Search results for 'J. A. North' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. A. Koyre & J. North, Part B: A Brief History of Space.score: 410.0
    (I) Aristotle of Stagira (384-322 BC) 0) A closed geocentric spherical cosmology. (Adopted from the great mathematician, Eudoxus, c. 400 to 347 BC; via Calippus; but Aristotle unifies their separate schemes for different heavenly bodies). (Aristotle cites mathematicians as estimating radius of earth: in fact 200% of correct figure. Eratosthenes ca. 250 BC estimates radius of earth as 120% of correct).
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  2. John David North, John J. Roche & A. C. Crombie (eds.) (1985). The Light of Nature: Essays in the History and Philosophy of Science Presented to A.C. Crombie. Distributors for the United States and Canada Kluwer Academic Publishers.score: 390.0
    INTRODUCTION This volume of essays is meant as a tribute to Alistair Crombie by some of those who have studied with him. The occasion of its publication is ...
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  3. J. A. North (2000). J. Nelson Kraybill: Imperial Cult and Commerce in John's Apocalypse . (Journal for the Study of the New Testament, Supplement 132.) Pp. 262, 10 Pls. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1996. £33/$49. ISBN: 1-85075-616-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (01):324-.score: 380.0
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  4. J. A. North (1966). Cecil Bennett Pascal: The Cults of Cisalpine Gaul. Pp. 222; 1 Map. Brussels: Latomus, 1964. Paper, 350 B.Fr. The Classical Review 16 (02):240-241.score: 290.0
  5. J. North, T 3:30-5:20 Lc 206.score: 150.0
    There is no question that the theory of quantum mechanics is empirically successful. What the formalism of the theory says about the world, however, remains controversial. In this class, we will look at different theories of quantum mechanics. We will examine a range of philosophical issues that arise for the different theories, including the measurement problem, non-locality, the ontological status of the wavefunction and configuration space, the nature of probability, causation, and the compatibility of quantum mechanics with relativity.
     
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  6. R. W. Thatcher, J. F. Gomez-Molina, C. Biver, D. North, R. Curtin & R. W. Walker (2000). Two Compartmental Models of EEG Coherence and MRI Biophysics. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (3):412-412.score: 150.0
    Studies have shown that as MRI T2 relaxation time lengthens there is a shift toward more unbound or “free-water” and less partitioning of the protein/lipid molecules per unit volume. A shift toward less water partitioning or lengthened MRI T2 relaxation time is linearly related to reduced high frequency EEG amplitude, reduced short distance EEG coherence, increased long distance EEG coherence, and reduced cognitive functioning (Thatcher et al. 1998a; 1998b).
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  7. J. A. Petch (1923). The Romans in Britain Caer Llugwy : The Roman Fort Between Capel Curig and Bettws-y-Coed. By J. P. Hall. One Vol. 10″ × 7½″. Pp. 64. Frontispiece, 20 Plates, 4 Plans, and a Map. Manchester : Taylor, Garnett, Evans and Co., 1923. 10s. 6d. The Roman Villa at North Leigh. By M. V. Taylor. 8½″ × 5½″. Pp. 4, with a Map, Plan, and 2 Photographs. Oxford, at the Clarendon Press, 1923. 1s. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 37 (7-8):186-.score: 95.0
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  8. A. M. Dale (1954). J. C. Opstelten : Sophocles and Greek Pessimism. Translated From the Dutch by J. A. Ross. Pp.250. Amsterdam: North Holland Publishing Company, 1952. Cloth, 25s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 4 (3-4):290-.score: 90.0
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  9. Robert A. Kaster (2009). Latin Lexicography Glinister (F.), Woods (C.) (Edd.) with North (J.A.), Crawford (M.H.) Verrius, Festus, & Paul. Lexicography, Scholarship, and Society. (BICS Supplement 93.) Pp. Xiv + 191. London: Institute of Classical Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London, 2007. Paper, £25. ISBN: 978-1-905670-06-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 59 (01):169-.score: 90.0
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  10. L. J. Russell (1927). Matter and Gravity in Newton's Physical Philosophy. By A. J. Snow , Lecturer in Psychology, North-Western University. (Oxford University Press. 1926. Pp. 256.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 2 (06):263-.score: 84.0
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  11. —Martin Bunzl (2008). A Climate of Injustice: Global Inequality, North-South Politics, and Climate Policy -by J. Timmons Roberts and Bradley C. Parks. Ethics and International Affairs 22 (2):229–230.score: 81.0
  12. R. M. Ogilvie (1971). The Ager Veientanus A. Kahane, L. Murray Threipland, J. Ward-Perkins: The Ager Veientanus, North and East of Rome. (Papers of the British School at Rome, Xxxvi.) Pp. 218; 39 Figs., 32 Plates. London: British School at Rome, 1968. Cloth, £3·50. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 21 (03):438-439.score: 81.0
