Search results for 'James M. Day' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. James M. Day (1991). Role‐Taking Revisited: Narrative and Cognitive‐Developmental Interpretations of Moral Growth. Journal of Moral Education 20 (3):305-315.score: 290.0
    Abstract For some decades the cognitive?developmental approach to moral psychology has dominated discussions of moral action and growth, and the concept of role?taking has been central to related understandings. Narrative, both as conceptual approach and as method of investigation and interpretation, is presented here as a critical and complementary adjunct to the cognitive?developmental case.
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  2. L. Topp, M. M. Islam & C. A. Day (forthcoming). Relative Efficacy of Cash Versus Vouchers in Engaging Opioid Substitution Treatment Clients in Survey-Based Research. Journal of Medical Ethics.score: 140.0
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  3. Jane M. Day & Plato (eds.) (2012). Plato's Meno In Focus. Routledge.score: 120.0
    In one volume, this book brings together a new English translation of Plato's Meno, a selection of illuminating articles on themes in the dialogue published between 1965 and 1985 and an introduction setting the Meno in its historical ...
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  4. Mark Nielsen & R. H. Day (1999). William James and the Evolution of Consciousness. Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 19 (1):90-113.score: 120.0
  5. James Meredith Day (2008). Human Development and the Model of Hierarchical Complexity: Learning From Research in the Psychology of Moral and Religious Development. World Futures 64 (5 - 7):452 – 467.score: 120.0
    Critical consideration is given the empirical evidence for psychological models of religious development, its supposed relationship to other domains of psychological development, and especially, moral development. Significant problems with stage conceptions in these models augur a fundamental rethinking of religious development as a construct in developmental psychology. Model of Hierarchical Complexity has demonstrable promise for enabling greater precision in constructs and methods. This may resolve some central problems and advance research in the field.
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  6. Paul M. McNeill, Ian H. Kerridge, Catherine Arciuli, David A. Henry, Graham J. Macdonald, Richard O. Day & Suzanne R. Hill (2006). Gifts, Drug Samples, and Other Items Given to Medical Specialists by Pharmaceutical Companies. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 3 (3).score: 120.0
    Aim To ascertain the quantity and nature of gifts and items provided by the pharmaceutical industry in Australia to medical specialists and to consider whether these are appropriate in terms of justifiable ethical standards, empirical research and views expressed in the literature.
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  7. Arthur C. Graesser, Cheryl A. Bowers, Tom Trabasso, Brian Harvey, Sunil Cherian, Wade O. Troxell, Timothy Joseph day, Robert M. French, Roger Sansom, Kenneth Aizawa, David Shier, Yakir Levin & Nicholas Power (1996). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 6 (3).score: 120.0
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  8. M. Day (2011). Historical Judgement, by Jonathan Gorman. Mind 119 (476):1168-1171.score: 120.0
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  9. Eric A. Weiss, Justin Leiber, Judith Felson Duchan, Mallory Selfridge, Eric Dietrich, Peter A. Facione, Timothy Joseph Day, Johan M. Lammens, Andrew Feenberg, Deborah G. Johnson, Daniel S. Levine & Ted A. Warfield (1995). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 5 (1).score: 120.0
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  10. James F. Day (1983). Some Reflections on Professor Rescher's Paper. Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy 5:16-22.score: 120.0
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  11. R. T. Watson, Elliot S. Valenstein, Alice T. Day & K. M. Heilman (1994). Posterior Neocortical Systems Subserving Awareness and Neglect: Neglect Associated with Superior Temporal Sulcus but Not Area 7 Lesions. Archives of Neurology 51:1014-1021.score: 120.0
     
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  12. Aaron James, How to Defend Sweatshop Labor.score: 60.0
    To what extent should those of us concerned with justice in the global economy worry about exploitation? As I understand it, this question is in part a question about fairness and where, if at all, it applies. On one plausible view, exploitation, in the most basic, morally problematic sense, arises in bargaining situations: one party exploits another party when and only when it uses its superior bargaining position to win terms favorable to it in the agreement being made between them. (...)
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  13. William James, The Hidden Self.score: 60.0
    “The great field for new discoveries,” said a scientific friend to me the other day, “is always the Unclassified Residuum.” Round about the accredited and orderly facts of every science there ever floats a sort of dust-cloud of exceptional observations, of occurrences minute and irregular, and seldom met with, which it always proves less easy to attend to than to ignore. The ideal of every science is that of a closed and completed system of truth. The charm of most sciences (...)
