Search results for 'Jeffrey B. Adams' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Jeffrey B. Adams & Ronald B. Miller (2008). Bridging Psychology's Scientist Vs. Practitioner Divide: Fruits of a Twenty-Five Year Dialogue. Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 28 (2):375-394.score: 290.0
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  2. Robert Merrihew Adams (2004). Voluntarism and the Shape of a History. Utilitas 16 (2):124-132.score: 150.0
    This article is concerned with the shape of the story of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century moral philosophy as told by J. B. Schneewind in The Invention of Autonomy. After discussion of alternative possible shapes for such a story, the focus falls on the question to what extent, in Schneewind's account, strands of empiricist voluntarism and rationalist intellectualism are interwoven in Kant. This in turn leads to consideration of different types of voluntarism and their roles in early modern ethical theory. Correspondence:c1 robert. (...)@mansfield.oxford.ac.uk. (shrink)
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  3. Ethan T. Adams (2010). The Metamorphoses (B.) Pavlock The Image of the Poet in Ovid's Metamorphoses. Pp. X + 198. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2009. Cased, US$55. ISBN: 978-0-299-23140-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 60 (02):451-453.score: 120.0
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  4. Colin Adams (2000). Alexandria and Rome G. Grimm: Alexandria. Die Erste Königsstadt der Hellenistischen Welt . Pp. 168, 152 Ills, Maps. Mainz Am Rhein: Philipp Von Zabern, 1998. Cased, Dm 68. Isbn: 3-8053-2337-9. A. Lampela: Rome and the Ptolemies of Egypt. The Development of Their Political Relations 273–80 B.C . Pp. 301. Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica, 1998. Paper. Isbn: 951-653-295-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (01):195-.score: 120.0
  5. Zed Adams, Daniel Farnham, Ian Farrell, Daniel Jacobson & Paul B. Thompson (2006). Book Notes. [REVIEW] Ethics 116 (2):445-450.score: 120.0
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  6. H. M. Adams (1931). The Printed Books in the Library of the Hunterian Museum in the University of Glasgow. A Catalogue Prepared by Mungo Ferguson, with a Topographical Index by D. B. Smith. Pp. Xxiii + 396. (Glasgow University Publications, XVIII.) Glasgow: Jackson, Wylieand Co., 1930. Cloth, 63s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 45 (05):205-.score: 120.0
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  7. Rae B. Adams (1985). Wayward Capitalists. Business and Professional Ethics Journal 4 (2):81-85.score: 120.0
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  8. Ernest W. Adams & Roger D. Rosenkrantz (1980). Applying the Jeffrey Decision Model to Rational Betting and Information Acquisition. Theory and Decision 12 (1):1-20.score: 120.0
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  9. M. -C. Jaberoo, J. Joseph, G. Korgaonkar, K. Mylvaganam, B. Adams & M. Keene (2013). Medico-Legal and Ethical Aspects of Nasal Fractures Secondary to Assault: Do We Owe a Duty of Care to Advise Patients to Have a Facial X-Ray? Journal of Medical Ethics 39 (2):125-126.score: 120.0
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  10. David W. Rutledge, Walter B. Gulick, John V. Apczynski, Doug Adams & J. Stines (1991). The Tacit Victory and the Unfinished Agenda. Tradition and Discovery 18 (1):5-17.score: 120.0
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  11. A. E. Taylor, John Adams, P. E. Winter, F. C. S. Schiller, M. L., S. R., J. Waterlow, Francis Jones, B. Russell, E. M. Smith & A. D. Lindsay (1910). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 19 (75):422-442.score: 120.0
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  12. Robert Merrihew Adams (1979). Divine Command Metaethics Modified Again. Journal of Religious Ethics 7 (1):66 - 79.score: 60.0
    This essay presents a version of divine command metaethics inspired by recent work of Donnellan, Kripke, and Putnam on the relation between necessity and conceptual analysis. What we can discover a priori, by conceptual analysis, about the nature of ethical wrongness is that wrongness is the property of actions that best fills a certain role. What property that is cannot be discovered by conceptual analysis. But I suggest that theists should claim it is the property of being contrary to the (...)
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  13. Frederick R. Adams (1993). Fodor's Modal Argument. Philosophical Psychology 6 (1):41-56.score: 60.0
    What we do, intentionally, depends upon the intentional contents of our thoughts. For about ten years Fodor has argued that intentional behavior causally depends upon the narrow intentional content of thoughts (not broad). His main reason is a causal powers argument—brains of individuals A and B may differ in broad content, but, if A and B are neurophysically identical, their thoughts cannot differ in causal power, despite differences in broad content. Recently Fodor (Fodor, 1991) presents a new 'modal' version of (...)
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  14. Robert Merrihew Adams (1995). Moral Horror and the Sacred. Journal of Religious Ethics 23 (2):201 - 224.score: 60.0
    The sense of moral horror at certain deeds and the related idea of the sacred have not been given as central a place in ethical theory, theological or secular, as they have in our moral consciousness. I place them in a broader theological metaethics, in a way that I hope avoids mere taboo and provides for a rational critique of our responses. Moral horror is understood here in terms of violation of the sacred, and the sacred is understood in terms (...)