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  13. D. E. Strong (1968). A. N. Zadoks-Josephus Jitta, W. J. T. Peters, W. A. Van Es: Roman Bronze Statuettes From the Netherlands, I: Statuettes Found North of the Limes. (Scripta Archaeologica Groningana, I.) Pp. Xiii+140; 193 Ill. Groningen: Wolters, 1967. Cloth, Fl.37.50. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 18 (03):360-361.score: 81.0
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  14. H. H. Scullard (1957). Roman Sea-Power J. H. Thiel: A History of Roman Sea-Power Before the Second Punic War. Pp. Viii + 368. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Co., 1954. Cloth, Fl. 25. H. T. Wallinga: The Boarding-Bridge of the Romans. Pp. Viii + 96; 2 Plates, 12 Figs. The Hague: Nijhoff (London: Batsford), 1956. Stiff Paper, Fl. 8.90. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 7 (02):144-147.score: 81.0
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  15. William Barr (1998). Eutropius J. Long: Claudian's In Eutropium: Or How, When and Why to Slander a Eunuch. Pp. Xiv + 291. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1996. Cased, $45. ISBN: 0-8078-2263-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 48 (01):37-38.score: 81.0
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  16. James Collins (1972). "Russell and Moore: The Analytical Heritage," by A. J. Ayer; and "The Unifying Moment: The Psychological Philosophy of William James and Alfred North Whitehead," by Craig R. Eisendrath. [REVIEW] The Modern Schoolman 49 (4):370-372.score: 81.0
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  17. Jill Harries (1989). Gallic Emperors in the Third Century J. F. Drinkwater: The Gallic Empire. Separatism and Continuity in the North-Western Provinces of the Roman Empire A.D. 260–274. (Historia Einzelschriften, 52.) Pp. 276; 8 Maps and Figures. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 1987. Paper, DM 58. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (01):89-90.score: 81.0
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  18. Douglas M. MacDowell (1989). Fighting for a Comic Perspective Kenneth J. Reckford: Aristophanes' Old-and-New Comedy, Vol. 1: Six Essays in Perspective. Pp. Xiv + 567; 8 Illustrations. Chapel Hill and London: The University of North Carolina Press, 1987. £29.75. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (01):16-17.score: 81.0
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  19. M. M. Willcock (1975). Pindar: Seventh Olympian W. J. Verdenius: Pindar's Seventh Olympian Ode: A Commentary. (Med. Der K. Ned. Akad., Afd. Letterkunde, N.S. 35. 2.) Pp. 33. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Co., 1972. Paper, Fl.8. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 25 (01):5-6.score: 81.0
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  20. A. J. Woodman (1989). Recent Studies of Horace's Odes Matthew S. Santirocco: Unity and Design in Horace's Odes. Pp. X + 251. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1986. £24. David H. Porter: Horace's Poetic Journey: A Reading of Odes 1–3. Pp. Xiv + 281; 9 Diagrams. Princeton University Press, 1987. £22. Peter Connor: Horace's Lyric Poetry: The Force of Humour. (Ramus Monographs, 2.) Pp. X + 221. Victoria: Aureal Publications, 1987. Australian $24. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (02):208-211.score: 48.0
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  21. J. Savulescu (2005). What Makes the Best Medical Ethics Journal? A North American Perspective. Journal of Medical Ethics 31 (10):591-597.score: 45.0
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  22. A. W. Macdonald (1954). Reviews : The Religion of the Tempasuk Dusuns of North Borneo BY 1. H. N. EVANS Cambridge: University Press, 1953, Pp. 579 and 22 Additional Plates. The Na-Khi Naga Cult and Related Ceremonies, Parts I and II BY J. F. ROCK Rome: Is. M.E.O., 1952 ('Serie Orientale Roma', IV), 2 Volumes, Pp. 806 and 58 Additional Plates and Explanatory Notes. Le Concile de Lhasa BY P. DEMIEVILLE Paris: Presses Universitaires, 1952 ('Bibliotheque de l'Institut des Hautes Etudes Chinoises', VII), Pp. 399 and 32 Additional Plates. [REVIEW] Diogenes 2 (6):111-115.score: 39.0
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  23. John J. Cleary (2000). ARISTOTLE'S POLITICS P. L. P. Simpson: A Philosophical Commentary on the Politics of Aristotle . Pp. Xxxvi + 476. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1997. Cased, $40.95. ISBN: 0-8078-2308-5. P. L. P. Simpson: The Politics of Aristotle: Translated with Introduction, Analysis and Notes . Pp. Xliv + 274. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1997. Cased, $39.95 (Paper, $12.95) ISBN: 0-8078-2327-9 (0-8078-4637-6 Pbk). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (02):424-.score: 39.0
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  24. S. J. Freebairn-Smith (1989). Some Recent School Books Adrian Spooner: Lingo: A Course on Words and How to Use Them. Pupils' Book and Teachers' Pack with Graded Tests [for Photocopying]. Pp. Vi + 167 (Pupils), 32 (Teachers); Many Black and White Illustrations, Some in Cartoon Form. Bristol Classical Press, 1988. Paper, £4.95 Each Vol. Lawrence Giangrande: Greek in English. Pp. Viii + 148. North York, Ontario: University Press of Canada (Captus Press Inc.), 1987. Paper, US $19.20 (Can $22.50). Michael Massey: Women in Ancient Greece and Rome. Pp. Iv + 36; 20 Black and White Illustrations. Cambridge University Press, 1988. Paper, £2.50. Robin Place: The Romans: Fact and Fiction. Adventures in Roman Britain. Pp. Iii + 32; 40 Black and White, and Colour, Illustrations. Cambridge University Press, 1988. £5.25 (Paper, £3.25). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (02):367-368.score: 39.0