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  14. James Wetzel (2005). Thomas Pink and M. W. F. Stone (Eds) the Will and Human Action: From Antiquity to the Present Day. (London and New York: Routledge, 2004). Pp. VIII+219. $104.95, £60.00 (Hbk). ISBN 0 415 32467 X. [REVIEW] Religious Studies 41 (2):242-246.score: 39.0
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  15. Fergus Shanahan & Eamonn M. M. Quigley (2006). Medicine in the Age of " Ulysses ": James Joyce's Portrait of Life, Medicine, and Disease on a Dublin Day a Century Ago. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 49 (2):276-285.score: 39.0
  16. T. Corbishley (1949). Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: The Tractatus de Successivis, Attributed to William of Ockham.Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: The Tractatus de Praedestinatione Et de Praescientia Dei Et de Futuris Contingentibus, Edited by Philotheus Boehner, O.F.M.Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: The Transcendentals and Their Function in the Metaphysics of Duns Scotus, by Allan B. Wolter, O.F.M., Ph.D.Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: Intuitive Cognition, A Key to the Significance of the Later Scholastics, by Sebastian J. Day, O.F.M., Ph.D. [REVIEW] Philosophy 24 (90):274-.score: 36.0
  17. D. Gill (1996). M.H. Jameson, C.N. Runnels, T. Van Andel: A Greek Countryside. The Southern Argolid From Prehistory to the Present Day with a Register of Sites by C.N. Runnels and M.H. Munn. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1994. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 46 (1):128-130.score: 36.0
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  18. E. S. Waterhouse (1930). Problems of Providence. By Rev. Charles J. Shebbeare M.A. (London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1929. Pp. Vi + 120. Price 4s. Cloth, 2s. 6d. Paper.)Religion and the Thought of To-Day. By C. C. J. Webb M.A., F.B.A. (London: Oxford University Press: Humphrey Milford. 1929. Pp. 50. Price 2s. 6d.)Do We Need a New Religion? By Paul Arthur Schilpp. (New York: Henry Holt & Co. 1929. Pp. Xvii + 325. Price $2.50.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 5 (17):134-.score: 36.0
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  19. N. G. L. Hammond (1964). The Athenaion Politeia James Day and Mortimer Chambers: Aristotle's History of Athenian Democracy. (Publications in History, 73.) Pp. Xiii+221. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1962. Paper, $5. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 14 (01):34-37.score: 36.0
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  20. J. H. Kells (1964). The Character of Electra Ivan M. Linforth: Electro's Day in the Tragedy of Sophocles. (Publications in Classical Philology, Vol. 19, No. 2.) Pp. 38. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1963. Paper, $1.00. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 14 (03):250-251.score: 36.0
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  21. F. H. Sandbach (1939). Archibald A. Day, M.A., Ph.D.: The Origins of Latin Love-Elegy. Pp. 148. Oxford: Blackwell, 1938. Cloth, 7s. 6d. The Classical Review 53 (5-6):220-.score: 36.0
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  22. G. H. Stevenson (1923). The Plebs in Cicero's Day: A Study of Their Provenance and of Their Employment. By M. E. Park. Bryn Mawr College, 1918. Pp. 90. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 37 (3-4):91-.score: 36.0
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  23. James A. Ogilvy (1994/1995). Living Without a Goal: Finding the Freedom to Live a Creative and Innovative Life. Currency Doubleday.score: 30.0
    In what may be the most radical business book ever published, philosopher Jay Ogilvy shows that living without a goal is the only way to accomplish anything. In the 1980s we ran our lives with all the direction and confidence filofaxes and to-do lists could provide. Always knowing exactly where we were headed, we climbed toward the goals corporate America held out in front of us like so many carrots: higher salaries, better titles, more impressive offices. But after a decade (...)
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  24. Henry Jackman (1998). James' Pragmatic Account of Intentionality and Truth. Transactions of the Charles s Peirce Society 34 (1):155-181.score: 27.0
    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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  25. Benjamin Hale (ed.) (2008). Philosophy Looks at Chess. Open Court Press.score: 27.0
    This book offers a collection of contemporary essays that explore philosophical themes at work in chess. This collection includes essays on the nature of a game, the appropriateness of chess as a metaphor for life, and even deigns to query whether Garry Kasparov might—just might—be a cyborg. In twelve unique essays, contributed by philosophers with a broad range of expertise in chess, this book poses both serious and playful questions about this centuries-old pastime. -/- Perhaps more interestingly, philosophers have often (...)
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  26. Henry Jackman, James's Empirical Assumptions.score: 23.0
    Those sympathetic to the naturalistic side of James hope that his critique of ‘philosophical materialism’ can be separated from those elements of his thinking that are essential to his pragmatism. Such a separation is possible once we see that James’s critique of materialism grows out of his views about its incompatibility with the existence of objective values. Objective values (as James understands them) are incompatible, however, not with materialism in its most general form, but rather with materialism (...)
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  27. Jaime Nubiola (2008). C. S. Peirce and G. M. Searle: The Hoax of Infallibilism. Cognitio 9 (1):73-84.score: 21.0
    George M. Searle (1839-1918) and Charles S. Peirce worked together in the Coast Survey and the Harvard Observatory during the decade of 1860: both scientists were assistants of Joseph Winlock, the director of the Observatory. When in 1868 George, a convert to Catholicism, left to enter the Paulist Fathers, he was replaced by his brother Arthur Searle. George was ordained as a priest in 1871, was a lecturer of Mathematics and Astronomy at the Catholic University of America, and became the (...)
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  28. Stanley Cavell (2005). Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.score: 21.0
    Something out of the ordinary -- The interminable Shakespearean text -- Fred Astaire asserts the right to praise -- Henry James returns to America and to Shakespeare -- Philosophy the day after tomorrow -- What is the scandal of skepticism? -- Performative and passionate utterance -- The Wittgensteinian event -- Thoreau thinks of ponds, Heidegger of rivers -- The world as things.
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  29. Douglas Kellner, A M Arcuse Renaissance?score: 21.0
    Since his death in 1979, Herbert M arcuse's influence has been steadily waning. The extent to which his work is ignored in progressive circles is curious, as M arcuse was one of the most influential radical theorists of the day during the 1960s and his work continued to be a topic of interest and controversy during the 1970s. While the waning of the revolutionary movements with which he was involved helps explain M arcuse's eclipse in popularity, the lack of new (...)
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  30. Don Morse (2005). William James's Neglected Critique of Hegel. Idealistic Studies 35 (2-3):199-214.score: 21.0
    Although most scholars have ignored it, William James’s critique of Hegel, as developed in his book A Pluralistic Universe, poses a significant challenge to Hegelian thought. While not every argument James levels against Hegel is valid, and some are bogus, at least two of his arguments are highly persuasive—the charge of “vicious intellectualism” and the charge of “false unity.” As a result of leveling these charges, James escapes Hegel’s logic and is able to establish pragmatism as an (...)
