Search results for 'James Gilbert-Walsh' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. William James (1996). The Vision of James. Element.score: 210.0
    William James had the courage to experience the collision of European and American ways of thinking head on, and to emerge from it with a new philosophy - one displaying a remarkable vitality for dealing with the transformative issues at the core of the human condition. This easy to read introduction to his life and work explains why James' work is overwhelmingly valuable to us today in getting to grips with the spiritual dimension of human experience.
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  2. Jonathan Bricklin & W. James (2005). William James: The Notion of Consciousness --Communication Made (in French) at the 5th International Congress of Psychology, Rome, 30 April (a New Translation by Jonathan Bricklin). [REVIEW] Journal of Consciousness Studies 12 (7):55-64.score: 180.0
    I should like to convey to you some doubts which have occurred to me on the subject of the notion of consciousness that prevails in all our treatises on psychology.
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  3. William James (1971/1972). A William James Reader. Boston,Houghton Mifflin.score: 180.0
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  4. William James (1967/1968). The Writings of William James. New York, Modern Library.score: 180.0
  5. William James (1942). As William James Said: Extracts From the Published Writings of William James. New York, the Vanguard Press.score: 180.0
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  6. William James (2011). Essential William James. Prometheus Books.score: 150.0
    The Essential William James covers the primary topics for which James is still closely studied: the nature of experience, the functions of the mind, the criteria for knowledge, the definition of “truth,” the ethical life, and the religious life. His notable terms, still resonating in their respective fields, are all covered here, from “stream of consciousness” and “pure experience” to the “will to believe,” the “cash-value of truth,” and the distinction between the religiously “healthy soul” and the “sick (...)
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  7. William James (1977). The Writings of William James: A Comprehensive Edition, Including an Annotated Bibliography Updated Through 1977. University of Chicago Press.score: 150.0
    In his introduction to this collection, John representative. McDermott presents James's thinking in all its manifestations, stressing the importance of radical empiricism and placing into perspective the doctrines of pragmatism and the will to believe. The critical periods of James's life are highlighted to illuminate the development of his philosophical and psychological thought. The anthology features representive selections from The Principles of Psychology, The Will to Believe , and The Variety of Religious Experience in addition to the complete (...)
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  8. C. L. R. James (1993). In 1960 James Writes to Freddie and Lyman Paine. Clr James Journal 4 (1):81-86.score: 150.0
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  9. Margaret Gilbert (1999). Critical Notice: Gilbert Harman and Judith Jarvis Thomson, Moral Relativism and Moral Objectivity. Noûs 33 (2):295–303.score: 120.0
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  10. Margaret P. Gilbert, Gilbert Harman and Judith Jarvis Thomson's Moral Relativism and Moral Objectivity.score: 120.0
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  11. William James (1907/1995). Pragmatism. Dover Publications.score: 120.0
    Noted psychologist and philosopher develops his own brand of pragmatism, based on theories of C. S. Peirce. Emphasis on "radical empiricism," versus the transcendental and rationalist tradition. One of the most important books in American philosophy. Note.
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  12. Arthur Hyman & James J. Walsh (eds.) (1973/1983). Philosophy in the Middle Ages: The Christian, Islamic, and Jewish Traditions. Hackett Pub. Co..score: 120.0
    Introduction The editors of this volume hope that it will prove useful for the study of philosophy in the Middle Ages by virtue of the comprehensiveness of ...
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  13. Robin James (2009). In but Not of, of but Not In: On Taste, Hipness, and White Embodiment. Contemporary Aesthetics 2 (Aesthetics and Race).score: 120.0
    The status of the body figures paradoxically in the interrelated discourses of whiteness, aesthetic taste, and hipness. While Richard Dyer’s analysis of whiteness argues that white identity is “in but not of the body,” Carolyn Korsmeyer’s and Julia Kristeva’s feminist analyses of aesthetic “taste” demonstrate that this faculty is traditionally conceived as something “of” but not “in” the body. While taste directly distances whiteness from embodiment, hipness negatively affirms this same distance: the hipster proves his elite status within white culture (...)