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  25. J. H. W. G. Liebeschuetz (1991). Ancient Priests Jens H. Vanggaard: The Flamen: A Study in the History and Sociology of Roman Religion. Pp. 175. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1988. Paper, D. Kr. 171.25. Mary Beard, John North (Edd.): Pagan Priests: Religion and Power in the Ancient World. Pp. Xi + 268. 31 Illus., 2 Tables, 4 Maps or Diagrams. London: Duckworth, 1990. £24. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 41 (01):117-120.score: 39.0
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  26. J. M. C. Toynbee (1960). The Impact of Roman on Native in North Britain Roman and Native in North Britain. Edited by I. A. Richmond. Pp. X + 174; 8 Plates, 8 Maps, 6 Figs. Edinburgh: Nelson, 1958. Cloth, 18s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 10 (02):164-166.score: 39.0
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  27. Malcolm A. R. Colledge (1989). J. C. Coulston, E. J. Phillips: Corpus of Sculpture of the Roman World: Great Britain: Hadrian's Wall West of the North Tyne, and Carlisle. (Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain: Vol. I, Fascicule 6.) Pp. Xix + 185; 1 Text-Figure; 117 Monochrome Plates. Oxford University Press (for the British Academy), 1986. £95. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (02):416-417.score: 39.0
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  28. S. J. Harrison (1993). Soracte Scrutinised Lowell Edmunds: From a Sabine Jar: Reading Horace, Odes 1.9. Pp. Xviii + 159. Chapel Hill, N.C. And London: University of North Carolina Press, 1992. $27.45. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (01):48-50.score: 39.0
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  29. J. B. Poynton (1926). The Position of the Possessive Pronoun in Cicero's Orations. (A Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the Graduate College of the State University of Iowa.) By Edgar Allen Menk. Pp. 71. Grand Forks, North Dakota: Normanden Publishing Company, 1925. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 40 (06):219-.score: 39.0
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  30. J. Timmons Roberts & Bradley C. Parks (2007). A Climate of Injustice: Global Inequality, North-South Politics, and Climate Policy. Mit Press.score: 39.0
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  31. J. T. Sheppard (1922). Some Books on Homer Odyssee Und Argonautika. Von Karl Meuli. Crown Octavo. Pp. 121. Berlin: Weidmann, 1921. M. 16. Die Homerischen Gleichnisse. Von Hermann Fraenkel. Crown Octavo. Pp. 120. Goettingen : Vandenhoeck U. Ruprecht, 1921. The Unity of Homer. By John A. Scott, Professor of Greek in the North-Western University. Being Vol. 1. Of the Sather Classical Lectures. Crown Octavo. Pp. 276. University of California Press, 1921. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 36 (7-8):168-170.score: 39.0
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  32. J. Tate (1947). B. A. Van Gkoningen: The Proems of the Iliad and the Odyssey. (Med. Der K. Ned. Academie van Wetenschappen, Afd. Letterkunde, N.R., Deel 9, No. 8). Pp. 16. Amsterdam: North- Holland Publishing Company, 1946. Paper, Fl. 0.80. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 61 (3-4):125-126.score: 39.0
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  33. Peter J. Taylor (2005). Unruly Complexity: Ecology, Interpretation, Engagement. University of Chicago Press.score: 30.0
    Ambitiously identifying fresh issues in the study of complex systems, Peter J. Taylor, in a model of interdisciplinary exploration, makes these concerns accessible to scholars in the fields of ecology, environmental science, and science studies. Unruly Complexity explores concepts used to deal with complexity in three realms: ecology and socio-environmental change; the collective constitution of knowledge; and the interpretations of science as they influence subsequent research. For each realm Taylor shows that unruly complexity-situations that lack definite boundaries, where what (...)
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  34. Barry Smith (1999). Truth and the Visual Field. In Jean Petitot (ed.), Naturalizing Phenomenology. Stanford: Stanford University Press.score: 27.0
    Abstract The paper uses the tools of mereotopology (the theory of parts, wholes and boundaries) to work out the implications of certain analogies between the 'ecological psychology' of J. J Gibson and the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl. It presents an ontological theory of spatial boundaries and of spatially extended entities. By reference to examples from the geographical sphere it is shown that both boundaries and extended entities fall into two broad categories: those which exist independently of our cognitive acts (for (...)