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  31. Robert J. O'Connell (1997). William James on the Courage to Believe. Fordham University Press.score: 21.0
    William James’ celebrated lecture on “The Will to Believe” has kindled spirited controversy since the day it was delivered. In this lively reappraisal of that controversy, Father O’Connell contributes some fresh contentions: that James’ argument should be viewed against his indebtedness to Pascal and Renouvier; that it works primarily to validate our “over-beliefs” ; and most surprising perhaps, that James envisages our “passional nature” as intervening, not after, but before and throughout, our intellectual weighing of the evidence (...)
     
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  32. James M. Fielding & Dirk Marwede (2012). The Anatomy of the Image: Toward an Applied Onto-Psychiatry. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 18 (4).score: 17.0
    The word "ontology" presently encompasses two different meanings. In the philosophical sense, ontology has been defined since the days of Aristotle as the "science of being," also called "metaphysics." In this sense, ontology is concerned with categorizing discrete entities in reality and the relationships that hold between those entities (Aristotle 1952). Ontology, in the tradition of philosophical realism, aims to describe every day, mesoscopic entities and relations as they are in themselves, and not from the specific viewpoint of some particular (...)
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  33. James J. Angel & Douglas M. McCabe (2009). The Business Ethics of Short Selling and Naked Short Selling. Journal of Business Ethics 85:239 - 249.score: 15.0
    The controversy over short selling has continued unabated from the introduction of modern equity trading in Amsterdam in 1610 to the present day. Nevertheless, the business ethics literature has not really addressed short selling. Short sellers not only profit from the misery of others, they also create it through their selling activities. However, they also provide a socially useful service by making prices better reflect true values, protecting other investors from purchasing overpriced securities. Short sellers can also help to provide (...)
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  34. Joseph M. Levine (1999). The Autonomy of History: Truth and Method From Erasmus to Gibbon. University of Chicago Press.score: 15.0
    In these learned essays, Joseph M. Levine shows how the idea and method of modern history first began to develop during the Renaissance, when a clear distinction between history and fiction was first proposed. The new claims for history were met by a new skepticism in a debate that still echoes today. Levine's first three essays discuss Thomas More's preoccupation with the distinction between history and fiction Erasmus's biblical criticism and the contribution of Renaissance philology to critical method and the (...)
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  35. Gail M. Presbey, Black Hawk Down: Somali and US Perspectives on the "Day of the Rangers&Quot.score: 15.0
    A recent story in USA Today about the war in Afghanistan drew a direct parallel to the film Black Hawk Down : When the history of the war is written, the traumatic battle in the mountains around the Shah-e-Kot Valley will be remembered as a testament to heroism: A bloodied, outnumbered band of US servicemen held off a determined al-Qaeda force on frigid rocky terrain at least 8,000 feet above sea level. Call it Black Hawk Down in the snow. (Jonathan (...)
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  36. M. W. F. Stone & Jonathan Wolff (eds.) (2000). The Proper Ambition of Science. Routledge.score: 15.0
    What is the proper relation between the scientific worldview and other parts or aspects of human knowledge and experience? Can any science aim at "complete coverage" of the world, and if it does, will it undermine--in principle or by tendency--other attempts to describe or understand the world? Should morality, theology and other areas resist or be protected from scientific treatment? Questions of this sort have been of pressing philosophical concern since antiquity. The Proper Ambition of Science presents ten particular case (...)
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  37. M. A. Box (1990). The Suasive Art of David Hume. Princeton University Press.score: 15.0
    Recognized in his day as a man of letters equaling Rousseau and Voltaire in France and rivaling Samuel Johnson, David Hume passed from favor in the Victorian age--his work, it seemed, did not pursue Truth but rather indulged in popularization. Although Hume is once more considered as one of the greatest British philosophers, scholars now tend to focus on his thought rather than his writing. To round out our understanding of Hume, M. A. Box in this book charts the interrelated (...)
     
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  38. James A. Gould (1970). R. B. Perry on the Origin of American and European Pragmatism. Journal of the History of Philosophy 8 (4).score: 15.0
    Western civilization has experienced the birth of many philosophical movements. Most of these have had their origin in a particular geographical area. One usually refers to the "Continental Rationalists." the "British Empiricists." and the "American Pragmatists." Just as "Rationalism" is said to have been created in Great Britain, it is usually said that "Pragmatism" was born in America. One speaks of pragmatism as "characteristically American." The date of birth of pragmatism in America has been pin-pointed. Its genesis came about during (...)
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  39. Robert D. Richardson (2006). William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism: A Biography. Houghton Mifflin.score: 12.7
    I. Growing up zigzag: -- Art is my vocation -- Newport and the Jameses -- The father -- Harvard, 1861 -- Science and the Civil War -- Comparative anatomy and medical school -- The gulls at the mouth of the Amazon -- Tea squalls and a life according to nature -- We must be our own providence -- A dead and drifting life -- Minnie Temple -- William James, M.D. -- Treading water -- The end of youth -- II. (...)
     
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  40. Michael Perry, Human Rights as Morality, Human Rights as Law.score: 12.0
    There has been growing interest in, and scholarly attention to, issues and questions that arise within the subject matter domain we may call "human rights theory". See, in particular, Amartya Sen, "Elements of a Theory of Human Rights," 32 Philosophy & Public Affairs 315 (2004); James W. Nickel, Making Sense of Human Rights (rev. ed. 2006); Michael J. Perry, Toward a Theory of Human Rights: Religion, Law, Courts (2007); James Griffin, On Human Rights (2008); Nicholas Wolterstorff, Justice: Rights (...)
