Search results for 'Jay Lombard' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Warren Breckman & Martin Jay (eds.) (2009). The Modernist Imagination: Intellectual History and Critical Theory: Essays in Honor of Martin Jay. Berghahn Books.score: 120.0
    This volumeincludes work from some of the most prominentcontemporary scholars in the humanities.
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  2. Jay Lombard (2008). Synchrnoic Consciousness From a Neurological Point of View: The Philosophical Foundations for Neuroethics. Synthese 162 (3):439 - 450.score: 120.0
    Daniel Kolak’s theory of synchronic consciousness according to which the entire range of dissociative phenomena, from pathologies such as MPD and schizophrenia to normal dream states, are best explained in terms of consciousness becoming simultaneously identified as many selves, has revolutionary therapeutic implications for neurology and psychiatry. All these selves, according to Kolak—even the purely imaginary ones that exist as such only in our dreams—are not just conscious but also self-conscious, with beliefs, intentions, living lives informed by memories (confabulatory, in (...)
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  3. Martin Jay (1993). Force Fields: Between Intellectual History and Cultural Critique. Routledge.score: 60.0
    Force Fields collects the recent essays of Martin Jay, an intellectual historian and cultural critic internationally known for his extensive work on the history of Western Marxism and the intellectual migration from Germany to America.
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  4. Martin Jay (2010). The Virtues of Mendacity: On Lying in Politics. University of Virginia Press.score: 60.0
    In The Virtues of Mendacity, Jay resolves to avoid this conventional framing of the debate over lying and politics by examining what has been said in support of ...
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  5. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1986). Events: A Metaphysical Study. Routledge & Kegan Paul.score: 30.0
    I EXISTENTIAL PROOFS INTRODUCTION Metaphysical problems, like all philosophical problems, arise from a sense of puzzlement. What is puzzling is that the ...
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  6. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1999). On the Alleged Incompatibility of Presentism and Temporal Parts. Philosophia 27 (1-2):253-260.score: 30.0
  7. Lawrence B. Lombard (2003). The Lowe Road to the Problem of Temporary Intrinsics. Philosophical Studies 112 (2):163 - 185.score: 30.0
    It has been argued that there is a problem oftemporary intrinsics, the problem of explaininghow it is possible for things to possesssuccessively contrary properties, if a certaintheory about time, ``eternalism'', is true. Inthis paper, I consider whether there really issuch a problem and survey some standardsolutions to it. I argue for one of them, onewhich has been offered by Mark Johnston andPeter van Inwagen, and which I call the``exemplification-solution''''. I consider avariant on that solution offered by E.J. Lowe(and Sally Haslanger), (...)
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  8. Martin Jay (1995). The Limits of Limit-Experience: Bataille and Foucault. Constellations 2 (2):155-174.score: 30.0
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  9. Martin Jay (1995). Book Review: Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twentieth-Century French Thought. [REVIEW] Philosophy and Literature 19 (1).score: 30.0
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  10. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1994). The Doctrine of Temporal Parts and the "No-Change" Objection. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 54 (2):365-372.score: 30.0
    The Doctrine of Temporal Parts (sometimes abbreviated herein as 'DTP') asserts that, for each portion (including infinitely small portions) of the smallest period of time during which a material object exists, there is an object-a temporal part of the material object in question-which exists at that and at no other time. In "Things Change," Mark Heller offers an argument for DTP, and responds to a objection, the "No-Change" objection, to that doctrine.2 My goal in this paper is to undermine both (...)
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  11. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1979). Events. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 9 (3):425 - 460.score: 30.0
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  12. Lawrence B. Lombard (2006). Scope Fallacies and the “Decisive Objection” Against Endurance. Philosophia 34 (4):441-452.score: 30.0
    From time to time, the idea that enduring things can change has been challenged. The latest challenge has come in the form of what David Lewis has called a “decisive objection”, which claims to deduce a contradiction from the idea that enduring things change with respect to their temporary intrinsics, when that idea is combined with eternalism. It is my aim in this paper to explain why I think that no argument has yet appeared that deduces a contradiction from a (...)