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  14. William James (1895). Is Life Worth Living? International Journal of Ethics 6 (1):1-24.score: 120.0
    Reprinted in James The Will to Believe and Other Essays.
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  15. William James & Ralph Barton Perry (eds.) (1996). Essays in Radical Empiricism. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.score: 120.0
    William James believed that events could not be catalogued simply as a series of facts, but had to be considered through the lens of experience.
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  16. William James (1880). Great Men and Their Environment. Atlantic Monthly 46 (Oct.):441-449.score: 120.0
    A lecture before the Harvard Natural History Society; published in the Atlantic Monthly; and later republished in James (1897)The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy.
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  17. William James & Doris Olin (eds.) (1992). William James: Pragmatism, in Focus. Routledge.score: 120.0
    The original 1907 text is accompanied with a series of critical essays from scholars including Moore and Russell.
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  18. William James (2010). The Heart of William James. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.score: 120.0
    What is an emotion? -- The dilemma of determinism -- The perception of reality -- The hidden self -- Habit -- The will -- The gospel of relaxation -- On a certain blindness in human beings -- What makes a life significant -- Philosophical conceptions and practical results -- The Philippine tangle -- The sick soul -- The Ph. D. octopus -- Does "consciousness" exist? -- The energies of men -- Concerning Fechner -- The moral equivalent of war.
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  19. William James (1995). The Will to Believe: And Other Writings From William James. Image Books.score: 120.0
  20. R. -B. Perry, C. Renouvier & William James (1929). Correspondance de Charles Renouvier Et de William James. Revue de Métaphysique Et de Morale 36 (1):1 - 35.score: 120.0
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  21. James J. Walsh (1964). Is Buridan a Sceptic About Free Will ? Vivarium 2 (1):50-61.score: 120.0
  22. William James (1903). Address to the Emerson Centenary at Concord. In Memories and Studies. Longmans Green.score: 120.0
    William James' 1903 address to the Emerson Centenary at Concord is a short summary of James' view of Emerson.
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  23. James J. Walsh (1986). Buridan on the Connection of the Virtues. Journal of the History of Philosophy 24 (4):453-482.score: 120.0
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  24. Henry James (1884/1970). The Literary Remains of Henry James. Upper Saddle River, N.J.,Literature House.score: 120.0
    INTRODUCTION. THE longer of the works that follow was left by its author almost finished, and, as far as it goes, in completed form, — the proofs having ...
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  25. J. C. Kenna & Wm James (1966). Ten Unpublished Letters From William James, 1842-1910 to Francis Herbert Bradley, 1846-1924. Mind 75 (299):309-331.score: 120.0
  26. P. G. Walsh (1969). Joannes Amos Comenius: Orbis Sensualium Pictus. Facsimile of the Third London Edition, 1672, with an Introduction by James Bowen. Pp. X+42+319. Sydney: University Press (London: Methuen), 1967. Cloth, 56s. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 19 (02):248-.score: 120.0
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  27. P. G. Walsh (1971). J. W. James: Rhigyfarch's Life of St. David. The Basic Mid-Twelfth-Century Latin Text with Introduction, Critical Apparatus, and Translation. Pp. Xliii+49. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. 1967. Cloth, £1·25. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 21 (01):138-139.score: 120.0
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  28. W. H. Walsh, James Griffin, J. W. N. Watkins, R. G. Swinburne, Bernard Mayo, J. A. Faris, C. H. Whiteley, P. F. Strawson, G. J. Warnock & Christopher Kirwan (1965). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 74 (295):434-458.score: 120.0
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  29. George Duke, Elena Walsh, Jack Reynolds & James Chase (2010). Post-Analytic Philosophy : Overcoming the Divide. In James Williams, Jack Reynolds, James Chase & Edwin Mares (eds.), Postanalytic and Metacontinental: Crossing Philosophical Divides. Continuum.score: 120.0
    This essay uses citational analyses to argue that most of the philosophers considered "postanalytic" - Wittgenstein, McDowell, Davidson, and Rorty - are not, in fact, genuine figures of rapprochement, since the particular essays cited, and/or the background literature that is cited, are not shared in common between the standard-bearing analytic and continental journals.