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  15. Ittay Nissan-Rozen (forthcoming). Jeffrey Conditionalization, the Principal Principle, the Desire as Belief Thesis, and Adams's Thesis. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.score: 48.0
    I show that David Lewis’s principal principle is not preserved under Jeffrey conditionalization. Using this observation, I argue that Lewis’s reason for rejecting the desire as belief thesis and Adams’s thesis applies also to his own principal principle. 1 Introduction2 Adams’s Thesis, the Desire as Belief Thesis, and the Principal Principle3 Jeffrey Conditionalization4 The Principal Principles Not Preserved under Jeffrey Conditionalization5 Inadmissible Experiences.
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  16. C. E. B. (1963). Adam Smith Speaks to Our Times. The Review of Metaphysics 17 (2):303-303.score: 40.0
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  17. Donald Meiklejohn (1969). Book Review:Voluntary Associations: A Study of Groups in Free Societies; Essays in Honor of James Luther Adams. D. B. Robertson. [REVIEW] Ethics 79 (2):165-.score: 36.0
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  18. H. S. G. (1922). A Study in the Commerce of Latium From the Early Iron Age Through the Sixth Century B.C. By Louise E. W. Adams, Ph.D. Pp. 84. Northampton, Mass.: Smith College Classical Studies, 1921. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 36 (1-2):42-.score: 36.0
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  19. Ittay Nissan Rozen (2013). Jeffrey Conditionalization, the Principal Principle, the Desire as Belief Thesis and Adams׳ Thesis. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.score: 36.0
  20. M. M. W. (1940). Book Review:Science in Your Life John Pfeiffer; Picture of Health James Clarke; Getting and Spending Mildred Adams; Who Are These Americans? Paul B. Sears; Which Way America? Lyman Bryson. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 7 (3):386-.score: 36.0
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  21. Alan Hájek (2012). The Fall of “Adams' Thesis”? Journal of Logic, Language and Information 21 (2):145-161.score: 27.0
    The so-called ‘Adams’ Thesis’ is often understood as the claim that the assertibility of an indicative conditional equals the corresponding conditional probability—schematically: $${({\rm AT})}\qquad\qquad\quad As(A\rightarrow B)=P({B|A}),{\rm provided}\quad P(A)\neq 0.$$ The Thesis is taken by many to be a touchstone of any theorizing about indicative conditionals. Yet it is unclear exactly what the Thesis is . I suggest some precise statements of it. I then rebut a number of arguments that have been given in its favor. Finally, I offer a (...)
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  22. Jeffrey Stout (1978). Metaethics and the Death of Meaning: Adams' Tantalizing Closing. Journal of Religious Ethics 6 (1):1 - 18.score: 15.0
    This essay assesses Robert Merrihew Adams' contribution to the religion-morality debate in light of questions in philosophical semantics and metaphilosophy, questions Adams raises without addressing directly. It sketches a holistic theory of the use of language in thought in the hope of providing a context for determining the value and philosophical relevance of Adams' semantic claims. It concludes by suggesting that descriptive metaethics should give way to explicitly historical studies, and by maintaining that historians of ethics need (...)
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  23. Jeffrey Stout (2009). Adams on the Nature of Obligation. In Samuel Newlands & Larry M. Jorgensen (eds.), Metaphysics and the Good: Themes From the Philosophy of Robert Merrihew Adams. Oxford University Press.score: 15.0
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  24. Andrew B. Irvine (2009). Review of Adam B. Seligman, Robert P. Weller, Michael J. Puett, and Bennett Simon , Ritual and its Consequences: An Essay on the Limits of Sincerity. [REVIEW] Sophia 48 (4).score: 13.0
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  25. Jack Weinstein, Adam Smith's Marketplace of Life, by James R. Otteson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. Pp. 352. H/B £50.00, $70.00, P/B £19.95, $26.00. [REVIEW]score: 13.0
    James Otteson’s Adam Smith’s Marketplace of Life is the latest instalment in a wave of new scholarship signalling a renewed interest in Adam Smith. These works share several characteristics. First, they present Smith as a philosopher and not an economist. Second, they take seriously The Theory of Moral Senti- ments (TMS), Smith’s first book, by suggesting that his moral theory holds..
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  26. Michael Wheeler (2010). In Defence of Extended Functionalism. In Richard Menary (ed.), The Extended Mind. Mit Press.score: 12.0
    According to the extended cognition hypothesis (henceforth ExC), there are conditions under which thinking and thoughts (or more precisely, the material vehicles that realize thinking and thoughts) are spatially distributed over brain, body and world, in such a way that the external (beyond-the-skin) factors concerned are rightly accorded fully-paid-up cognitive status.1 According to functionalism in the philosophy of mind, “what makes something a mental state of a particular type does not depend on its internal constitution, but rather on the way (...)