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  13. Lawrence B. Lombard (2003). The Cambridge Solution to the Time of a Killing. Philosophia 31 (1-2):93-106.score: 30.0
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  14. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1978). Relational Change and Relational Changes. Philosophical Studies 34 (1):63 - 79.score: 30.0
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  15. Christopher Jay (2009). Kant and the Historical Turn: Philosophy as Critical Interpretation. By Karl Ameriks. Heythrop Journal 50 (2):337-339.score: 30.0
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  16. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1978). Actions, Results, and the Time of a Killing. Philosophia 8 (2-3):341-354.score: 30.0
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  17. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1990). Causes, Enablers, and the Counterfactual Analysis. Philosophical Studies 59 (2):195 - 211.score: 30.0
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  18. M. Valenzuela Leslier, P. Mulki Jay & Jorge Fernando Jaramillo (2010). Impact of Customer Orientation, Inducements and Ethics on Loyalty to the Firm: Customers' Perspective. Journal of Business Ethics 93 (2).score: 30.0
    Customer orientation (CO) and the development of long-term relationships with customers are known conditions for growth and profit sustainability. Businesses use special treatments, inducements, and personal gestures to show their appreciation to customers. However, there are concerns about whether these inducements really create the right perceptions in customer’s mind. This study suggests that when customers believe that the firm is ethical, the inducements and special treatments received are seen in a positive light and can help develop loyalty. The hypotheses were (...)
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  19. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1992). Causes and Enablers: A Reply to Mackie. Philosophical Studies 65 (3):319 - 322.score: 30.0
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  20. L. B. Lombard & G. C. Stine (1974). Grice's Intentions. Philosophical Studies 25 (3):207 - 212.score: 30.0
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  21. A. Jay (2000). A Personal Response To: The Woman Who Walked Into Doors by Roddy Doyle. Medical Humanities 26 (1):58-59.score: 30.0
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  22. Martin Jay (2000). Diving Into the Wreck: Aesthetic Spectatorship at the Fin-de-Siècle. Critical Horizons 1 (1):93-111.score: 30.0
    The popularity of films like Titanic betokens a massive shift in the nature of aesthetic spectatorship in our time. The contemplative, distanced viewer who is able to judge from afar the spectacle before him or her, has been replaced by a more proximate, involved "kinaesthetic" subject whose body is stimulated as much as his or her eye. This is evident not only in mass culture with amusement thrill rides and the return of what has been called the "cinema of attractions"; (...)
     
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  23. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1982). Events and the Essentiality of Time. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 12 (1):1 - 17.score: 30.0
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  24. C. Barry Jay (1989). A Note on Natural Numbers Objects in Monoidal Categories. Studia Logica 48 (3):389 - 393.score: 30.0
    The internal language of a monoidal category yields simple proofs of results about a natural numbers object therein.
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  25. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1992). Events, Counterfactuals, and Speed. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 70 (2):187 – 197.score: 30.0
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  26. R. B. Angell & L. B. Lombard (1978). Gail Caldwell Stine 1940-1977. Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 51 (5):584 - 585.score: 30.0
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  27. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1978). Chisholm and Davidson on Events and Counterfactuals. Philosophia 7 (3-4):515-522.score: 30.0
  28. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1995). Delaying, Preventing, and Disenabling. Philosophia 24 (3-4):433-447.score: 30.0
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  29. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1974). A Note on Level-Generation and the Time of a Killing. Philosophical Studies 26 (2):151 - 152.score: 30.0
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  30. Martin Jay (2006). Review of Espen Hammer, Adorno and the Political. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (5).score: 30.0
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  31. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1995). Sooner or Later. Noûs 29 (3):343-359.score: 30.0
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  32. P. Mulki Jay, F. Jaramillo Jorge & B. Locander William (2008). Effect of Ethical Climate on Turnover Intention: Linking Attitudinal- and Stress Theory. Journal of Business Ethics 78 (4).score: 30.0
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  33. L. B. Lombard (1975). Events, Changes, and the Non-Extensionality of 'Become'. Philosophical Studies 28 (2):131 - 136.score: 30.0
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  34. C. Barry Jay (1991). Coherence in Category Theory and the Church-Rosser Property. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 33 (1):140-143.score: 30.0
  35. Peter Jay (1999). Research Misconduct—Have We Reached the Turning Point at Last? Science and Engineering Ethics 5 (1).score: 30.0
    The laissez-faire attitude towards dishonesty in research has simply created an environment for widespread escalation of the problem. Can we now believe anything we read? Why should we have confidence in an author because of his eminence? Should we automatically accept that clinical trials are always conducted with total integrity? Why have we been afraid to tackle this crisis head-on?