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  30. Katherine Gilbert (1925). James E. Creighton as Writer and Editor. Journal of Philosophy 22 (10):256-264.score: 120.0
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  31. Wm James, C. Renouvier & R. -B. Perry (1929). Correspondance de Charles Renouvier Et de William James (Suite). Revue de Métaphysique Et de Morale 36 (2):193 - 222.score: 120.0
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  32. James J. Walsh (1980). Teleology in the Ethics of Buridan. Journal of the History of Philosophy 18 (3):265-286.score: 120.0
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  33. J. Gilbert (2001). Biomedical Ethics Reviews, Is There a Duty to Die?: Edited by James M Humber and Robert F Almeder, Totawa, New Jersey, Humana Press, 2000, 221 Pages, US$49.50. [REVIEW] Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (3):209-a-210.score: 120.0
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  34. P. G. Walsh (1962). Life in Hannibal's Carthage Gilbert and Colette Charles-Picard: Daily Life in Carthage at the Time of Hannibal. Translated From the French by A. E. Foster. Pp. 263; 8 Plates, 2 Maps. London: Allen & Unwin, 1961. Cloth, 28s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 12 (01):76-77.score: 120.0
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  35. James J. Walsh (1963). Remarks on Thought and Action. Journal of Philosophy 60 (3):57-65.score: 120.0
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  36. James Francis Walsh (1944). The Missing Value in Medical Social Work. Thought 19 (1):188-189.score: 120.0
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  37. Michael J. Walsh (2011). The Papacy Since 1500: From Italian Prince to Universal Pastor. Edited by James Corkery and Thomas Worcester. Heythrop Journal 52 (3):534-535.score: 120.0
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  38. James J. Walsh (1927). The Renaissance of the Twelfth Century. The New Scholasticism 1 (4):367-370.score: 120.0
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  39. James Gilbert (1995). Burhoe and Shapley: A Complementarity of Science and Religion. Zygon 30 (4):531-539.score: 120.0
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  40. Henry James (1974). Henry James, Senior: A Selection of His Writings. Chicago,American Library Association.score: 120.0
  41. William James (1969). The Moral Philosophy of William James. New York, Crowell.score: 120.0
     
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  42. William James (1971). William James. New York,Harper & Row.score: 120.0
     
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  43. Sidney Morgenbesser & James J. Walsh (eds.) (1962). Freedom and Responsibility. Prentice-Hall.score: 120.0
     
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  44. John G. Slater & Frederick Michael Walsh (eds.) (2008). A Hundred Years of Philosophy From the Slater & Walsh Collections: Exhibition and Catalogue. Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto.score: 120.0
     
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  45. James J. Walsh (1960/1963). Aristotle's Conception of Moral Weakness. New York, Columbia University Press.score: 120.0
     
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  46. James J. Walsh (1967). Aristotle's Ethics: Issues and Interpretations. Belmont, Calif.,Wadsworth Pub. Co..score: 120.0
    On the nature of Aristotle's Ethics, by R. A. Gauthier.--Reason, happiness, and goodness, by F. Siegler.--The nature of aims, by J. Dewey.--Thought and action in Aristotle, by G. E. M. Anscombe.--On forgetting the difference between right and wrong, by G. Ryle.--Aristotle and the punishment of psychopaths, by V. Haksar.--Suggested further readings (p. 121-123).