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  35. Patricia Easton (2009). Teaching & Learning Guide For: What is at Stake in the Cartesian Debates on the Eternal Truths? Philosophy Compass 4 (5):880-884.score: 27.0
    Any study of the 'Scientific Revolution' and particularly Descartes' role in the debates surrounding the conception of nature (atoms and the void v. plenum theory, the role of mathematics and experiment in natural knowledge, the status and derivation of the laws of nature, the eternality and necessity of eternal truths, etc.) should be placed in the philosophical, scientific, theological, and sociological context of its time. Seventeenth-century debates concerning the nature of the eternal truths such as '2 + 2 = 4' (...)
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  36. Volker Peckhaus (1995). Hilberts Logik. Von der Axiomatik Zur Beweistheorie. NTM International Journal of History and Ethics of Natural Sciences, Technology and Medicine 3 (1):65-86.score: 27.0
    This paper gives a survey of David Hilbert's (1862–1943) changing attitudes towards logic. The logical theory of the Göttingen mathematician is presented as intimately linked to his studies on the foundation of mathematics. Hilbert developed his logical theory in three stages: (1) in his early axiomatic programme until 1903 Hilbert proposed to use the traditional theory of logical inferences to prove the consistency of his set of axioms for arithmetic. (2) After the publication of the logical and set-theoretical paradoxes by (...)
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  37. Peter Howlett & Mary S. Morgan (eds.) (2010). How Well Do Facts Travel?: The Dissemination of Reliable Knowledge. Cambridge University Press.score: 27.0
    Machine generated contents note: 1. Travelling facts Mary S. Morgan; Part I. Matters of Fact: 2. Facts and building artefacts: what travels in material objects? Simona Valeriani; 3. A journey through times and cultures? Ancient Greek forms in American 19th century architecture: an archaeological view Lambert Schneider; 4. Manning's N: putting roughness to work Sarah J. Whatmore and Catharina Landström; 5. My facts are better than your facts: spreading good news about global warming Naomi Oreskes; 6. Real problems with fictional (...)
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  38. Francisco Benzoni (2006). Creatures as Creative: Callicott and Whitehead on Creaturely Value. Environmental Ethics 28 (1):37-56.score: 27.0
    Alfred North Whitehead’s metaphysics provides a means for overcoming the dualism embedded in J. Baird Callicott’s “postmodern” axiology. Indeed, the lessons Callicott draws from the new physics and ecology imply Whitehead’s position. While Callicott holds that subjectivity and valuing require consciousness, Whitehead argues that subjectivity and valuing characterize all metaphysically basic entities, conscious and non-conscious. Removing the constraint that valuing requires consciousness is a slight shift, but it makes all the difference. By jettisoning this constraint, we can develop a (...)
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  39. William Franke (2013). Apophasis as the Common Root of Radically Secular and Radically Orthodox Theologies. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 73 (1):57-76.score: 27.0
    On the one hand, we find secularized approaches to theology stemming from the Death of God movement of the 1960s, particularly as pursued by North American religious thinkers such as Thomas J.J. Altizer, Mark C. Taylor, Charles Winquist, Carl Raschke, Robert Scharlemann, and others, who stress that the possibilities for theological discourse are fundamentally altered by the new conditions of our contemporary world. Our world today, in their view, is constituted wholly on a plane of immanence, to such an (...)
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  40. Brian Duignan (ed.) (2010). The 100 Most Influential Philosophers of All Time. Britannica Educational Pub. In Association with Rosen Educational Services.score: 27.0
    Pythagoras -- Confucius -- Heracleitus -- Parmenides -- Zeno of Elea -- Socrates -- Democritus -- Plato -- Aristotle -- Mencius -- Zhuangzi -- Pyrrhon of Elis -- Epicurus -- Zeno of Citium -- Philo Judaeus -- Marcus Aurelius -- Nagarjuna -- Plotinus -- Sextus Empiricus -- Saint Augustine -- Hypatia -- Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius -- Śaṅkara -- Yaqūb ibn Ishāq aṣ-Ṣabāḥ al-Kindī -- Al-Fārābī -- Avicenna -- Rāmānuja -- Ibn Gabirol -- Saint Anselm of Canterbury -- al-Ghazālī -- (...)
     
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  41. Eric Dietrich (2001). Banbury Bound, or Can a Machine Be Conscious? J. Of Experimental and Theoretical AI 13 (2):177-180.score: 24.0
    In mid-May of 2001, I attended a fascinating workshop at Cold Spring Harbor Labs. The conference was held at the lab's Banbury Center, an elegant mansion and its beautiful surrounding estate, located on Banbury Lane, in the outskirts of Lloyd Harbor, overlooking the north shore of Long Island in New York. The estate was formerly owned by Charles Sammis Robertson. In 1976, Robertson donated his estate, and an endowment for its upkeep, to the Lab. The donation included the Robertson's (...)