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  41. Susanne Bobzien (forthcoming). Sextus On Time: Notes On Sceptical Method and Doxographical Transmission. In Keimpe Algra & Katerina Ierodiakonou (eds.), Sextus Empiricus and ancient physics. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    ABSTRACT: For the most part, this paper is not a philosophical paper in any strict sense. Rather, it focuses on the numerous exegetical puzzles in Sextus Empiricus’ two main passages on time (M X.l69-247 and PH III.l36-50), which, once sorted, help to explain how Sextus works and what the views are which he examines. Thus the paper provides an improved base from which to put more specifically philosophical questions to the text. The paper has two main sections, which can, by (...)
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  42. Brian Weatherson (2011). Stalnaker on Sleeping Beauty. Philosophical Studies 155 (3):445-456.score: 12.0
    The Sleeping Beauty puzzle provides a nice illustration of the approach to self-locating belief defended by Robert Stalnaker in Our Knowledge of the Internal World (Stalnaker, 2008), as well as a test of the utility of that method. The setup of the Sleeping Beauty puzzle is by now fairly familiar. On Sunday Sleeping Beauty is told the rules of the game, and a (known to be) fair coin is flipped. On Monday, Sleeping Beauty is woken, and then put back to (...)
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  43. Sanford Shieh (2009). Teaching & Learning Guide For: Frege on Definitions. Philosophy Compass 4 (5):885-888.score: 12.0
    Three clusters of philosophically significant issues arise from Frege's discussions of definitions. First, Frege criticizes the definitions of mathematicians of his day, especially those of Weierstrass and Hilbert. Second, central to Frege's philosophical discussion and technical execution of logicism is the so-called Hume's Principle, considered in The Foundations of Arithmetic . Some varieties of neo-Fregean logicism are based on taking this principle as a contextual definition of the operator 'the number of …', and criticisms of such neo-Fregean programs sometimes appeal (...)
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  44. Peter Smith, Godel Without (Too Many) Tears.score: 12.0
    odel’s Theorems (CUP, heavily corrected fourth printing 2009: henceforth IGT ). Surely that’s more than enough to be going on with? Ah, but there’s the snag. It is more than enough. In the writing, as is the way with these things, the book grew far beyond the scope of the lecture notes from which it started. And while I hope the result is still pretty accessible to someone prepared to put in the time and effort, there is – to be (...)
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  45. Anthony Kenny (2007/2008). Philosophy in the Modern World. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
    Here is the concluding volume of Sir Anthony Kenny's monumental four-volume history of philosophy, the first major single-author narrative history to appear for several decades. In this volume, Kenny tells the fascinating story of the development of philosophy in the modern world, from the early nineteenth century to the end of the millennium. Alongside (and intertwined with) extraordinary scientific advances, cultural changes, and political upheavals, the last two centuries have seen some of the most intriguing and original developments in philosophical (...)
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  46. Thomas Pink & M. W. F. Stone (eds.) (2003). The Will and Human Action: From Antiquity to the Present Day. Routledge.score: 12.0
    What is the will? And what is its relation to human action? Throughout history, philosophers have been fascinated by the idea of "the will": the source of the drive that motivates human beings to act. However, there has never been a clear consensus as to what the will is and how it relates to human action. Some philosophers have taken the will to be based firmly in reason and rational choice, and some have seen it as purely self-determined. Others have (...)
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  47. Itay Shani (2010). Mind Stuffed with Red Herrings: Why William James' Critique of the Mind-Stuff Theory Does Not Substantiate a Combination Problem for Panpsychism. Acta Analytica 25 (4):413-434.score: 12.0
    There is a famous passage in chapter six of James’ Principles of Psychology whose import, many believe, deals a devastating blow to the explanatory aspirations of panpsychism. In the present paper I take a close look at James’ argument, as well as at the claim that it underlies a powerful critique of panpsychism. Apart from the fact that the argument was never aimed at panpsychism as such, I show that it rests on highly problematic assumptions which, if followed to their (...)
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  48. Tim Madigan (2008). W.K. Clifford and 'the Ethics of Belief'. Cambridge Scholars.score: 12.0
    In this book, Timothy J. Madigan examines the continuing relevance of "The Ethics of Belief" to epistemological and ethical concerns. He places the essay within the historical context, especially the so-called 'Victorian Crisis of Faith' of which Clifford was a key player. Clifford's own life and interests are dealt with as well, along with the responses to his essay by his contemporaries, the most famous of which was William James's "The Will to Believe." Madigan provides an overview of modern-day (...)
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  49. Sanford Goldberg (2005). Testimonial Knowledge Through Unsafe Testimony. Analysis 65 (288):302–311.score: 12.0
    Frank is a writer with a strange habit. Every morning, at precisely 7:30 a.m., he wakes up and dumps out whatever is left of the pint of milk he purchased the day before, but places the empty carton back in the fridge until noon. Then, throughout the interval from 7:30 to noon, he always remains in the kitchen, as that is where he writes every morning like clockwork. Finally, at exactly noon, he takes the now-empty milk carton out of the (...)
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  50. Alan Hájek (2005). The Cable Guy Paradox. Analysis 65 (286):112–119.score: 12.0
    The Cable Guy is coming. You have to be home in order for him to install your new cable service, but to your chagrin he cannot tell you exactly when he will come. He will definitely come between 8.a.m. and 4 p.m. tomorrow, but you have no more information than that. I offer to keep you company while you wait. To make things more interesting, we decide now to bet on the Cable Guy’s arrival time. We subdivide the relevant part (...)