     
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  47. James F. Walsh (1943). A Social Psychology of War and Peace. Thought 18 (3):549-551.score: 120.0
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  48. James Francis Walsh (1940). God the Holy Ghost. Thought 15 (3):555-556.score: 120.0
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  49. James Francis Walsh (1946). How You Can Help Other People. Thought 21 (3):573-574.score: 120.0
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  50. P. G. Walsh (1965). James and Janet Maclean Todd: Peoples of the Past. Pp. 352; 8 Plates, 3 Maps. London: Grey Arrow Books, 1963. Paper, 7s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 15 (01):127-128.score: 120.0
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  51. P. G. Walsh (1975). James J. Wilhelm: Medieval Song: An Anthology of Hymns and Lyrics. Pp. 416. London: Allen & Unwin, 1972. Cloth, £3·75. The Classical Review 25 (01):162-163.score: 120.0
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  52. James F. Walsh (1950). Lust for Power. Thought 25 (2):343-343.score: 120.0
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  53. James J. Walsh (1966). Nominalism and The. Journal of the History of Philosophy 4 (1).score: 120.0
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  54. James Jerome Walsh (1966). Nominalism and the Ethics : Some Remarks About Buridan's Commentary. Journal of the History of Philosophy 4 (1):1-13.score: 120.0
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  55. Frederick Michael Walsh (ed.) (2004). Philosophy & Bibliophily: An Exhibition Introducing the Walsh Philosophy Collection: The Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto, 26 January-30 April 2004. [REVIEW] University of Toronto.score: 120.0
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  56. James Francis Walsh (1940). Social Psychology. Thought 15 (3):569-570.score: 120.0
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  57. James Francis Walsh (1940). The Word of God. Thought 15 (2):382-382.score: 120.0
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  58. James Francis Walsh (1947). What Ails Mankind. Thought 22 (4):759-760.score: 120.0
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  59. William James, Meaning of Truth.score: 90.0
  60. William James, Pluralism Pragmatism and Instumental Truth (From a Pluralistic Universe).score: 90.0
    What at bottom is meant by calling the universe many or by calling it one? -/- Pragmatically interpreted, pluralism or the doctrine that it is many means only that the sundry parts of reality may be externally related. Everything you can think of, however vast or inclusive, has on the pluralistic view a genuinely "external" environment of some sort or amount. Things are "with" one another in many ways, but nothing includes everything, or dominates over everything. The word "and" trails (...)
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  61. William James (1906). The Moral Equivalent of War. Association for International Concilliation 27.score: 90.0
    The war against war is going to be no holiday excursion or camping party. The military feelings are too deeply grounded to abdicate their place among our ideals until better substitutes are offered than the glory and shame that come to nations as well as to individuals from the ups and downs of politics and the vicissitudes of trade. There is something highly paradoxical in the modern man's relation to war. Ask all our millions, north and south, whether they would (...)
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  62. William James, The Chicago School.score: 90.0
    he rest of the world has made merry over the Chicago man's legendary saying that 'Chicago hasn't had time: to get round to culture yet, but when she does strike her, she'll make her hum.' Already the prophecy is fulfilling itself in a dazzling manner. Chicago has a School of Thought! -- a school of thought which, it is safe to predict, will figure in literature as the School of Chicago for twenty-five years to come. Some universities have plenty of (...)
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  63. William James (1978). Pragmatism, a New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking ; the Meaning of Truth, a Sequel to Pragmatism. Harvard University Press.score: 90.0
  64. William James, Talks to Teachers.score: 90.0
    This is the text available from Emory University.
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  65. William James (1971). The Moral Equivalent of War, and Other Essays. New York,Harper & Row.score: 90.0
  66. William James (1911/1970). Memories and Studies. St. Clair Shores, Mich.,Scholarly Press.score: 90.0
    Louis Agassiz.--Address at the Emerson Centenary in Concord.--Robert Gould Shaw.--Francis Boott.--Thomas Davidson: a knight-errant of the intellectual life.--Herbert Spencer's autobiography.--Frederick Myers' services to psychology.--Final impressions of a psychical researcher.--On some mental effects of the earthquake.--The energies of men.--The moral equivalent of war.--Remarks at the peace banquet.--The social value of the college-bred.--The university and the individual: The Ph.D. octopus. The true Harvard. Stanford's ideal destiny.--A pluralistic mystic.