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  27. Alan Hájek, Probability, Logic, and Probability Logic.score: 12.0
    “Probability logic” might seem like an oxymoron. Logic traditionally concerns matters immutable, necessary and certain, while probability concerns the uncertain, the random, the capricious. Yet our subject has a distinguished pedigree. Ramsey begins his classic “Truth and Probability” [44] with the words: “In this essay the Theory of Probability is taken as a branch of logic...”. De Finetti [7] speaks of “the logic of the probable”. And more recently, Jeffrey [25] regards probabilities as estimates of truth values, and thus (...)
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  28. Alan Hájek (2005). Scotching Dutch Books? Philosophical Perspectives 19 (1):139–151.score: 12.0
    The Dutch Book argument, like Route 66, is about to turn 80. It is arguably the most celebrated argument for subjective Bayesianism. Start by rejecting the Cartesian idea that doxastic attitudes are ‘all-or-nothing’; rather, they are far more nuanced degrees of belief, for short credences, susceptible to fine-grained numerical measurement. Add a coherentist assumption that the rationality of a doxastic state consists in its internal consistency. The remaining problem is to determine what consistency of credences amounts to. The Dutch Book (...)
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  29. J. R. G. Williams, Counterepistemic Indicative Conditionals and Probability.score: 12.0
    Two major themes in the literature on indicative conditionals are (1) that the content of indicative conditionals typically depends on what is known;1 (2) that conditionals are intimately related to conditional probabilities.2 In possible world semantics for counterfactual conditionals, a standard assumption is that conditionals whose antecedents are metaphysically impossible are vacuously true.3 This aspect has recently been brought to the fore, and defended by Tim Williamson, who uses it in to characterize alethic necessity by exploiting such equivalences as: A⇔¬A (...)
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  30. Albert Einstein (ed.) (1931). Living Philosophies. New York, Simon and Schuster.score: 12.0
    Albert Einstein.--Bertrand Russell.--John Dewey.--R.A. Millikan.--Theodore Dreiser.--H.G. Wells.--Fridtjof Nansen.--Sir James Jeans.--Irving Babbitt.--Sir Arthur Keith.--J.T. Adams.--H.L. Mencken.--Julia Peterkin.--Lewis Mumford.--G.J. Nathan.--Hu Shih.--J.W. Krutch.--Irwin Edman.--Hilaire Belloc.--Beatrice Webb.--W.R. Inge.--J.B.S. Haldane.--Biographical notes. Note: This book was re-published by AMS Press, 1979.
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  31. Donald Bamber (2000). Entailment with Near Surety of Scaled Assertions of High Conditional Probability. Journal of Philosophical Logic 29 (1):1-74.score: 12.0
    An assertion of high conditional probability or, more briefly, an HCP assertion is a statement of the type: The conditional probability of B given A is close to one. The goal of this paper is to construct logics of HCP assertions whose conclusions are highly likely to be correct rather than certain to be correct. Such logics would allow useful conclusions to be drawn when the premises are not strong enough to allow conclusions to be reached with certainty. This goal (...)
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  32. R. Bradley (2012). Multidimensional Possible-World Semantics for Conditionals. Philosophical Review 121 (4):539-571.score: 12.0
    Adams’s Thesis, the claim that the probabilities of indicative conditionals equal the conditional probabilities of their consequents given their antecedents, has proven impossible to accommodate within orthodox possible-world semantics. This essay proposes a modification to the orthodoxy that removes this impossibility. The starting point is a proposal by Jeffrey and Stalnaker that conditionals take semantic values in the unit interval, interpreting these (à la McGee) as their expected truth-values at a world. Their theories imply a false principle, namely, (...)
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  33. Harvey Friedman, New Borel Independence Results.score: 12.0
    S. Adams, W. Ambrose, A. Andretta, H. Becker, R. Camerlo, C. Champetier, J.P.R. Christensen, D.E. Cohen, A. Connes. C. Dellacherie, R. Dougherty, R.H. Farrell, F. Feldman, A. Furman, D. Gaboriau, S. Gao, V. Ya. Golodets, P. Hahn, P. de la Harpe, G. Hjorth, S. Jackson, S. Kahane, A.S. Kechris, A. Louveau,, R. Lyons, P.-A. Meyer, C.C. Moore, M.G. Nadkarni, C. Nebbia, A.L.T. Patterson, U. Krengel, A.J. Kuntz, J.-P. Serre, S.D. Sinel'shchikov, T. Slaman, Solecki, R. Spatzier, J. Steel, D. Sullivan, (...)
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  34. Carl G. Wagner (2004). Modus Tollens Probabilized. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 55 (4):747-753.score: 12.0
    We establish a probabilized version of modus tollens, deriving from p(E|H)=a and p()=b the best possible bounds on p(). In particular, we show that p() 1 as a, b 1, and also as a, b 0. Introduction Probabilities of conditionals Conditional probabilities 3.1 Adams' thesis 3.2 Modus ponens for conditional probabilities 3.3 Modus tollens for conditional probabilities.
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  35. Ari Maunu (1999). Worldlessness, Determinism and Free Will. Dissertation, University of Turku (Finland)score: 12.0
    I have three main objectives in this essay. First, in chapter 2, I shall put forward and justify what I call worldlessness, by which I mean the following: All truths (as well as falsehoods) are wholly independent of any circumstances, not only time and place but also possible worlds. It follows from this view that whatever is actually true must be taken as true with respect to every possible world, which means that all truths are (in a sense) necessary. However, (...)