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  36. Lawrence Brian Lombard (1979). The Extensionality of Causal Contexts: Comments on Rosenberg and Martin. Midwest Studies in Philosophy 4 (1):409-415.score: 30.0
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  37. A. Jay (2003). Fugitive Pieces: A Michaels. Bloomsbury, 1998, 6.99, Pp 294. ISBN 0 7475 3496. Medical Humanities 29 (1):21-21.score: 30.0
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  38. Martin Jay (1984). Adorno. Harvard University Press.score: 30.0
     
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  39. Martin Jay (1996). Between the Norm and the Exception. International Studies in Philosophy 28 (4):153-154.score: 30.0
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  40. Jennifer W. Jay (2012). China and Greece (Y.) Zhou Festivals, Feasts, and Gender Relations in Ancient China and Greece. Pp. X + 373. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Cased, £55, US$90. ISBN: 978-0-521-19762-5. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 62 (01):199-201.score: 30.0
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  41. Martin Jay (2011). Essays From the Edge: Parerga and Paralipomena. University of Virginia Press.score: 30.0
    Taking on the stigma of inauthenticity : Adorno's critique of genuineness -- Is experience still in crisis? : reflections on a Frankfurt school lament -- Mourning a metaphor: the revolution is over -- Cultural relativism and the visual turn -- Scopic regimes of modernity revisited -- No state of grace : violence in the garden -- Visual parrhesia? : Foucault and the truth of the gaze -- The Kremlin of modernism -- Phenomenology and lived experience -- Aesthetic experience and historical (...)
     
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  42. Martin Jay (1973). Max Horkheimer (1895-1973). Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 47:219 - 220.score: 30.0
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  43. Martin Jay (2009). Pseudology : Derrida on Arendt and Lying in Politics. In Pheng Cheah & Suzanne Guerlac (eds.), Derrida and the Time of the Political. Duke University Press.score: 30.0
  44. Martin Jay (2010). Taking on the Stigma of Inauthenticity : Adorno's Critique of Genuineness. In Gerhard Richter (ed.), Language Without Soil: Adorno and Late Philosophical Modernity. Fordham University Press.score: 30.0
     
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  45. Emma Jay (2002). Thinking Philosophically. International Philosophical Quarterly 42 (2):271-272.score: 30.0
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  46. Jean Lombard (ed.) (2007). L'école Et la Philosophie. Harmattan.score: 30.0
     
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  47. Christo Lombard (1999). The Ethics of Listening: Namibian Perspectives on Academic Cooperation in a Globalized World. Ecumenical Institute for Namibia, University of Namibia.score: 30.0
     
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  48. Lawrence B. Lombard (2010). Time for a Change : A Polemic Against the Presentism/Eternalism Debate. In Joseph Keim Campbell, Michael O'Rourke & Harry Silverstein (eds.), Time and Identity. Mit Press.score: 30.0
     
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  49. Peter Lombard & Giulio Silano (2011). The Sentences, Book III: On the Incarnation of the Word. Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (2):247 - 249.score: 30.0
     
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  50. Author unknown, Peter Lombard. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 15.0
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  51. Massimo Pigliucci (2007). Stephen Jay Gould. In T. Flynn (ed.), The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief. Prometheus.score: 12.0
    A brief biography of evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould.