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  67. T. G. Smith (1967). Aristotle's Conception of Moral Weakness. By James Jerome Walsh: New York, Columbia University Press. Toronto, Copp Clark Co. 1963. Pp. Viii, 199. $6.00. [REVIEW] Dialogue 6 (03):425-427.score: 42.0
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  68. Arthur C. Danto, Bernard Berofsky, Isaac Levi & Charles D. Parsons (2003). In Memoriam: James J. Walsh. Journal of Philosophy 100 (5):272 -.score: 42.0
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  69. Marjorie Grene (1965). Aristotle and the Problem of Value. By Whitney J. Oates. (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1963. Pp. X+387. Price $8.50.)Aristotle's Conception of Moral Weakness. By James Jerome Walsh. (New York and London: Columbia University Press, 1963. Pp. Xii + 199. Price $6.00.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 40 (153):248-.score: 42.0
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  70. James Gilbert-Walsh (2000). Broken Imperatives: The Ethical Dimension of Nancy's Thought. Philosophy and Social Criticism 26 (2):29-50.score: 29.0
    In this paper I discuss the role played by the 'categorical imperative' in the thought of Jean-Luc Nancy. I argue that, while this is a theme of major importance in Nancy's work, its overall significance is not immediately evident: on the surface, Nancy appears to be affirming the abstract exigency of the imperative while at the same time depriving it of any possible concrete force. I maintain, however, that a close reading of this theme in terms of other crucial themes (...)
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  71. James Gilbert-Walsh (2010). Revisiting the Concept of Time: Archaic Perplexity in Bergson and Heidegger. Human Studies 33 (2):173-190.score: 29.0
    Though the claims they make about temporality are markedly different, Henri Bergson and Martin Heidegger agree that time is a philosophically foundational phenomenon; indeed, they agree that time is, in certain respects, the basis for all discursively representable beings. This paper focuses not so much on their theories of temporality (i.e., their respective answers to the question what is time? and their justifications for these answers) but rather on the challenges involved in talking about this phenomenon at all. Both thinkers (...)
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  72. Bertrand Russell (1992). William James's Conception of Truth. In William James & Doris Olin (eds.), William James: Pragmatism, in Focus. Routledge.score: 21.0
    The original 1907 text of James' Pragmatism is accompanied with a series of critical essays from scholars including Moore and Russell. In the introduction Olin evaluates the strength of the criticisms made against James.
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  73. Eugene Taylor & Robert H. Wozniak (1996). Pure Experience: The Response to William James. In E. I. Taylor & R. H. Wozniak (eds.), Pure Experience: The Response to William James. Bristol: Thoemmes Press.score: 21.0
    The radical empiricism of William James was first formally presented in his seminal papers of 1904, 'Does Consciousness Exist?' and 'A World of Pure Experience'. In James's view, pure experience was to serve as the source for psychology's primary data and radical empiricism was to launch an effective critique of experimentalism in psychology, a critique from which the problem of experimentalism within science could be addressed more broadly. This collection of papers presents James's formal statements on radical (...)
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  74. Jaime Nubiola (2000). Ludwig Wittgenstein and William James. Streams of William James 2 (3):2-4.score: 21.0
    The relationship between William James and Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) has recently been the subject of intense scholarly research. We know for instance that the later Wittgenstein's reflections on the philosophy of psychology found in James a major source of inspiration. Not surprisingly therefore, the pragmatist nature of the philosophy of the later Wittgenstein is increasingly acknowledged, in spite of Wittgenstein’s adamant refusal of being labeled a “pragmatist”. In this brief paper I merely want to piece together some of (...)
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  75. Jaime Nubiola (2001). William James and Borges Again: The Riddle of the Correspondence with Macedonio Fernández. Streams of William James 3 (2):10-11.score: 21.0
    In this short paper I try to present William James’s connection with the Argentinian writer Macedonio Fernández (1874-1952), who was in some sense a mentor of Borges and might be considered the missing link between Borges and James.
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  76. Jaime Nubiola (1999). Jorge Luis Borges and William James. Streams of William James 1 (3):7.score: 21.0
    The year of the centennial of the Argentinean writer Jorge Luis Borges is probably the right time to exhume one of the links that this universal writer had with William James. In 1945, Emece, a publisher from Buenos Aires, printed a Spanish translation of William James’s book Pragmatism, with a foreword by Jorge Luis Borges.
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  77. Jaime Nubiola & Izaskun Martínez (2003). The Reception of W. James in Spain and Unamuno's Reading of Varieties. Streams of William James 5 (2):7-9.score: 21.0
    Our aim in this article, after providing the general framework of the reception of William James in Spain, is to trace the reception of The Varieties of Religious Experience through Unamuno’s reading of this book.