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  36. Matthew M. Hurley, Daniel C. Dennett & Reginald B. Adams Jr (2011). Q & A. The Philosopher's Magazine (53):114-115.score: 12.0
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  37. Richard Bradley (1998). A Representation Theorem for a Decision Theory with Conditionals. Synthese 116 (2):187-229.score: 12.0
    This paper investigates the role of conditionals in hypothetical reasoning and rational decision making. Its main result is a proof of a representation theorem for preferences defined on sets of sentences (and, in particular, conditional sentences), where an agent’s preference for one sentence over another is understood to be a preference for receiving the news conveyed by the former. The theorem shows that a rational preference ordering of conditional sentences determines probability and desirability representations of the agent’s degrees of belief (...)
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  38. Richard Bradley (2000). Conditionals and the Logic of Decision. Philosophy of Science 67 (3):32.score: 12.0
    In this paper Richard Jeffrey's 'Logic of Decision' is extended by examination of agents' attitudes to the sorts of possibilities identified by indicative conditional sentences. An expression for the desirability of conditionals is proposed and, along with Adams' thesis that the probability of a conditional equals the conditional probability of its antecedent given its consequent, is defended by informally deriving it from Jeffrey's notion of desirability and some weak constraints on rational preference for conditional possibilities. Finally a (...)
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  39. Gordon Graham (2009). Adam Ferguson: History, Progress and Human Nature, Edited by Eugene Heath and Vincenzo Merolle, London: Pickering and Chatto. 2008. 253pp. H/B. $99. ISBN 978-1-85196-864-. [REVIEW] Journal of Scottish Philosophy 7 (1):107-111.score: 12.0
  40. H. D. Lewis (1960). Lessing's Theological Writings. Selections in Translation with an Introductory Essay by B. D. Henry Chadwick (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1956. Pp. 110. Price 8s. 6d.)Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit by S. T. Coleridge. Reprinted From the Third Edition 1853 with the Introduction by Joseph Henry Green and the Note by Sara Coleridge. Edited with an Introductory Note by H. St. J. Hart, B.D. (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1956. Pp. 118. Price 8s. 6d.)The Natural History of Religion by David Hume. Edited with an Introduction by H. E. Root. (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1956. Pp. 76. Price 6s. 6d.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 35 (132):83-.score: 12.0
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  41. Gregory Mellema (1999). Adam B. Seligam, the Problem of Trust. Journal of Value Inquiry 33 (2):273-275.score: 12.0
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  42. Hugo Meynell (2009). Modest Claims: Dialogues and Essays on Tolerance and Tradition, Edited by Adam B. Seligman. Heythrop Journal 50 (6):1071-1073.score: 12.0
  43. J. Gow (1902). Horace and a Monastic Rival Odes Choisies d' Horace. Par B. Baelde Et M. Legrain Brussels: Desclée, De Brouwer Et Cie. Proses d' Adam de Saint-Victor. Par M. L'Abbé Legrain. Same Publishers. Protes d' Adam Et Odes d' Horace. Par B. Baelde, M. Legrain Et L. Guillaume. Same Publishers. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 16 (01):61-63.score: 12.0
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  44. Ray Lepley (1957/1973). The Language of Value. Westport, Conn.,Greenwood Press.score: 12.0
    Essays: The language of values, by W. Moore. The languages of sign theory and value theory, by E. S. Robinson. Significance, signification, and painting, by C. Morris. Evaluation and discourse, by S. C. Pepper. Empirical verifiability theory of factual meaning and axiological truth, by E. M. Adams. The third man, by I. McGreal. A non-normative definition of "good," by A. C. Garnett. The judgmental functions of moral language, by H. Fingarette. Some puzzles for attitude theories of value, by R. (...)
     
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  45. James Adam & D. B. Monro (1892). Mr. Adam and Mr. Monro on the Nuptial Number of Plato. The Classical Review 6 (06):240-244.score: 7.0
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  46. John Sutton, Celia B. Harris, Paul G. Keil & Amanda J. Barnier (2010). The Psychology of Memory, Extended Cognition, and Socially Distributed Remembering. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 9 (4):521-560.score: 6.0
    This paper introduces a new, expanded range of relevant cognitive psychological research on collaborative recall and social memory to the philosophical debate on extended and distributed cognition. We start by examining the case for extended cognition based on the complementarity of inner and outer resources, by which neural, bodily, social, and environmental resources with disparate but complementary properties are integrated into hybrid cognitive systems, transforming or augmenting the nature of remembering or decision-making. Adams and Aizawa, noting this distinctive complementarity (...)
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  47. Charles B. Cross (2011). Brute Facts, the Necessity of Identity, and the Identity of Indiscernibles. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 92 (1):1-10.score: 6.0
    In ‘Two Spheres, Twenty Spheres, and the Identity of Indiscernibles,’ Della Rocca argues that any counterexample to the PII would involve ‘a brute fact of non-identity [. . .] not grounded in any qualitative difference.’ I respond that Adams's so-called Continuity Argument against the PII does not postulate qualitatively inexplicable brute facts of identity or non-identity if understood in the context of Kripkean modality. One upshot is that if the PII is understood to quantify over modal as well as (...)