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  52. William Dembski, An Analysis of Homer Simpson and Stephen Jay Gould.score: 12.0
    Note: The Simpson's, television's popular prime-time cartoon known for its satirical commentary on various social issues, recently took a shot at the creation-evolution debate by featuring Stephen Jay Gould prominently in one of its episodes. Here is Bill Dembski's review and observations of that episode.
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  53. Gregory Nixon (2007). Jay's *Songs of Experience*. [REVIEW] Journal of Consciousness Studies 14 (11):125-7.score: 12.0
    ‘Experience is the best teacher’ goes the cliché without ever making clear just want is meant by that slippery first term. ‘Experience is never remembered unaltered’ goes another. Is experience something to be undergone, like a journey, or is it perhaps the relational immediacy between organism and environment? What do we reference when we use the term experience? -/- Martin Jay, renowned intellectual historian from UC Berkeley, here examines these questions in a grand survey of the term’s use throughout the (...)
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  54. Francisco J. Ayala, The Structure of Evolutionary Theory: On Stephen Jay Gould's Monumental Masterpiece.score: 12.0
    Stephen Jay Gould’s monumental The Structure of Evolutionary Theory ‘‘attempts to expand and alter the premises of Darwinism, in order to build an enlarged and distinctive evolutionary theory . . . while remaining within the tradition, and under the logic, of Darwinian argument.’’ The three branches or ‘‘fundamental principles of Darwinian logic’’ are, according to Gould: agency (natural selection acting on individual organisms), efficacy (producing new species adapted to their environments), and scope (accumulation of changes that through geological time yield (...)
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  55. John Inglis (2011). Mediaeval Commentaries on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (1):119-120.score: 12.0
    The first volume of the Mediaeval Commentaries on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (=MCS1) edited by G. R. Evans in 2002 provided the first comprehensive study of those works that house much Latin medieval philosophy from the middle of the twelfth century to Martin Luther in the sixteenth century. Philipp Rosemann rounded out this project in 2007 with The Story of a Great Medieval Book: Peter Lombard's Sentences (Peterborough, ON: Broadview), which serves as an introduction to the second (...)
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  56. Philipp W. Rosemann (2004). Peter Lombard. OUP USA.score: 12.0
    Peter Lombard is best known as the author of a celebrated work entitled Book of Sentences, which for several centuries served as the standard theological textbook in the Christian West. It was the subject of more commentaries than any other work of Christian literature besides the Bible itself. The Book of Sentences is essentially a compilation of older sources, from the Scriptures and Augustine down to several of the Lombard's contemporaries, such as Hugh of Saint Victor and Peter (...)
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  57. Jay A. Jacobson & Barbara White (1991). No: Jay A. Jacobson, M.D.(FACP) Barbara White, B.A. HEC Forum 3 (6):351-353.score: 12.0
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  58. Michael Shermer, The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive.score: 12.0
    tephen Jay Gould's Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History , has become something of a watershed for those who study contingency and complexity, especially applied to organisms, societies, and history, and discussions of it can be found in many works. Walter Fontana and Leo Buss, for example, ask in the title of their chapter "What Would Be Conserved If 'The Tape Were Played Twice'?" This is a direct reference to Gould's suggestion in Wonderful Life that if (...)
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  59. Xinyan Jiang (2002). Reply to Jay Gallagher. Hypatia 17 (1):71-76.score: 12.0
    : In response to Jay Gallagher's criticism, I emphasize that my article "The Dilemma Faced by Chinese Feminists" (2000) is aimed at showing how both the level of economic development and sexual difference are relevant to the realization of sexual equality. It is a much more serious theoretical attempt than to argue that men have a physical advantage in a society where heavy labor is still in great demand.