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  78. James Rowland Angell (1908). Book Review: Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking. William James. [REVIEW] Ethics 18 (2):226-.score: 21.0
    An early review of William James' Pragmatism, which views pragmatism as primarily methodological.
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  79. James T. Kloppenberg (2009). James's Pragmatism and American Culture, 1907-2007. In John J. Stuhr (ed.), 100 Years of Pragmatism: William James's Revolutionary Philosophy. Indiana University Press.score: 21.0
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  80. James O. Pawelski (2001). Heaven's Champion: William James's Philosophy of Religion (Review). [REVIEW] Journal of Speculative Philosophy 15 (1):56-61.score: 21.0
    William James is notorious for the large number of inconsistencies and at least apparent contradictions in his writings. Many readers conclude that he should be appreciated more for his profound but erratic insights than for any coherent philosophical perspective. Ellen Kappy Suckiel disagrees. She argues that James is far more careful and systematic than many readers realize. Her work on James is guided by the attempt to lay bare his coherent philosophical vision and the consistent philosophical methodology (...)
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  81. Erik C. Banks (2013). Williams James' Direct Realism: A Reconstruction. History of Philosophy Quarterly 30 (3).score: 18.0
    William James' Radical Empiricist essays offer a unique and powerful argument for direct realism about our perceptions of objects. This theory can be completed with some observations by Kant on the intellectual preconditions for a perceptual judgment. Finally James and Kant deliver a powerful blow to the representational theory of perception and knowledge, which applies quite broadly to theories of representation generally.
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  82. Matthew Ratcliffe (2005). William James on Emotion and Intentionality. International Journal of Philosophical Studies 13 (2):179-202.score: 18.0
    William James's theory of emotion is often criticized for placing too much emphasis on bodily feelings and neglecting the cognitive aspects of emotion. This paper suggests that such criticisms are misplaced. Interpreting James's account of emotion in the light of his later philosophical writings, I argue that James does not emphasize bodily feelings at the expense of cognition. Rather, his view is that bodily feelings are part of the structure of intentionality. In reconceptualizing the relationship between cognition (...)
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  83. Michael Pace (2011). The Epistemic Value of Moral Considerations: Justification, Moral Encroachment, and James' 'Will To Believe'. Noûs 45 (2):239-268.score: 18.0
    A moral-pragmatic argument for a proposition is an argument intended to establish that believing the proposition would be morally beneficial. Since such arguments do not adduce epistemic reasons, i.e., reasons that support the truth of a proposition, they can seem at best to be irrelevant epistemically. At worst, believing on the basis of such reasoning can seem to involve wishful thinking and intellectual dishonesty of a sort that that precludes such beliefs from being epistemically unjustified. Inspired by an argument from (...)
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  84. Andrew R. Bailey (1999). Beyond the Fringe: William James on the Transitive Parts of the Stream of Consciousness. Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (2-3):141-53.score: 18.0
    One of the aspects of consciousness deserving of study is what might be called its subjective unity - the way in which, though conscious experience moves from object to object, and can be said to have distinct ‘states', it nevertheless in some sense apparently forms a singular flux divided only by periods of unconsciousness. The work of William James provides a valuable, and rather unique, source of analysis of this feature of consciousness; however, in my opinion, this component of (...)
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  85. H. G. Callaway (ed.) (2008). William James, A Pluralistic Universe: A New Philosophical Reading. Cambridge Scholars.score: 18.0
    This book is my new scholarly edition of William James, A Pluralistic Universe. The original text has been recovered, annotations to the text added to identify James' authors and events of interest, there is a new bibliography chiefly based on James' sources, a brief chronology of James' career, and I have added an expository and critical Introduction and a comprehensive analytical index.