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  48. Charles B. Cross (2009). Causal Independence, the Identity of Indiscernibles, and the Essentiality of Origins. Journal of Philosophy 106 (5):277-291.score: 6.0
    In his well-known 1952 dialogue Max Black describes a counterexample to the Principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles (PII). The counterexample is a world containing nothing but two purportedly indiscernible iron spheres. Reflecting on Black's example, Robert Adams uses the possibility of a world containing two almost indiscernible spheres to argue for the possibility of the indiscernible spheres world. One of Adams's almost indiscernible spheres has a small impurity, and, Adams writes, "Surely... the absence of the impurity (...)
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  49. Sten Lindström & Wlodek Rabinowicz (1991). Epistemic Entrenchment with Incomparabilities and Relational Belief Revision. In André Fuhrmann & Michael Morreau (eds.), The Logic of Theory Change. Springer.score: 6.0
    In earlier papers (Lindstrrm & Rabinowicz, 1989. 1990), we proposed a generalization of the AGM approach to belief revision. Our proposal was to view belief revision as a relation rather thanas a function on theories (or belief sets). The idea was to allow for there being several equally reasonable revisions of a theory with a given proposition. In the present paper, we show that the relational approach is the natural result of generalizing in a certain way an approach to belief (...)
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  50. Wlodek Rabinowicz & Sten Lindström (1994). How to Model Relational Belief Revision. In Dag Prawitz & Dag Westerståhl (eds.), Logic and Philosophy of Science in Uppsala. Kluwer.score: 6.0
    This is a short version of Lindström & Rabinowicz 1991.In earlier papers, we proposed a generalization of the AGM approach to belief revision. The proposal was to view belief revision as a relation rather than as a function on theories (or belief sets). Going relational means that one allows for several equally reasonable revisions of a theory with a given proposition. In the present paper, we show that the relational approach is the natural result of generalizing in a certain way (...)
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  51. J. B. Schneewind (2004). Comments on the Commentaries. Utilitas 16 (2):184-192.score: 6.0
    Adams's suggestion that there must be one really right way of presenting the history of moral philosophy seems implausible to me, so I reject – with additional reasons – his charges against the structure of Invention of Autonomy. Skorupski's way of stating the ‘equal moral abilities’ thesis is not, I argue, very Kantian; a more Kantian version is not open to his objections. I am unconvinced by Schultz's claim that Sidgwick did not really hold that thesis. Deigh raises (...)
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  52. A. B. Dickerson (2003). Kant on Representation and Objectivity. Cambridge University Press.score: 5.0
    This book is a study of the second-edition version of the 'Transcendental Deduction' (the so-called 'B-Deduction'), which is one of the most important and obscure sections of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. By way of a close analysis of the B-Deduction, Adam Dickerson makes the distinctive claim that the Deduction is crucially concerned with the problem of making intelligible the unity possessed by complex representations - a problem that is the representationalist parallel of the semantic problem of the unity of (...)
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  53. Harold B. Jones (forthcoming). Marcus Aurelius, the Stoic Ethic, and Adam Smith. Journal of Business Ethics.score: 5.0
    In The Theory of Moral Sentiments (TMS) Adam Smith draws on the Stoic idea of a Providence that uses everything for the good of the whole. The process is often painful, so the Stoic ethic insisted on conscious cooperation. Stoic ideas contributed to the rise of science and enjoyed wide popularity in Smith’s England. Smith was more influenced by the Stoicism of his professors than by the Epicureanism of Hume. In TMS, Marcus Aurelius’s “helmsman” becomes the “impartial spectator,” who judges (...)
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  54. Ross B. Emmett (2011). Man and Society in Adam Smith's Natural Morality : The Impartial Spectator, the Man of System, and the Invisible Hand. In Paul Oslington (ed.), Adam Smith as Theologian. Routledge.score: 5.0
     
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  55. Jeffrey Friedman & Adam McCabe (1996). Preferences or Happiness? Tibor Scitovsky's Psychology of Human Needs. Critical Review 10 (4):471-480.score: 4.7
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  56. Jeffrey G. Lawrence & Adam C. Retchless (2010). The Myth of Bacterial Species and Speciation. Biology and Philosophy 25 (4):569-588.score: 4.0
    The Tree of Life hypothesis frames the evolutionary process as a series of events whereby lineages diverge from one another, thus creating the diversity of life as descendent lineages modify properties from their ancestors. This hypothesis is under scrutiny due to the strong evidence for lateral gene transfer between distantly related bacterial taxa, thereby providing extant taxa with more than one parent. As a result, one argues, the Tree of Life becomes confounded as the original branching structure is gradually superseded (...)
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  57. Linda B. Smith & Adam Sheya (2010). Is Cognition Enough to Explain Cognitive Development? Topics in Cognitive Science 2 (4):725-735.score: 4.0
    Traditional views separate cognitive processes from sensory–motor processes, seeing cognition as amodal, propositional, and compositional, and thus fundamentally different from the processes that underlie perceiving and acting. These were the ideas on which cognitive science was founded 30 years ago. However, advancing discoveries in neuroscience, cognitive neuroscience, and psychology suggests that cognition may be inseparable from processes of perceiving and acting. From this perspective, this study considers the future of cognitive science with respect to the study of cognitive development.