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  42. J. Mark Halstead (2011). Is Moral Education Working? Extracts From the Diary of a Twenty-First Century Moral Educator. Journal of Moral Education 40 (3):339-347.score: 24.0
    This article takes the form of a set of edited diary entries containing reflections on incidents drawn mainly from the author?s professional life as a university professor and as a consultant to a disadvantaged multi-ethnic secondary school in the north of England. The form of the article allows a wide range of issues to be touched on, including respect, equality, authority, discipline, postmodernism, multicultural education, complexities in the concept of teaching by example and tensions between the enforcement of morality (...)
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  43. D. Pimentel, N. Brown, F. Vecchio, V. La Capra, S. Hausman, O. Lee, A. Diaz, J. Williams, S. Cooper & E. Newburger (1992). Ethical Issues Concerning Potential Global Climate Change on Food Production. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 5 (2).score: 24.0
    Burning fossil fuel in the North American continent contributes more to the CO2 global warming problem than in any other continent. The resulting climate changes are expected to alter food production. The overall changes in temperature, moisture, carbon dioxide, insect pests, plant pathogens, and weeds associated with global warming are projected to reduce food production in North America. However, in Africa, the projected slight rise in rainfall is encouraging, especially since Africa already suffers from severe shortages of rainfall. (...)
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  44. Christopher J. Cowton & Thomas W. Dunfee (1995). Internationalizing the Business Ethics Curriculum: A Survey. Journal of Business Ethics 14 (5):331 - 338.score: 24.0
    This article reports on a telephone survey of business school faculty in the United Kingdom, Asia and North America concerning efforts to internationalize the teaching of business ethics. International dimensions of business ethics are currently given only limited coverage in the business school curriculum with over half of the faculty surveyed indicating that less then 10% of their ethics teaching focuses on global issues. Teaching objectives vary widely with some faculty emphasizing a relativistic, diversity oriented perspective while others stress (...)
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  45. S. J. Harrison (2004). Apuleius: A Latin Sophist. OUP Oxford.score: 24.0
    This book is a response to the literary pleasures and scholarly problems of reading the texts of Apuleius, most famous for his novel Metamorphoses or Golden Ass. Living in second-century North Africa, Apuleius was more than an author of fiction; he was a consummate orator and professional intellectual, Platonist philosopher, extraordinary stylist, relentless self-promoter, and versatile author of a remarkably diverse body of work, much of which is lost to us. This book is written for those able to read (...)
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  46. J. Barkley Rosser, The New Institutional Economy and the New Traditional Economy in Korea: Does the Confucian Tradition Give It a Competitive Edge?score: 24.0
    A new traditional economy combines elements of traditional culture, such as Confucianism, with a modern, technologically advanced economy, while a new institutional economy minimizes transactions costs through its institutional structure. South Korea has enhanced its competitive edge by drawing on Confucian elements such as respect for education and the search for family-like harmony in chaebol corporations that can reduce transactions costs (despite problems) in an open system. Despite also emphasizing respect for education, North Korea has drawn on anti-mercantile elements (...)
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  47. Sanjay Sharma, J. Alberto Aragón-Correa & Antonio Rueda (2006). The Contingent Influence of Organizational Capabilities on Environmental Strategy in North American and European Ski Resorts. Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 17:201-206.score: 24.0
    The influence of externally focused organizational capabilities on the generation of proactive environmental strategies was examined under contingenteffects of uncertainty in the general business environment in 134 North American and European ski resorts. Capabilities of strategic proactivity and continuous innovation were found to be associated with proactive environmental strategies. Managerial perceptions of uncertainty in the general business environment were found to moderate the deployment of the capability of continuous innovation at all levels of uncertainty and stakeholder engagement at low (...)
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  48. J. A. McWilliams (1942). The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead. The Modern Schoolman 19 (4):79-79.score: 23.0
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  49. Daniel Howard-Snyder, The Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans: Should Conservative Anglicans Sign Up?score: 18.0
    The Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (FCA), whose leaders govern well over half of the 80 million Anglicans worldwide, have put forward ‘a contemporary rule,’ called The Jerusalem Declaration, to guide the Anglican realignment movement. The FCA and its affiliates, e.g. the newly-formed Anglican Church in North America, require assent to the Declaration. To date, there has been little serious appraisal of the Declaration and the status accorded to it. I aim to correct that omission. Unlike ap-praisals in the social (...)