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  86. Desh Raj Sirswal (2010). Doctoral Dissertation: A Philosophical Study of the Concept of Mind (with Special Reference to Rene Descartes, David Hume and Gilbert Ryle). Dissertation, Kurukshetra University, Kurukshetrascore: 18.0
    My research work title is “A Philosophical Study of the Concept of Mind (with special reference to Rene Descartes, David Hume and Gilbert Ryle).” In this study we have discussed three conceptions of mind presented by Rene Descartes, David Hume and Gilbert Ryle. All the three thinkers are related to different philosophical traditions known as Rationalism, Empiricism and Analytical Philosophy respectively. Each of these various approaches can be seen as at least partly successful, each provides answers to questions regarded as (...)
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  87. Henry Jackman, Wittgenstein & James's Stream of Thought.score: 18.0
    William James has been characterized as “the major whipping boy of the later Wittgenstein,” and the currency of this impression of the relation between James and Wittgenstein is understandable. Reading Wittgenstein and his commentators can leave one with the impression that James was a badly muddled “exponent of the tradition in the philosophy of mind that [Wittgenstein] was opposing.” There have been recent attempts to resist this trend, but even these tend to focus on the affinities between (...)
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  88. Jaime Nubiola (2009). Review of H.G. Callaway (Ed), William James, A Pluralistic Universe. [REVIEW] Anuario Filosófico 42 (1):222-223.score: 18.0
    As suggested in the subtitle, A New Philosophical Reading, the editor aspires in his Introduction and his notes to “facilitate a deeper understanding and a critical evaluation (...) of this crucial and difficult philosophical work” (p. ix). This was the last important book which James published during his lifetime. With it James aims at a critical evaluation of Hegelian monism and an exploration of the philosophical and theological alternatives. “Our world of some one hundred years on”—the editor says (...)
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  89. Guy Axtell (2001). Teaching James's “The Will to Believe”. Teaching Philosophy 24 (4):325-345.score: 18.0
    Many readers have viewed William James's "The Will to Believe" as his most distinctive and resonating lecture. Yet for all the scholarly attention it has received, the complexities of the "pragmatic defence," and the issues it raises concerning evidential and pragmatic reasoning are still often misunderstood. In this paper I explicate a neglected "core" argument tied closely to James's thesis statement, and provide charts and other tools useful in presenting James' lecture in the philosophy classroom. This argument, (...)
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  90. Richard A. S. Hall (2009). Review of H.G. Callaway Ed, William James, A Pluralistic Universe, A New Philosophical Reading. [REVIEW] The Pluralist 4 (3).score: 18.0
    In 1907 William James was invited to give the Hibbert Lectures at Manchester College, Oxford. Initially he was reluctant to do so since he feared undertaking them would divert him from developing rigorously and systematically some metaphysical ideas of his own that had preoccupied him for some time. In the end, however, he relented and in the spring of 1908 gave the lectures which were subsequently published as A Pluralistic Universe. As it happened, though, in the course of these (...)
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  91. Sami Pihlström (2009). The Conduct of Life: A Philosophical Reading, Ralph Waldo Emerson By H.G. Callaway (Ed.) Society and Solitude: Twelve Chapters. A New Study Edition, with Notes, Philosophical Commentary and Historical Contextualization, Ralph Waldo Emerson By H.G. Callaway (Ed.) A Pluralistic Universe: Hibbert Lectures at Manchester College on the Present Situation in Philosophy. A New Philosophical Reading, William James By H.G. Callaway (Ed.). [REVIEW] Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 45 (3):444-449.score: 18.0
    This new edition of William James’s 1909 classic, A Pluralistic Universe reproduces the original text, only modernizing the spelling. The books has been annotated throughout to clarify James’s points of reference and discussion. There is a new, fuller index, a brief chronology of James’s life, and a new bibliography—chiefly based on James’s own references. The editor, H.G. Callaway, has included a new Introduction which elucidates the legacy of Jamesian pluralism to survey some related questions of contemporary (...)