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  58. Adam B. Cohen, Douglas T. Kenrick & Yexin Jessica Li (2006). Ecological Variability and Religious Beliefs. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (5):468-468.score: 4.0
    Religious beliefs, including those about an afterlife and omniscient spiritual beings, vary across cultures. We theorize that such variations may be predictably linked to ecological variations, just as differences in mating strategies covary with resource distribution. Perhaps beliefs in a soul or afterlife are more common when resources are unpredictable, and life is brutal and short.
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  59. Benjamin G. Purzycki, Daniel N. Finkel, John Shaver, Nathan Wales, Adam B. Cohen & Richard Sosis (2012). What Does God Know? Supernatural Agents' Access to Socially Strategic and Non-Strategic Information. Cognitive Science 36 (5):846-869.score: 4.0
    Current evolutionary and cognitive theories of religion posit that supernatural agent concepts emerge from cognitive systems such as theory of mind and social cognition. Some argue that these concepts evolved to maintain social order by minimizing antisocial behavior. If these theories are correct, then people should process information about supernatural agents’ socially strategic knowledge more quickly than non-strategic knowledge. Furthermore, agents’ knowledge of immoral and uncooperative social behaviors should be especially accessible to people. To examine these hypotheses, we measured response-times (...)
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  60. Adam B. Seligman (2010). Ritual and Sincerity: Certitude and the Other. Philosophy and Social Criticism 36 (1):9-39.score: 4.0
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  61. Adam B. Seligman (2008). Secularism, Liberalism and the Problem of Tolerance
    The Case of the USA.
    Theoria 55 (115):17-31.
    score: 4.0
  62. K. A. Mohyeldin Said (ed.) (1990). Modelling the Mind. Oxford University Press.score: 4.0
    This collection by a distinguished group of philosophers, psychologists, and physiologists reflects an interdisciplinary approach to the central question of cognitive science: how do we model the mind? Among the topics explored are the relationships (theoretical, reductive, and explanatory) between philosophy, psychology, computer science, and physiology; what should be asked of models in science generally, and in cognitive science in particular; whether theoretical models must make essential reference to objects in the environment; whether there are human competences that are resistant, (...)
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  63. Adam B. Cohen, Dacher Keltner & Paul Rozin (2004). Different Religions, Different Emotions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (6):734-735.score: 4.0
    Atran & Norenzayan (A&N) correctly claim that religion reduces emotions related to existential concerns. Our response adds to their argument by focusing on religious differences in the importance of emotion, and on other emotions that may be involved in religion. We believe that the important differences among religions make it difficult to have one theory to account for all religions.
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  64. Jeffrey Lomonaco (2002). Adam Smith's "Letter to the Authors of the Edinburgh Review&Quot. Journal of the History of Ideas 63 (4):659-676.score: 4.0
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  65. Frederik Herzberg (2007). Internal Laws of Probability, Generalized Likelihoods and Lewis' Infinitesimal Chances–a Response to Adam Elga. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 58 (1):25-43.score: 4.0
    The rejection of an infinitesimal solution to the zero-fit problem by A. Elga ([2004]) does not seem to appreciate the opportunities provided by the use of internal finitely-additive probability measures. Indeed, internal laws of probability can be used to find a satisfactory infinitesimal answer to many zero-fit problems, not only to the one suggested by Elga, but also to the Markov chain (that is, discrete and memory-less) models of reality. Moreover, the generalization of likelihoods that Elga has in mind is (...)
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  66. Namjoong Kim, Sleeping Beauty and De Nunc Updating.score: 4.0
    About a decade ago, Adam Elga introduced philosophers to an intriguing puzzle. In it, Sleeping Beauty, a perfectly rational agent, undergoes an experiment in which she becomes ignorant of what time it is. This situation is puzzling for two reasons: First, because there are two equally plausible views about how she will change her degree of belief given her situation and, second, because the traditional rules for updating degrees of belief don't seem to apply to this case. In this dissertation, (...)
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  67. Dean A. Kowalski (ed.) (2012). The Big Bang Theory and Philosophy: Rock, Paper, Scissors, Aristotle, Locke. John Wiley & Sons, Inc..score: 4.0
    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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  68. Lindsay G. Feldman, Adam L. Fried & Celia B. Fisher (2009). Graduate Socialization in the Responsible Conduct of Research: A National Survey on the Research Ethics Training Experiences of Psychology Doctoral Students. Ethics and Behavior 19 (6):496-518.score: 4.0
    Little is known about the mechanisms by which psychology graduate programs transmit responsible conduct of research (RCR) values. A national sample of 968 current students and recent graduates of mission-diverse doctoral psychology programs completed a Web-based survey on their research ethics challenges, perceptions of RCR mentoring and department climate, whether they were prepared to conduct research responsibly, and whether they believed psychology as a discipline promotes scientific integrity. Research experience, mentor RCR instruction and modeling, and department RCR policies predicted student (...)
