junguk Hur, Gilbert S. Omenn, Brian Athey & Barry Smith - 2022 - Journal of Biomedical Semantics 13 (1):25.
    The current COVID-19 pandemic and the previous SARS/MERS outbreaks of 2003 and 2012 have resulted in a series of major global public health crises. We argue that in the interest of developing effective and safe vaccines and drugs and to better understand coronaviruses and associated disease mechenisms it is necessary to integrate the large and exponentially growing body of heterogeneous coronavirus data. Ontologies play an important role in standard-based knowledge and data representation, integration, sharing, and analysis. Accordingly, we initiated the (...)
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  35. The Demiurge and the Forms.Eric D. Perl - 1998 - Ancient Philosophy 18 (1):81-92.
  36. An argument for temporalism and contingentism.Caleb Perl - 2015 - Philosophical Studies 172 (5):1387-1417.
    Aristotle and Aquinas may have held that the things we believe and assert can have different truth-values at different times. Stoic logicians did; they held that there were “vacillating assertibles”—assertibles that are sometimes true and sometimes false. Frege and Russell endorsed the now widely accepted alternative, where the propositions believed and asserted are always specific with respect to time. This paper brings a new perspective to this question. We want to figure out what sorts of propositions speakers believe. Some philosophers (...)
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  37.  22
    Hong Kong: Wake-Up Call.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (2):197-211.
    In this piece, the editor of Common Knowledge offers excerpts from his two-year correspondence with a reader in Hong Kong, who was drawn to arguments made in the journal about maintaining “quietism and resistance in the face of vile behavior.” In the summer and fall of 2019, during the insurrection in Hong Kong, his correspondent shifts rapidly from taking comfort in CK’s defense of quietism to a full embrace of “uncivil disobedience.” She implies that the solidarity the editor expresses with (...)
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  38.  4
    Suffocation in the Polis.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2019 - Common Knowledge 25 (1-3):332-338.
    This introduction to the third and final part of the Common Knowledge symposium “Unsocial Thought, Uncommon Lives” is reprinted here in a special issue of representative pieces from the journal’s first twenty-five years. The title is taken from an article by Isaiah Berlin in CK. Perl’s essay argues against the Aristotelian presumption that “man is a social animal” and explains that the CK symposium on unsocial thought was meant to substantiate that “societies do as a rule smother instinctive behaviors, but (...)
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  39.  16
    Newton's Justification of the Laws of Motion.Margula R. Perl - 1966 - Journal of the History of Ideas 27 (4):585.
  40.  49
    The Motion of Intellect On the Neoplatonic Reading of Sophist 248e-249d.Eric D. Perl - 2014 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 8 (2):135-160.
    This paper defends Plotinus’ reading ofSophist248e-249d as an expression of the togetherness or unity-in-duality of intellect and intelligible being. Throughout the dialogues Plato consistently presents knowledge as a togetherness of knower and known, expressing this through the myth of recollection and through metaphors of grasping, eating, and sexual union. He indicates that an intelligible paradigm is in the thought that apprehends it, and regularly regards the forms not as extrinsic “objects” but as the contents of living intelligence. A meticulous reading (...)
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  41.  23
    Solitary Confinement: Social Death and Its Afterlives.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2013 - Common Knowledge 21 (2):331-332.
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  42.  13
    Introduction.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2018 - Common Knowledge 24 (1):26-34.
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  43. Neither One Nor Many: God and the Gods in Plotinus, Proclus, and Aquinas.Eric D. Perl - 2010 - Dionysius 28.
     
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  44.  25
    Civilian scholarship.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2002 - Common Knowledge 8 (1):1-6.
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  45. Hierarchy and Participation in Dionysius the Areopagite and Greek Neoplatonism.Eric Perl - 1994 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 68 (1):15-30.
  46.  10
    Introduction: Coherent Mixtures.Jeffrey M. Perl, Noa Halevy, Edith Bruder & Jamie Gilham - 2017 - Common Knowledge 23 (3):396-403.
    In his introduction to part 2 of the Common Knowledge symposium on xenophilia, the journal's editor tours the reader through two private apartments and through two public art collections in an effort to establish that aesthetically coherent mixtures of apparently immiscible objects from widely divergent cultures are possible and also morally glamorous. Xenophobia at its least reprehensible, he argues, is a fear of ecumenism and its consequences, as well as a fear of one's own conversion — of “turning Turk.” Xenophilia (...)
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  47.  32
    Introduction: Self-Identity and Ambivalence.Jeffrey M. Perl, Humberto Garcia, Noa Halevy & Peter Valdina - 2017 - Common Knowledge 23 (2):225-231.
    In this introduction to the first installment of the Common Knowledge symposium on xenophilia, the editor explains the rationale of the new project, citing increases in aggressive xenophobia internationally. He comments on the intergroup-relations theorist Todd Pittinsky's argument that, since tolerance is not logically the antithesis of negative feelings toward out-groups, even long-established traditions of toleration are inadequate to prevent intergroup aggression. Pittinsky proposes that tolerance be replaced, as a principle of peacekeeping, by the encouragement of positive feelings toward out-groups, (...)
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  48. Sense-perception and intellect in Plato.Eric D. Perl - 1997 - Revue de Philosophie Ancienne 15 (1):15-34.
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  49.  26
    Introduction: Regarding change at ise jingū.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2008 - Common Knowledge 14 (2):208-220.
  50.  8
    Books in My LifeAmerican Publishing History: The Tanselle Collection.Jeffrey M. Perl - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (2):241-242.
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