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  50. J. L. Tonry (2013). Pan-STARRS, ATLAS and Optical Transient Searches. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A 371 (1992):20120269-20120269.score: 18.0
    The Pan-STARRS1 survey is collecting multi-epoch, multi-colour observations of the sky north of declination −30°, and has designated 70 deg2 for nightly observations that are particularly useful for transient detection. A duplicate, Pan-STARRS2, is nearing completion that offers opportunities to improve the quality of transient search and observation, as well as simply increasing the number of detections. A new system, the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS), increases the search area to all-sky in return for diminished sensitivity, and highlights (...)
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  51. Paul J. Borowski (1998). Manager-Employee Relationships: Guided by Kant's Categorical Imperative or by Dilbert's Business Principle. Journal of Business Ethics 17 (15):1623-1632.score: 15.0
    The relationship between Employer and Employees is a central one in the world of business. While an important relationship, it is one that is often a source of tension for the workplace. Employers are seemingly in constant mistrust of workers, while workers often look upon their bosses as "less than competent". In the American world of business today, should this "adversarial" relationship continue or should the Employer–Employee Relationship be governed by different rules. Immanuel Kant's Categorical Imperative offers some insights into (...)
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  52. Matthew J. Barker (2010). Specious Intrinsicalism. Philosophy of Science 77 (1):73-91.score: 15.0
    Over the last 2,300 years or so, many philosophers have believed that species are individuated by essences that are at least in part intrinsic. Psychologists tell us most folks also believe this view. But most philosophers of biology have abandoned the view, in light of evolutionary conceptions of species. In defiance, Michael Devitt has attempted in this journal to resurrect a version of the view, which he calls Intrinsic Biological Essentialism. I show that his arguments for the resurrection fail, and (...)
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  53. Philippe Gugler & Jacylyn Y. J. Shi (2009). Corporate Social Responsibility for Developing Country Multinational Corporations: Lost War in Pertaining Global Competitiveness? Journal of Business Ethics 87:3 - 24.score: 15.0
    This article explores the conceptual and practical gap existing between the developed and developing countries in relation to corporate social responsibility (CSR), or the North-South ' CSR Divide', through the analysis of possible impact on the competitiveness of developing countries' and economies' SMEs and MNEs in globalization. To do so, this article first reviewed the traditional wisdom on the concept of strategic CSR developed in the North and the role that CSR engagement can play in corporate competitiveness, and (...)
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  54. J. Thomas Cook, Spinoza's Place in This Century's Anglo-American Philosophy.score: 15.0
    The recently published Cambridge Companion to Spinoza contains a fine essay by Pierre- Francois Moreau on Spinoza’s reception and on his influence during the more than three hundred years that have passed since his death. In Moreau’s twenty-five page article we find a brief paragraph on the novelist George Eliot and half a sentence on Ed Curley. There is not another mention, at all, of any other philosopher from an English-speaking land since the seventeenth century – nothing on how Spinoza’s (...)
     
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  55. Robert Boyd, Gerd Gigerenzer, Peter J. Richerson, Arthur Robson, Jeffrey R. Stevens & Peter Hammerstein, Individual Decision Making and the Evolutionary Roots of Institutions.score: 15.0
    Humans hunt and kill many different species of animals, but whales are our biggest prey. In the North Atlantic, a male long-fi nned pilot whale (Globiceph- ala melaena), a large relative of the dolphins, can grow as large as 6.5 meters and weigh as much as 2.5 tons. As whales go, these are not particularly large, but there are more than 750,000 pilot whales in the North Atlantic, traveling in groups, “pods,” that range from just a few individuals (...)
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  56. Walter J. Bock (1994). Ernst Mayr, Naturalist: His Contributions to Systematics and Evolution. Biology and Philosophy 9 (3):267-327.score: 15.0
    Ernst Mayr''s scientific career continues strongly 70 years after he published his first scientific paper in 1923. He is primarily a naturalist and ornithologist which has influenced his basic approach in science and later in philosophy and history of science. Mayr studied at the Natural History Museum in Berlin with Professor E. Stresemann, a leader in the most progressive school of avian systematics of the time. The contracts gained through Stresemann were central to Mayr''s participation in a three year expedition (...)
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  57. Robert J. Stainton & Christopher Viger, Essays in Honour of Ernie Lepore.score: 15.0
    I met Ernie in 1965 on the wrestling mats of our high school in North Bergen, New Jersey, a township on top of the plateau overlooking Hoboken and across the Hudson River from Manhattan. Hoboken then was still the Hoboken of Elia Kazan’s “On the Waterfront” (1954).1 Even though the Hudson was less than a mile across at that point, it was a wide spiritual divide. We were Jersey boys, not New Yorkers. Ernie was as ambitious as I was (...)
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  58. J. Douglas Rabb (2002). The Vegetarian Fox and Indigenous Philosophy. Environmental Ethics 24 (3):275-294.score: 15.0
    I critique the oppressive society in which Michael A. Fox’s Deep Vegetarianism was written and which Fox too attempts to criticize and change. Fox proves himself to be among a handful of Western philosophers open-minded enough to acknowledge and attempt to learn from North American indigenous values and world views. For this reason, he should be commended. In defending his thesis that a vegetarian life style is morally preferable, he draws upon indigenous thought, feminist philosophy, and antidomination theories, arguing (...)