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  51. Bruce Ackerman & James S. Fishkin (2002). Deliberation Day. Journal of Political Philosophy 10 (2):129–152.score: 12.0
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  52. 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: 12.0
    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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  53. Susan Dodds (1998). Justice and Indigenous Land Rights. Inquiry 41 (2):187 – 205.score: 12.0
    Political theorists have begun to re-examine claims by indigenous peoples to lands which were expropriated in the course of sixteenth-eighteenth century European expansionism. In Australia, these issues have captured public attention as they emerged in two central High Court cases: Mabo (1992) and Wik (1996), which recognize pre-existing common law rights of native title held by indigenous people prior to European contact and, in some cases, continue to be held to the present day. The theoretical significance of the two Australian (...)
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  54. Peter Smith, Incompleteness – the Very Idea.score: 12.0
    Why these notes? After all, I’ve written An Introduction to Gödel’s Theorems (CUP, heavily corrected fourth printing 2009: henceforth IGT ). Surely that’s more than enough to be going on with? Ah, but there’s the snag. It is more than enough. In the writing, as is the way with these things, the book grew far beyond the scope of the lecture notes from which it started. And while I hope the result is still pretty accessible to someone prepared to (...)
     
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  55. Jennifer R. March (1989). M. L. West: Hesiod: Theogony and Works and Days (A New Translation). (The World's Classics.) Pp. Xxv + 79. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. £17.50 (Paper £2.50). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (02):381-.score: 12.0
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  56. Roberto Cordeschi (2000). Early-Connectionism Machines. AI and Society 14 (3-4):314-330.score: 12.0
    In this paper I put forward a reconstruction of the evolution of certain explanatory hypotheses on the neural basis of association and learning that are the premises of connectionism in the cybernetic age and of present-day connectionism. The main point of my reconstruction is based on two little-known case studies. The first is the project, published in 1913, of a hydraulic machine through which its author believed it was possible to simulate certain essential elements of the plasticity of nervous connections. (...)
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  57. Jennifer Pitts (2003). Legislator of the World? A Rereading of Bentham on Colonies. Political Theory 31 (2):200-234.score: 12.0
    It has become almost commonplace to claim that utilitarianism was, from its inception, an imperialist theory. Many writers, from Bentham's own followers to recent scholars, have suggested that from Bentham onward, utilitarians reveled in the opportunity that they believed despotic power provided for the establishment of perfectly rational laws and institutions. A closer look at Bentham's own views on empire, however, reveals a sharp break between his position on European colonies and that of followers such as James and John (...)
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  58. Stephen Morton (2007). Gayatri Spivak: Ethics, Subalternity and the Critique of Postcolonial Reason. Polity.score: 12.0
    Gayatri Chakravorty Spivaks seminal contribution to contemporary thought defies disciplinary boundaries. From her early translations of Derrida to her subsequent engagement with Marxism, feminism and postcolonial studies and her recent work on human rights, the war on terror and globalization, she has proved to be one of the most vital of present-day thinkers. In this book Stephen Morton offers a wide-ranging introduction to and critique of Spivaks work. He examines her engagements with philosophers and other thinkers from Kant to Paul (...)
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  59. Don S. Browning (2011). Reviving Christian Humanism: Science and Religion. Zygon 46 (3):673-685.score: 12.0
    Abstract. A possible consequence of the dialogue between science and religion is a revived religious humanism—a firmer grasp of the historical and phenomenological meanings of the great world religions correlated with the more accurate explanations of the rhythms of nature that natural science can provide. The first great expressions of religious humanism in the West emerged when Jewish, Christian, and Islamic scholars sat in the same libraries in Spain and Sicily, studying and translating the lost manuscripts of Aristotle in the (...)
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  60. Ted Honderich (ed.) (1995/1999). The Philosophers: Introducing Great Western Thinkers. Oxford Univeristy Press.score: 12.0
    What better introduction to the world of philosophy than through the lives of its most prominent citizens. In The Philosophers, we are introduced to twenty-eight of the greatest thinkers in Western civilization, ranging from Aristotle and Plato to Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Sartre. An illustrious team of scholars takes us on a concise and illuminating tour of some of the most brilliant minds and enduring ideas in history. Here is Aristotle's Nichomachean Ethics, Plato's cave of shadows, Schopenhauer's vision of reality as (...)
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  61. Vince Brewton, Ralph Waldo Emerson. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 12.0
    In his lifetime, Ralph Waldo Emerson became the most widely known man of letters in America, establishing himself as a prolific poet, essayist, popular lecturer, and an advocate of social reforms who was nevertheless suspicious of reform and reformers. Emerson achieved some reputation with his verse, corresponded with many of the leading intellectual and artistic figures of his day, and during an off and on again career as a Unitarian minister, delivered and later published a number of controversial sermons. Emerson’s (...)
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  62. Charles Darwin (1993/1998). The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or, the Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life. Modern Library.score: 12.0
    Perhaps the most readable and accessible of the great works of scientific imagination, The Origin of Species sold out on the day it was published in 1859. Theologians quickly labeled Charles Darwin the most dangerous man in England, and, as the Saturday Review noted, the uproar over the book quickly "passed beyond the bounds of the study and lecture-room into the drawing-room and the public street." Yet, after reading it, Darwin's friend and colleague T. H. Huxley had a different reaction: (...)
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  63. Gail Kennedy (1950). Pragmatism and American Culture. Boston, Heath.score: 12.0
    The only obvious successor in our day to the philosophies of Jefferson and Emerson and Whitman is the "pragmatism" of William James and John Dewey. All of the critics from whose writings selections have been made for this volume agree that Pragmatism is an indigenous American philosophy; most of them would add that it is the philosophy which best expresses the "climate of opinion" peculiar to American civilization. Their criticisms, therefore, take two forms: they may argue that, granted pragmatism (...)