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  69. Sabrina J. Goodman, Kaori Kubo Germano, Adam L. Fried & Celia B. Fisher (2009). Measures of Mentoring, Department Climate, and Graduate Student Preparedness in the Responsible Conduct of Psychological Research. Ethics and Behavior 19 (3):227-252.score: 4.0
    Drawing upon two independent national samples of 201 and 241 psychology graduate students, this article describes the development and psychometric evaluation of 4 Web-based student self-report scales tapping student socialization in the responsible conduct of research (RCR) with human participants. The Mentoring the Responsible Conduct of Research Scale (MRCR) is composed of 2 subscales assessing RCR instruction and modeling by research mentors. The 2 subscales of the RCR Department Climate Scale (RCR-DC) assess RCR department policies and faculty and student RCR (...)
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  70. Adam B. Seligman (2010). A Reply to My Critics. Philosophy and Social Criticism 36 (1):67-91.score: 4.0
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  71. J. Adam (1899). Plato, Republic VII. 529 B, C. The Classical Review 13 (01):11-12.score: 4.0
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  72. Jonathan Baron, Burcu Gürçay, Adam B. Moore & Katrin Starcke (2012). Use of a Rasch Model to Predict Response Times to Utilitarian Moral Dilemmas. Synthese 189 (S1):107-117.score: 4.0
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  73. Celia B. Fisher, Adam L. Fried & Lindsay G. Feldman (2009). Graduate Socialization in the Responsible Conduct of Research: A National Survey on the Research Ethics Training Experiences of Psychology Doctoral Students. Ethics and Behavior 19 (6):496 – 518.score: 4.0
    Little is known about the mechanisms by which psychology graduate programs transmit responsible conduct of research (RCR) values. A national sample of 968 current students and recent graduates of mission-diverse doctoral psychology programs completed a Web-based survey on their research ethics challenges, perceptions of RCR mentoring and department climate, whether they were prepared to conduct research responsibly, and whether they believed psychology as a discipline promotes scientific integrity. Research experience, mentor RCR instruction and modeling, and department RCR policies predicted student (...)
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  74. J. B. Hainsworth (1974). The Making of Homeric Verse Adam Parry (Ed.): The Making of Homeric Verse. The Collected Papers of Milman Parry. Pp. Lxii+483; 2 Plates. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971. Cloth, £6. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 24 (01):12-14.score: 4.0
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  75. D. B. Monro (1892). The Number of Plato The Nuptial Number of Plato: Its Solution and Significance: By James Adam, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. London: C. J. Clay and Sons. 1891. 2s. 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 6 (04):152-156.score: 4.0
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  76. G. B. R. (1914). Plato: Moral and Political Ideals. By A. M. Adam. Pp. Vii + 159. Cambridge: University Press, 1913. Price 1s. The Classical Review 28 (05):177-.score: 4.0
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  77. W. B. Gallie (1950). Goethe. By Albert Schweitzer. (Adam and Charles Black. 1949. Pp. 84. Price 6s.). Philosophy 25 (95):347-.score: 4.0
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  78. J. Adam (1899). Plato, Republic VI. 507 D and 507 B. The Classical Review 13 (02):99-100.score: 4.0
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  79. J. Adam (1894). Praechter's Tabula of Cebes Cebetis Tabula. Recensuit Carolus Praechter. Lipsiae in Aedibus B. G. Teubneri. 1893. 60 Pf. The Classical Review 8 (06):265-.score: 4.0
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  80. J. Adam (1894). Wohlrab's Republic of Plato Platon's Staat. Erstes Buch. Erklärt von Martin Wohlrab. Leipzig, B. G. Teubner. 1893. 60 Pf. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 8 (06):261-262.score: 4.0
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  81. William John Bosenbrook & Hayden V. White (eds.) (1968). The Uses of History. Detroit, Wayne State University Press.score: 4.0
    Adam Smith and the philosophy of anti-history, by J. Weiss.--Towards a dissolution of the ontological argument, by A. C. Danto.--Romanticism, historicism, realism: toward a period concept for early 19th century intellectual history, by H. V. White.--History and humanity: the Proudhonian vision, by A. Noland.--Hintze and the legacy of Ranke, by M. Covensky.--Objections to metaphysics, by J. Cobitz.--The term expressionism in the visual arts, by V. H. Miesel.--Karl Löwith's anti-historicism, by B. Riesterer.--Antonio Gramsci; Marxism and the Italian intellectual tradition, by J. (...)
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  82. Steven M. Cahn (ed.) (2002). Classics of Political and Moral Philosophy. Oxford University Press.score: 4.0
    Classics of Political and Moral Philosophy provides in one volume the major writings from nearly 2,500 years of political and moral philosophy. The most comprehensive collection of its kind, it moves from classical thought (Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, Cicero) through medieval views (Augustine, Aquinas) to modern perspectives (Machiavelli, Hobbes, Spinoza, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Adam Smith, Kant). It includes major nineteenth-century thinkers (Hegel, Bentham, Mill, Nietzsche) as well as twentieth-century theorists (Rawls, Nozick, Nagel, Foucault, Habermas, Nussbaum). Also included are numerous essays from (...)