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  59. Mohammed Y. A. Rawwas, Scott J. Vitell & Jamal A. Al-Khatib (1994). Consumer Ethics: The Possible Effects of Terrorism and Civil Unrest on the Ethical Values of Consumers. Journal of Business Ethics 13 (3):223 - 231.score: 15.0
    Research investigating the consumer's ethical beliefs, ideologies and orientation has been limited. Additionally, despite the repeated call in the literature for cross cultural research, virtually no studies have examined the ethical beliefs and ideologies of consumers from cultures other than those in North America. This study partially fills this gap in the literature by investigating the ethical beliefs, preferred ethical ideology, and degree of Machiavellianism of consumers from Egypt and Lebanon. The results indicate that consumers in Lebanon, which has (...)
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  60. J. Baird Callicott (2000). The Indigenous World or Many Indigenous Worlds? Environmental Ethics 22 (3):291-310.score: 15.0
    Earth’s Insights is about more than indigenous North American environmental attitudes and values. The conclusions of Hester, McPherson, Booth, and Cheney about universal indigenous environmental attitudes and values, although pronounced with papal infallibility, are based on no evidence. The unstated authority of their pronouncements seems to be the indigenous identity of two of the authors. Two other self-identified indigenous authors, V. F. Cordova and Sandy Marie Anglás Grande, argue explicitly that indigenous identity is sufficient authority for declaring what pre-Columbian (...)
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  61. Granville C. Henry & Robert J. Valenza (1993). Idempotency in Whitehead's Universal Algebra. Philosophia Mathematica 1 (2):157-172.score: 15.0
    Alfred North Whitehead's treatise Universal Algebra classifies algebras as either non-numerical or numerical according to whether they satisfy the law of idempotency, a + a = a. We undertake a technical critique of this classification scheme and examine how its flaws may reflect certain mathematical and philosophical biases in Whitehead's outlook. We argue further that Whitehead's presumption of immutable foundations for mathematics and his early commitment to the priority of objects over relations may in part account (...)
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  62. Carla C. J. M. Millar, Chong-Ju Choi & Philip Y. K. Cheng (2009). Co-Evolution: Law and Institutions in International Ethics Research. Journal of Business Ethics 87 (4):455 - 462.score: 15.0
    Despite the importance of the co-evolution approach in various branches of research, such as strategy, organisation theory, complexity, population ecology, technology and innovation (Lewin et al., 1999; March, 1991), co-evolution has been relatively neglected in international business and ethics research (Madhok and Phene, 2001). The purpose of this article is to show how co-evolution theory provides a theoretical framework within which some issues of ethics research are addressed. Our analysis is in the context of the contrasts between business systems ( (...), 1990), and in particular the distinction between informal systems and those systems where institutions are formalised in law. This complements the growing research on comparative corporate governance and capitalisms (Chandler and Hikino, 1990; Choi et al., 1999; Whitley, 1994). The synthesis of co-evolution and analysis of divergent institutional environments in ethics research can also complement the globalisation and MNE approaches to international business research. (shrink)
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  63. Leonard J. Brooks (1989). Corporate Codes of Ethics. Journal of Business Ethics 8 (2-3):117 - 129.score: 15.0
    The majority of North American corporations awakened to the need for their own ethical guidelines during the late 1970s and early 1980s, even though modern corporations are subject to a surprising multiplicity of external codes of ethics or conduct. This paper provides an understanding of both internal and external codes through a discussion of the factors behind the development of the codes, an analysis of internal codes and an identification of problems with them.
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  64. Christopher B. Anderson, Gene E. Likens, Ricardo Rozzi, Julio R. Gutiérrez & Juan J. Armesto (2008). Integrating Science and Society Through Long-Term Socio-Ecological Research. Environmental Ethics 30 (3):295-312.score: 15.0
    Long-term ecological research (LTER), addressing problems that encompass decadal or longer time frames, began as a formal term and program in the United States in 1980. While long-term ecological studies and observation began as early as the 1400s and 1800s in Asia and Europe, respectively, the long-term approach was not formalized until the establishment of the U.S. long-term ecological research programs. These programs permitted ecosystem-level experiments and cross-site comparisons that led to insights into the biosphere’s structure and function. The holistic (...)
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  65. Peter J. Richerson & Robert Boyd, Culture is Part of Human Biology.score: 15.0
    Rates of violence in the American South have long been much greater than in the North. Accounts of duels, feuds, bushwhackings, and lynchings occur prominently in visitors’ accounts, newspaper articles, and autobiography from the 18th Century onward. According to crime statistics these differences persist today. In their book, Culture of Honor, Richard Nisbett and Dov Cohen (1996) argue that the South is more violent than the North because Southerners have different, culturally acquired beliefs about personal honor than Northerners. (...)