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  64. Edward M. Swiderski (1993). From Social Subject to the 'Person' the Belated Transformation in Latter-Day Soviet Philosophy. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 23 (2):199-227.score: 12.0
    With the dismantling of Marxist-Leninist ideology, fresh inspiration has been discernible in recent Soviet philosophy. This article argues that a major area of concern is the nature of the human being, a theme formerly dominated by the "social" conceptions inscribed into official historical materialism. Soviet philosophers are examining such categories as culture, spirit, consciousness, and personality with an eye to their common characteristics. For many, the latter is grounded in the nature of the person, the specificity of which lies in (...)
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  65. Douglas Kellner, The Persian Gulf TV War Revisited.score: 12.0
    The 1991 war against Iraq was one of the first televised events of the global village in which the entire world watched a military spectacle unfold via global TV satellite networks.1 In retrospect, the Bush administration and the Pentagon carried out one of the most successful public relations campaigns in the history of modern politics in its use of the media to mobilize support for the war. The mainstream media in the United States and elsewhere tended to be a compliant (...)
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  66. John Watson (ed.) (1922/1971). Philosophical Essays, Presented to John Watson. Freeport, N.Y.,Books for Libraries Press.score: 12.0
    A school of idealism: meditatio laici, by J. Cappon.--Beati possidentes, by R. M. Wenley.--Moral validity: a study in Platonism, by R. C. Lodge.--Plato and the poet's eidōla, by A. S. Ferguson.--Some reflections on Aristotle's theory of tragedy, by G. S. Brett.--The function of the phantasm in St. Thomas Aquinas, by H. Carr.--The development of the psychology of Maine de Biran, by N. J. Symons.--A plea for eclecticism, by H. W. Wright.--Some present-day tendencies in philosophy, by J. M. MacEachran.--Evolution and personality, (...)
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  67. Ian Shapiro (2005). The State of Democratic Theory: A Reply to James Fishkin. Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 8 (1):79-83.score: 12.0
    I respond to Fishkin?s critique of my book The State of Democratic Theory (Princeton University Press 2003). I reiterate my defense of a competitive model of democracy geared to reducing domination, rather than Fishkin?s deliberative model that deploys structured discussion to enlighten mass preferences. In light of the literatures on framing effects and the value of mutually independent judgments, I question whether the procedures Fishkin recommends would produce outcomes that are better informed rather than differently informed. Recognizing that deliberation might (...)
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  68. James P. Scanlan (2007). Two Camps of Theoreticians (Apropos of Day and a Bit More). Studies in East European Thought 59 (1-2).score: 12.0
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  69. Peter Singer, D E B at E.score: 12.0
    An d rew Ku per begins his cri ti que of my vi ews on poverty by accepti n g the crux of my moral argument: The interests of all persons ought to count equally, and geographic location and citizenship m a ke no intrinsic differen ce to the ri gh t s and obl i ga ti ons of i n d ivi du a l s . Ku per also sets out some key facts about global poverty, for (...)
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  70. Wenda Bauchspies (2000). Images of Mathematics in Togo, West Africa. Social Epistemology 14 (1):43 – 53.score: 12.0
    On a stroll down a neighbourhood street in Togo, one is likely to see: little boys playing with homemade toys that roll and can be pushed with a stick or pulled on a string; girls helping their mother around the house and tending younger siblings; men sitting chatting with friends, smoking and playing dice games or zipping by on a variety of two-wheelers; women waiting at the pump for their turn to fill their basins before 2 p.m. when the pump (...)
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  71. Susan Blackmore, Daily Telegraph, Saturday May 21st 2005, Pp 17-18.score: 12.0
    Every year, like a social drinker who wants to prove to herself that she's not an alcoholic, I give up cannabis for a month. It can be a tough and dreary time - and much as I enjoy a glass of wine with dinner, alcohol cannot take its place. Some people may smoke dope just to relax or have fun, but for me the reason goes deeper. In fact, I can honestly say that without cannabis, most of my scientific research (...)
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  72. Dean A. Kowalski (ed.) (2012). The Big Bang Theory and Philosophy: Rock, Paper, Scissors, Aristotle, Locke. John Wiley & Sons, Inc..score: 12.0
    Machine generated contents note: Acknowledgments Introduction: "Unraveling the Mysteries" Part One. "It All Began on a Warm Summer's Evening in Greece": Aristotelian Insights 1. Aristotle on Sheldon Cooper: Ancient Greek Meets Modern Geek Greg Littmann 2. "You're a Sucky, Sucky Friend": Seeking Aristotelian Friendship in The Big Bang Dean A. Kowalski 3. The Big Bang Theory on the Use and Abuse of Modern Technology Kenneth Wayne Sayles III Part Two. "Is It Wrong to Say I Love Our Killer Robot?": Ethics (...)
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  73. Adrienne Martin, Hope, Fantasy, and Commitment1 Adrienne M. Martin Adrm@Sas.Upenn.Edu.score: 12.0
    The standard foil for recent theories of hope is the belief-desire analysis advocated by Hobbes, Day, Downie, and others. According to this analysis, to hope for S is no more and no less than to desire S while believing S is possible but not certain. Opponents of the belief-desire analysis argue that it fails to capture one or another distinctive feature or function of hope: that hope helps one resist the temptation to despair;2 that hope engages the sophisticated capacities of (...)
     
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  74. Marlene Podritske & Peter Schwartz (eds.) (2009). Objectively Speaking: Ayn Rand Interviewed. Lexington Books.score: 12.0
    Beginnings : a Russian émigré's first interviews (1932-1949) -- Russian girl jeers at U.S. for depression complaint, Oakland Tribune, 1932 -- True picture of Russian girls' love life tragic, Boston Post, 1936 -- The woman of tomorrow, WJZ radio, 1949 -- On campus : Ayn Rand talks with future intellectuals (1962-1966) -- Objectivism versus conservatism -- The campaign against extremism -- The robber-barons -- Myths of capitalism -- The political structure of a free society -- The American Constitution -- Objective (...)