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  60. Albert Jay Nock (1962/1983). Our Enemy, the State: Albert Jay Nock's Classic Critique Distinguishing "Government" From "the State". Hallberg Pub. Corp..score: 12.0
  61. Andrew Sneddon (2005). Moral Responsibility: The Difference of Strawson, and the Difference It Should Make. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 8 (3):239-264.score: 9.0
    P.F. Strawson’s work on moral responsibility is well-known. However, an important implication of the landmark “Freedom and Resentment” has gone unnoticed. Specifically, a natural development of Strawson’s position is that we should understand being morally responsible as having externalistically construed pragmatic criteria, not individualistically construed psychological ones. This runs counter to the contemporary ways of studying moral responsibility. I show the deficiencies of such contemporary work in relation to Strawson by critically examining the positions of John Martin Fischer and Mark (...)
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  62. Michael Huemer (2008). Intellectual Virtues: An Essay in Regulative Epistemology - by Robert C. Roberts and W. Jay Wood. Philosophical Books 49 (4):388-390.score: 9.0
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  63. John Turri (2011). Review of Robert C. Roberts and W. Jay Wood, Intellectual Virtues. [REVIEW] Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 82 (3):793–797.score: 9.0
  64. Bronwyn Finnigan (2011). The Possibility of Buddhist Ethical Agency Revisited—A Reply to Jay Garfield and Chad Hansen. Philosophy East and West 61 (1).score: 9.0
    I begin by warmly thanking Professors Garfield and Hansen for participating in this dialogue. I greatly value the work of both and appreciate having the opportunity to engage in a dialogue with them. Aside from the many important insights I gain from their replies, I believe that both Garfield and Hansen misrepresent my position. In response, I shall clarify the argument contained in my preceding comment, and will consider the objections as they bear on this clarified position.Both Garfield and Hansen (...)
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  65. J. M. Bernstein (2006). Review of Martin Jay, Songs of Experience: Modern American and European Variations on a Universal Theme. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (7).score: 9.0
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  66. Christopher Evan Franklin (forthcoming). A Theory of the Normative Force of Pleas. Philosophical Studies.score: 9.0
    A familiar feature of our moral responsibility practices are pleas: considerations, such as “That was an accident”, or “I didn’t know what else to do”, that attempt to get agents accused of wrongdoing off the hook. But why do these pleas have the normative force they do in fact have? Why does physical constraint excuse one from responsibility, while forgetfulness or laziness does not? I begin by laying out R. Jay Wallace’s (Responsibility and the moral sentiments, 1994 ) theory of (...)
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  67. Joshua Gert & Michael McKenna (2008). Review of Normativity and the Will by R. Jay Wallace. [REVIEW] Philosophical Quarterly 58 (232):559–563.score: 9.0
  68. Russell Powell (2012). Convergent Evolution and the Limits of Natural Selection. European Journal for Philosophy of Science 2 (3):355-373.score: 9.0
    Stephen Jay Gould argued that replaying the “tape of life” would result in a radically different evolutionary outcome. Some biologists and philosophers, however, have pointed to convergent evolution as evidence for robust replicability in macroevolution. These authors interpret homoplasy, or the independent origination of similar biological forms, as evidence for the power of natural selection to guide form toward certain morphological attractors, notwithstanding the diversionary tendencies of drift and the constraints of phylogenetic inertia. In this paper, I consider the implications (...)