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  66. J. Casanova (2012). The Politics of Nativism: Islam in Europe, Catholicism in the United States. Philosophy and Social Criticism 38 (4-5):485-495.score: 15.0
    The politics of nativism directed at Catholic immigrants in 19th-century America offer a fruitful comparative perspective through which to analyze the discourse and the politics of Islam in contemporary Europe. Anti-Catholic nativism constituted a peculiar North American version of the larger and more generalized phenomenon of anti-immigrant populist xenophobic politics which one finds in many countries and in different historical contexts. What is usually designated as Islamo-phobia in contemporary Europe, however, manifests striking resemblances with the original phenomenon of American (...)
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  67. J. R. Lucas, Memorandum Submitted to Franks Commission.score: 15.0
    I am a tutor, aged 35, who was brought up in Durham, and who have been since graduating, at Cambridge, Princeton and Leeds. I want to explain why I think Oxford and Cambridge to be, in spite of many defects, the best universities in the world, and why I brush off all tentative approaches from other places in the U. K. and North America. I believe my views are shared by a large number of other tutors, who are (...)
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  68. Christopher J. Preston & Steven H. Corey (2005). Public Health and Environmentalism: Adding Garbarge to the History of Environmental Ethics. Environmental Ethics 27 (1):3-21.score: 15.0
    There exists in the United States a popular account of the historical roots of environmental philosophy which is worth noting not simply as a matter of historical interest, but also as a source book for some of the key ideas that lend shape to contemporary North American environmental philosophy. However, this folk wisdom about the historical beginnings of North American environmental thinking is incomplete. The wilderness-based history commonly used by environmental philosophers should be supplemented with the neglected story (...)
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  69. Edward J. Romar (2004). Globalization, Ethics, and Opportunism. Business Ethics Quarterly 14 (4):663-678.score: 15.0
    Opportunism impacts the behavior of firms in market situations where they purchase goods and services externally and create dependency relationships with other firms. Opportunism as a business issue is addressed in economics and marketing literature as an important factor in transaction cost analysis and market governance. Management and business ethics scholars, however, do not address this issue in depth, if at all.The recent bankruptcy of MCI WorldCom highlights some of the risks inherent in a world economy where customers and companies (...)
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  70. M. J. Cherry (2012). Building Social and Economic Capital: The Family and Medical Savings Accounts. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 37 (6):526-544.score: 15.0
    Despite the well-documented social, economic, and adaptive advantages for young children, adolescents, and adults, the traditional family in the West is in decline. A growing percentage of men and women choose not to be bound by the traditional moral and social expectations of marriage and family life. Adults are much more likely than in the past to live as sexually active singles, with a concomitant increase in forms of social isolation as well as in the number of children born outside (...)
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  71. Daniel J. Goldstein (1989). A Biotechnological Agenda for the Third World. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 2 (1):37-51.score: 15.0
    Third World countries should exploit the genetic information stored in their flora and fauna to develop independent and highly competitive biotechnological and pharmaceutical industries. The necessary condition for this policy to succeed is the reshaping of their universities and hospitals—to turn them into high-caliber research institutions dedicated to the creation of original knowledge and biomedical invention. Part of the service of the Third World foreign debt should be co-invested with the lending banks in high technology enterprises. This should be complemented (...)
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  72. S. J. Harrison, J. L. Hilton & Vincent Hunink (eds.) (2001). Apuleius: Rhetorical Works. OUP Oxford.score: 15.0
    These rhetorical texts by Apuleius, second-century Latin writer and author of the famous novel Metamorphoses or Golden Ass, have not been translated into English since 1909. They are some of the very few Latin speeches surviving from their century, and constitute important evidence for Latin and Roman North African social and intellectual culture in the second century AD. They are the work of a talented writer who is being increasingly viewed as the major literary artist of his time in (...)
     
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  73. Peter J. Richerson, Cultural Innovations and Demographic Change.score: 15.0
    Demography plays a large role in cultural evolution through its effects on the effective rate of innovation. If we assume that useful inventions are rare, then small isolated societies will have low rates of invention. In small populations, complex technology will tend to be lost as a result of random loss or incomplete transmission (the Tasmanian effect). Large populations have more inventors and are more resistant to loss by chance. If human populations can grow freely, then a population-technology-population positive feedback (...)
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  74. J. Wesley Robbins, Pragmatism and American Public Religion.score: 15.0
    William Dean is a tireless proponent of a public role for religion in American society, most recently in his American Academy of Religion award winning book The Religious Critic in American Culture . He writes there about the importance of, and need for, both a common American spiritual culture and public intellectuals who would understand, criticize, and innovatively rework that shared American religion. Dean represents a metaphysical strand of American pragmatism. His thought is rooted in William James’s radical empiricism, Bernard (...)
     
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