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  75. N. Motroshilova (2009). Barbarity as the Reverse Side of Civilization. Diogenes 56 (2-3):72-83.score: 12.0
    This article analyzes philosophical discussions on the problem of barbarity as the reverse side of civilization in general, and of the modern civilization in particular (as exemplified by the works of K. Offe, L. Klausen, K.-Z. Reberg, M. Miller, H.-G. Soeffner, S.N. Eisenstadt and Z. Bauman. Joining in these discussions, the author makes a critical appraisal of these works and presents (in brief) her own conception of civilization which she has been elaborating for the last 25 years. Particular attention is (...)
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  76. James P. Scanlan (2007). Review: Two Camps of Theoreticians (Apropos of Day and a Bit More): [A Translation of "Dva Lageria Teoretikov (Po Povodu 'Dnia' I Koi-Chego Drugogo)," Dostoevskij, PSS 20: 5-22]. [REVIEW] Studies in East European Thought 59 (1/2):141 - 157.score: 12.0
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  77. Malcolm Davies (1979). Hesiod M. L. West: Hesiod, Works and Days, Edited with Prolegomena and Commentary. Pp. Xiv + 400. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1978. £15. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 29 (02):202-206.score: 12.0
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  78. Jonathan S. Marko (2010). Revisiting the Question. Philosophy and Theology 22 (1/2):77-104.score: 12.0
    In this article I argue that the 1729 Dissertation on Liberty and Neces­sity should be attributed to Anthony Collins. This was the prevailing view until the publication of James O’Higgins’s 1970 biography of Collins. Since then, most have followed Collins’s modern-day biographer in denying that Collins penned the Dissertation. After reviewing O’Higgins’s six reasons for rejecting Collins as the author, I respond to the substantive issues in what follows. Part I is a historical positioning of the Clarke-Collins liberty-necessity debate (...)
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  79. Kelly A. Parker (2011). Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Volume 8: 1890–1892 (Review). Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 47 (3):348-352.score: 12.0
    “I have a hard year, a year of effort before me. . . . I think I shall very soon be completely ruined; it seems inevitable. What I have to do is to peg away and try to do my duty, and starve if necessary. One thing I must make up my mind to clearly. I must earn some money every day” (W8 lxiv). Peirce wrote these words in his diary on New Year’s Day 1892, at 12:05 a.m. His forced (...)
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  80. A. M. Suggate (2001). Book Reviews : Christian Thinking and Social Order: Conviction Politics From the 1930s to the Present Day, Edited by Marjorie Reeves. London: Cassell,1999. 224 Pp. Pb. $27.95. ISBN 0-304-70248-X. [REVIEW] Studies in Christian Ethics 14 (1):108-110.score: 12.0
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  81. F. H. Bradley (1999). Collected Works of F.H. Bradley. Thoemmes Press.score: 12.0
    F. H. Bradley (1846-1924) was considered in his day to be the greatest British philosopher since Hume. For modern philosophers he continues to be an important and influential figure. However, the opposition to metaphysical thinking throughout most of the twentieth century has somewhat eclipsed his important place in the history of British thought. Consequently, although there is renewed interest in his ideas and role in the development of Western philosophy, his writings are often hard to find. This collection unites all (...)
     
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  82. James Collins (1967). Evil and the God of Love. By John Hick. / Hegelianisme Et Christianisme. By Henry Rondet, S.J. / Understanding God: The Key Issue in Present-Day Protestant Thought. By Frederick Herzog. / Man's Quest for God. By A. J. Heschel. [REVIEW] The Modern Schoolman 45 (1):72-75.score: 12.0
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  83. Stewart Duncan, Hope, Fantasy, and Commitment1 Adrienne M. Martin Adrm@Sas.Upenn.Edu.score: 12.0
    The standard foil for recent theories of hope is the belief-desire analysis advocated by Hobbes, Day, Downie, and others. According to this analysis, to hope for S is no more and no less than to desire S while believing S is possible but not certain. Opponents of the belief-desire analysis argue that it fails to capture one or another distinctive feature or function of hope: that hope helps one resist the temptation to despair;2 that hope engages the sophisticated capacities of (...)
     
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  84. H. Frederik Nijhout, Michael C. Reed & Cornelia M. Ulrich (2007). A Day in the Life of Cell Metabolism. Biological Theory 2 (2):124-127.score: 12.0
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  85. George Johnson, Consciousness Explained.score: 12.0
    Wielding his philosophical razor, William of Ockham declared, in the early 14th century, that in slicing the world into categories, thou shalt not multiply entities needlessly. He might have been pleased when, half a millennium later, James Clerk Maxwell helped tidy things up by writing the equations that show magnetism and electricity as perpendicular shadows cast by light beams, radio waves, X-rays and other forms of what we now call electromagnetic radiation. Einstein did Maxwell one (...)
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  86. D. M. Lewis (1977). Never on the Day of the Agathos Daimon Jon D. Mikalson: The Sacred and Civil Calendar of the Athenian Year. Pp. X + 226. Princeton and London: Princeton University Press, 1976. Cloth, £7·90. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 27 (02):215-216.score: 12.0
  87. Horace James Bridges (1944). Some Applications of Ethical Religion in Our Day. New York, N.Y.,American Ethical Union.score: 12.0
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  88. Timo Airaksinen (2012). D. M. Gross, The Secret History of Emotion: From Aristotles Rhetoric to Modern Brain Science. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2006, X+194 Pp. ISBN-13: 978-0-226-30980-4, Paperback ($ 22). [REVIEW] Hobbes Studies 25 (2):233-235.score: 12.0
    This paper discusses sovereignty and examines in detail Hobbes's debates with the two leading legal theorists of his day, Coke and Hale, both Lord Chief Justices of the King's Bench. I argue that Hobbes came to change his mind somewhat about the desirability of divided sovereignty by the time, near the end of his life, that he wrote the Dialogue . But I also argue that Hobbes should have developed more than a very thin conception of the rule of law. (...)