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  69. Willem A. deVries (2008). Review of Jay F. Rosenberg, Wilfrid Sellars: Fusing the Images. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (6).score: 9.0
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  70. Jason Baehr (2007). Review of Robert C. Roberts, W. Jay Wood, Intellectual Virtues: An Essay in Regulative Epistemology. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (7).score: 9.0
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  71. Christopher Brooke (2009). Reviews Reification: A New Look at an Old Idea by Axel Honneth, with Judith Butler, Raymond Geuss and Jonathan Lear Edited by Martin Jay Oxford University Press, 2008, 184 Pp., £16.99. [REVIEW] Philosophy 84 (3):441-445.score: 9.0
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  72. Hans-Georg Moeller (2010). China-West Interculture: Toward the Philosophy of World Integration. Essays on Wu Kuang-Ming's Thinking – Edited by Jay Goulding. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 37 (2):333-336.score: 9.0
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  73. Marcia L. Colish (1992). Peter Lombard and Abelard: The Opinio Nominalium and Divine Transcendence. Vivarium 30 (1):139-156.score: 9.0
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  74. Kim Sterelny (2003). Last Will and Testament: Stephen Jay Gould's the Structure of Evolutionary Theory. Philosophy of Science 70 (2):255-263.score: 9.0
    I outline Gould's conception of evolutionary theory and his ways of contrasting it with contemporary Darwinism; a contemporary Darwinism that focuses on the natural selection of individual organisms. Gould argues for a hierarchical conception of the living world and of the evolutionary processes that have built that living world: organisms are built from smaller components (genes, cells) and are themselves components of groups, populations, species, lineages. Selection, drift and constraint are important to all of these levels of biological organization, not (...)
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  75. Espen Hammer (2002). Review of Jay Bernstein, Adorno: Disenchantment and Ethics. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2002 (2).score: 9.0
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  76. John J. Davenport (2007). Review of R. Jay Wallace, Normativity and the Will: Selected Essays on Moral Psychology and Practical Reason. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (12).score: 9.0
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  77. Daniel E. Palmer (2006). Joseph Raz, Engaging Reason: On the Theory of Value and Action (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), Pp. 336 Joseph Raz, The Practice of Value, Ed. R. Jay Wallace (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2003), Pp. Vii + 161. [REVIEW] Utilitas 18 (03):321-.score: 9.0
  78. Richard M. Burian (1978). Book Review:Linguistic Representation Jay F. Rosenberg. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 45 (2):325-.score: 9.0
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  79. William K. Blackburn (1983). Ambiguity and Non-Specificity: A Reply to Jay David Atlas. Linguistics and Philosophy 6 (4):479 - 498.score: 9.0
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  80. Bradford Cokelet (2007). Review of Normativity and the Will by R. Jay Wallace. [REVIEW] Ethics 117 (4):790-794.score: 9.0
  81. Elisabeth A. Lloyd (2002). Memorium for Stephen Jay Gould. Biology and Philosophy 17 (3).score: 9.0
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  82. Richard Umbers (2010). Intellectual Virtues: An Essay in Regulative Epistemology. By Robert C. Roberts & W. Jay Wood and A Virtue Epistemology: Apt Belief and Reflective Knowledge. By Ernest Sosa. [REVIEW] Heythrop Journal 51 (2):333-335.score: 9.0
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  83. H. J. Blumenthal (1993). Neoplatonism and Gnosticism Richard T. Wallis, Jay Bregman (Edd.): Neoplatonism and Gnosticism. (Studies in Neoplatonism: Ancient and Modern, 6.) Pp. Xi + 531. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press for International Society for Neoplatonic Studies, 1992. $19.95. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (02):307-308.score: 9.0
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  84. D. Scott-Kakures & P. Hurley (2008). Review: R. Jay Wallace: Normativity and the Will. [REVIEW] Mind 117 (467):744-750.score: 9.0
  85. Richard Dawkins (1997). Human Chauvinism. Review of Full House by Stephen Jay Gould. Evolution 51 (3).score: 9.0
    This pleasantly written book has two related themes. The first is a statistical argument which Gould believes has great generality, uniting baseball, a moving personal response to the serious illness from which, thankfully, the author has now recovered, and his second theme: that of whether evolution is progressive.