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  92. G. William Barnard (2005). Pt. 3. James and Mysticism. For an Engaged Reading : William James and the Varieties of Postmodern Religious Experience / Grace M. Jantzen ; Asian Religions and Mysticism : The Legacy of William James in the Study of Religions / Richard King ; James and Freud on Mysticism / Robert A. Segal ; Mystical Assessments : Jamesian Reflections on Spiritual Judgments. [REVIEW] In Jeremy R. Carrette (ed.), William James and the Varieties of Religious Experience: A Centenary Celebration. Routledge.score: 18.0
  93. Gerald E. Myers (1971). William James on Time Perception. Philosophy of Science 38 (September):353-360.score: 18.0
    James argued that time is a sensation, and the main point of this paper is to deny that claim. The concept of the specious present is explained, indicating how it clarifies the concept of "the present moment." But neither it nor an argument used by Mach and James show time to be a sensation. The analysis presented here requires distinguishing concepts of sensation from concepts of temporal relations. James' view is really a theory that time-as-duration is sensed. (...)
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  94. Jennifer Welchman (2006). William James's "the Will to Believe" and the Ethics of Self-Experimentation. Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 42 (2):229-241.score: 18.0
    : William James's "The Will to Believe" has been criticized for offering untenable arguments in support of belief in unvalidated hypotheses. Although James is no longer accused of suggesting we can create belief ex nihilo, critics continue to charge that James's defense of belief in what he called the "religious hypothesis" confuses belief with hypothesis adoption and endorses willful persistence in unvalidated beliefs—not, as he claimed, in pursuit of truth, but merely to avoid the emotional stress of (...)
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  95. Richard M. Gale (1999). William James and the Willfulness of Belief. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (1):71-91.score: 18.0
    It was important to James's philosophy, especially his doctrine of the will to believe, that we could believe at will. Toward this end he argues in The Principles of Psychology that attending to an idea is identical with believing it, which, in turn, is identical with willing that it be realized. Since willing is identical with believing and willing is an intentional action, it follows by Leibniz's Law that believing also is an intentional action. This paper explores the problems (...)
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  96. Alexander Klein (2009). On Hume on Space: Green's Attack, James' Empirical Response. Journal of the History of Philosophy 47 (3):pp. 415-449.score: 18.0
    ABSTRACT. Associationist psychologists of the late 19th-century premised their research on a fundamentally Humean picture of the mind. So the very idea of mental science was called into question when T. H. Green, a founder of British idealism, wrote an influential attack on Hume’s Treatise. I first analyze Green’s interpretation and criticism of Hume, situating his reading with respect to more recent Hume scholarship. I focus on Green’s argument that Hume cannot consistently admit real ideas of spatial relations. I then (...)
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  97. Alexander Klein (2007). The Rise of Empiricism: William James, Thomas Hill Green, and the Struggle Over Psychology. Dissertation, Indiana University, Bloomingtonscore: 18.0
    The concept of empiricism evokes both a historical tradition and a set of philosophical theses. The theses are usually understood to have been developed by Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. But these figures did not use the term “empiricism,” and they did not see themselves as united by a shared epistemology into one school of thought. My dissertation analyzes the debate that elevated the concept of empiricism (and of an empiricist tradition) to prominence in English-language philosophy. -/- In the 1870s and (...)
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  98. Henry Jackman (1998). James' Pragmatic Account of Intentionality and Truth. Transactions of the Charles s Peirce Society 34 (1):155-181.score: 18.0
    William James presents a preference-sensitive and future-directed notion of truth that has struck many as wildly revisionary. This paper argues that such a reaction usually results from failing to see how his accounts of truth and intentionality are intertwined. James' forward-looking account of intentionality (or "knowing") compares favorably the 'causal' and 'resemblance-driven' accounts that have been popular since his day, and it is only when his remarks about truth are placed in the context of his account of intentionality (...)
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  99. Thomas Natsoulas (2000). On the Intrinsic Nature of States of Consciousness: Further Considerations in the Light of James's Conception. Consciousness and Emotion 1 (1):139-166.score: 18.0
    How are the states of consciousness intrinsically so that they all qualify as ?feelings? in William James?s generic sense? Only a small, propaedeutic part of what is required to address the intrinsic nature of such states can be accomplished here. I restrict my topic mainly to a certain characteristic that belongs to each of those pulses of mentality that successively make up James?s stream of consciousness. Certain statements of James?s are intended to pick out the variable ?width? (...)
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