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  89. Richard Crouter (2010). Reinhold Niebuhr: On Politics, Religion, and Christian Faith. OUP USA.score: 12.0
    In his day, theologian Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971) was immensely influential - a public intellectual and author of many books who even appeared on the cover of Time magazine (in 1948). He was a realist in political philosophy, and his book The Irony of American History continues to speak directly to the question of American imperialism. The current international situation requires serious reflection of the kind at which Niebuhr excelled, and Niebuhr's thought has experienced something of a revival. Pundits and politicians (...)
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  90. M. C. Dawes (1887). A Course of Modern Greek, or the Greek Language of the Present, Day. By D. Zompolides, Ph.D. Part I., Elementary Method. Williams and Norgate. 5s. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 1 (04):113-.score: 12.0
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  91. L. M. Demchenko (2008). Phenomenon of Self-Alienation of Culture as a Basis of Transformations of Philosophy in the Present-Day World. Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 36:7-12.score: 12.0
    This article covers issues illustrating determining significance of philosophy as a theoretical reflection over the utmost bases of culture as well as processes, conditioned by phenomena of alienation and self-alienation of culture, resulting in its integrity, uniqueness and originality demolition. This, in its turn, definitely leads to various kinds of deformation of philosophic reflection. The most important tendency in subduing the crisis of culture and philosophy is to project a new type of philosophizing, represented in the critical philosophy of “Frankfurt’s (...)
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  92. M. F. A. Dillon (2012). World Youth Day in Madrid, 2011. The Chesterton Review 38 (1-2):277-277.score: 12.0
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  93. F. J. M. Feldbrugge (1996). The Impact of Ethical Considerations on Oresent-Day Russian Law. Studies in East European Thought 48 (2-4):159 - 170.score: 12.0
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  94. Manjulika Ghosh (2008). On Parasitic Language. Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 39:43-48.score: 12.0
    This paper is about the uses of language which the Oxford philosopher of language, J.L. Austin excluded from theoretical consideration in his William James Lectures delivered in 1955 and posthumously published as How to Do Things with Words. Uses of language, such as dramatic, poetic or comedic, are said by Austin to be non-serious, deviant and parasitic upon the everyday normal ordinary language. This leaves literature out of consideration as an etiolation. Derrida, who is not merely a trained philosopher (...)
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  95. Mariam Ghosn (2006). Aspartame: An Artificial Sweetener Under Review. Chisholm Health Ethics Bulletin 11 (4):9.score: 12.0
    Ghosn, Mariam A seven-year $1 million dollar study conducted by Dr. M. Soffritti found that significant trend of increasing lymphoma and leukaemia incidence in female rats fed aspartame with a significant increase in the number of female rats affected at dosages of 20 mg/kg per day and upward, thus questioning aspartame's safety. However, the European Food Safety Authority's (EFSA's) Scientific Panel on Food Additives, Flavourings, Processing Aids and Materials in Contact with Food (AFC) argued that there was not enough evidence (...)
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  96. Arthur N. Gilbert (1972/1971). In Search of a Meaningful Past. Boston,Houghton Mifflin Co..score: 12.0
    The historical crisis, by J. T. Marcus.--History and the search for identity, by P. Smith.--The role of history, by J. H. Plumb.--History as progress, by E. H. Carr.--On optimism, by P. Gay.--The purpose of history, by G. R. Elton.--The uses of history, by D. H. Fischer.--The dangers of history, by H. Butterfield.--Unity of history, by P. Smith.--History as private enterprise, by H. Zinn.--The historian and his day, by J. H. Hexter.--Present interest, by S. Kracauer.--On becoming an historian, by M. Duberman.--Vietnam (...)
     
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  97. James Mavor (1892). Book Review:The Eight Hours' Day. Sidney Webb. [REVIEW] Ethics 2 (2):259-.score: 12.0
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  98. S. M. J. (1892). Book Review:The Path Towards Knowledge; Discourses on Some Difficulties of the Day. W. Cunningham. [REVIEW] Ethics 2 (2):262-.score: 12.0
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  99. Harold D. Lasswell (1965). Language of Politics. Cambridge, Mass.,M.I.T. Pr..score: 12.0
    Introduction: The language of power, by H. D. Lasswell. Style in the language of politics, by H. D. Lasswell. Why be quantitative? By H. D. Lasswell.--Technique: The problem of validating content analysis, by I. L. Janis. The reliability of content analysis categories, by Abraham Kaplan and J. M. Goldsen. Recording and context units, four ways of coding editorial content, by Alan Grey, David Kaplan and H. D. Lasswell. The feasibility of the use of samples in content analysis, by Alexander Mintz. (...)
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  100. Tim LeBon (2001). Wise Therapy: Philosophy for Counsellors. Continuum.score: 12.0
    Independent on Sunday October 2nd One of the country's lead­ing philosophical counsellers, and chairman of the Society for Philosophy in Practice (SPP), Tim LeBon, said it typically took around six 50 ­minute sessions for a client to move from confusion to resolution. Mr LeBon, who has 'published a book on the subject, Wise Therapy, said philoso­phy was perfectly suited to this type of therapy, dealing as it does with timeless human issues such as love, purpose, happiness and emo­tional challenges. `Wise (...)
     
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