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  86. John Martin Fischer (1996). Book Review:Responsibility and the Moral Sentiments. R. Jay Wallace. [REVIEW] Ethics 106 (4):850-.score: 9.0
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  87. M. J. S. Hodge (1978). Book Review:Ontogeny and Phylogeny Stephen Jay Gould. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 45 (4):652-.score: 9.0
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  88. Michael Ruse, The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive.score: 9.0
    arly in December of 1981, the federal courtroom in Little Rock, Arkansas, was packed. It was the first week of a trial brought on by the American Civil Liberties Union to challenge the constitutionality of a state law passed earlier that year. The law mandated "balanced treatment," in the publicly supported schools, between evolutionary ideas and so-called Creation Science, better known as the early chapters of Genesis taken absolutely literally (Ruse 1988). By the end of the third day, the case (...)
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  89. Jim Schaal (2011). Creation Made Free: Open Theology Engaging Science Edited by Thomas Jay Oord. Zygon 46 (1):247-249.score: 9.0
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  90. Terence Ball (1985). Book Review:Marxism and Totality: The Adventures of a Concept From Lukacs to Habermas. Martin Jay. [REVIEW] Ethics 96 (1):200-.score: 9.0
  91. John Turri (2011). Critical Notice of Robert C Roberts and W. Jay Wood, Intellectual Virtues: An Essay in Regulative Epistemology. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 82 (3):793-797.score: 9.0
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  92. R. P. C. Hanson (1959). Eric G. Jay: New Testament Greek. An Introductory Grammar. Pp. Viii+350. London: S.P.C.K., 1958. Boards, 21s. Net. The Classical Review 9 (03):290-291.score: 9.0
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  93. Keith Ansell Pearson (2007). Review of Jay Lampert, Deleuze and Guattari's Philosophy of History. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (3).score: 9.0
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  94. Bruce Russell (2005). Review of R. Jay Wallace (Ed.), Samuel Scheffler (Ed.), Michael Smith (Ed.), Reason and Value: Themes From the Moral Philosophy of Joseph Raz. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2005 (4).score: 9.0
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  95. Richard Dawkins, The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive.score: 9.0
    n the pioneering days of radio, my grandfather's job was to lecture to young engineers who were joining Marconi's company. To illustrate that any complex wave form can be broken down into summed simple waves of different frequencies (important in both radio and acoustics), he took wheels of different diameters and attached them with pistons to a clothesline. When the wheels went round, the clothesline was jerked up and down, causing waves of movement to snake along it. The wriggling clothesline (...)
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  96. James R. Horne (1987). The Mental Philosophy of John Henry Newman Jay Newman Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1986. Pp. Xii, 209. $19.95. [REVIEW] Dialogue 26 (04):783-.score: 9.0
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  97. J. E. Saindon (1975). Book Reviews : The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School and the Institute of Social Research, I923-I950. By Martin Jay. Boston, Toronto: Little, Brown and Company, I973. Pp. 382. $4.75 (Paper). Critical Theory of Society (Translation of Kritische Gesellschaftstheorie Und Positiv Ismus). By Albrecht Wellmer, Translated by John Cumming. New York : Herder and Herder, I97i. Pp. I39. $6.95. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 5 (1):79-83.score: 9.0
  98. Ernst Mayr, The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive.score: 9.0
    Theories postulating saltational evolution are a necessary consequence of essentialism. If one believes in constant types, only the sudden production of a new type can lead to evolutionary change. That such saltations can occur and indeed that their occurrence is a necessity is an old belief. Almost all of the theories of evolution described by H. F. Osborn (1894) in his From the Greek s to Darwin were saltational theories, that is, theories of the sudden origin of new kinds. The (...)
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  99. Nikolay Milkov (2004). Jay F. Rosenberg, Thinking About Knowing. [REVIEW] Pragmatics and Cognition 14:395-401.score: 9.0
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  100. Jared Diamond, The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive.score: 9.0
    little more than a year ago, I participated in a meeting, organized by the National Academy of Sciences , on the subject of enhancing public understanding of science by encouraging greater collaboration between scientists and the media. Most of the scientists present were members of the academy, which serves both as an elected honor society and as an official adviser on science policy to the U.S. government. Across the room I spotted a slim man who seemed somehow familiar. His deliberate (...)
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