     
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  83. Steven M. Cahn (ed.) (2005). Political Philosophy: The Essential Texts. Oxford University Press.score: 4.0
    Ideal for survey courses in social and political philosophy, this volume is a substantially abridged and slightly altered version of Steven M. Cahn's Classics of Political and Moral Philosophy (OUP, 2001). Offering coverage from antiquity to the present, Political Philosophy: The Essential Texts is a historically organized collection of the most significant works from nearly 2,500 years of political philosophy. It moves from classical thought (Plato, Aristotle) through the medieval period (Aquinas) to modern perspectives (Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Adam (...)
     
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  84. Timothy M. Costelloe (ed.) (2012). The Sublime: From Antiquity to the Present. Cambridge University Press.score: 4.0
    Machine generated contents note: 'The sublime'. A short introduction to a long history Timothy M. Costelloe; Part I. Philosophical History of the Sublime: 1. Longinus and the ancient sublime Malcolm Heath; 2...And the beautiful? revisiting Edmund Burke's 'double aesthetics' Rodolphe Gasche; 3. The moral source of the Kantian sublime Melissa Meritt; 4. Imagination and internal sense: the sublime in Shaftesbury, Reid, Addison, and Reynolds Timothy M. Costelloe; 5. The associative sublime: Kames, Gerrard, Alison, and Stewart Rachel Zuckert; 6. The 'prehistory' (...)
     
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  85. E. H., W. B. Pillsbury, E. B. Titchener, E. F. Stevenson, J. C. & J. Adam (1898). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 7 (27):427-440.score: 4.0
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  86. F. B. Jevons (1908). Adam's 'Religious Teachers of Greece.' The Religious Teachers of Greece, Being Gifford Lectures on Natural Religion Delivered at Aberdeen. By James Adam, Litt.D., Edited with a Memoir by His Wife, Adela Marion Adam. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1908. 8vo. Xix + Lv + 467. A Photograph of James Adam. 10s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 22 (08):252-254.score: 4.0
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  87. Jay B. Martin, Thomas L. Griffiths & Adam N. Sanborn (2012). Testing the Efficiency of Markov Chain Monte Carlo With People Using Facial Affect Categories. Cognitive Science 36 (1):150-162.score: 4.0
    Exploring how people represent natural categories is a key step toward developing a better understanding of how people learn, form memories, and make decisions. Much research on categorization has focused on artificial categories that are created in the laboratory, since studying natural categories defined on high-dimensional stimuli such as images is methodologically challenging. Recent work has produced methods for identifying these representations from observed behavior, such as reverse correlation (RC). We compare RC against an alternative method for inferring the structure (...)
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  88. J. Roland Pennock & John William Chapman (eds.) (1985). Criminal Justice. New York University Press.score: 4.0
    This, the twenty-seventh volume in the annual series of publications by the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy, features a number of distinguised contributors addressing the topic of criminal justice. Part I considers "The Moral and Metaphysical Sources of the Criminal Law," with contributions by Michael S. Moore, Lawrence Rosen, and Martin Shapiro. The four chapters in Part II all relate, more or less directly, to the issue of retribution, with papers by Hugo Adam Bedau, Michael Davis, Jeffrie G. (...)
     
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  89. Wade L. Robison & David B. Suits (eds.) (2012). New Essays on Adam Smith's Moral Philosophy. Rit Press.score: 4.0
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  90. Amélie Rorty (ed.) (1998). Philosophers on Education: Historical Perspectives. Routledge.score: 4.0
    Philosophers on Education provides the most comprehensive history of philosphers' views and impacts on the direction of education, from Plato to Dewey. As Amelie Oksenberg Rorty explains in describing a history of education, we are essentially describing and gaining the clearest understanding of the issues that presently concern and divide us. Philosophical reflection on education has usually been directed to the education of rulers, to those who are presumed to preserve and transmit--or to redirect and transform--the culture of sociey, its (...)
     
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  91. Adam B. Seligman (2012). Rethinking Pluralism: Ritual, Experience, and Ambiguity. Oxford University Press.score: 4.0
    The importance of being ambiguous -- Interlude : ambiguity, order and the deity -- Notation and its limits -- Interlude : the Israelite red heifer and the edge of power in China -- Ritual and the rhythms of ambiguity -- Interlude : crossing the boundaries of empathy -- Shared experience -- Interlude : experience and multiplicity.
     
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  92. Peter Singer (1995/1997). How Are We to Live?: Ethics in an Age of Self-Interest. Oxford University Press.score: 4.0
    B'Imagine that you could choose a book that everyone in the world would read. My choice would be this book.' Roger Crisp, Ethics -/- Many people have an uneasy feeling that they may be missing out on something basic that would give their lives a significance it currently lacks. But how should we live? What is there to stop us behaving selfishly? In a highly readable account which makes reference to a wide variety of sources and everyday issues, Peter Singer (...)
     
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  93. Philip Stokes (2002/2003). Philosophy, 100 Essential Thinkers. Enchanted Lion.score: 4.0
    The Great Philosophers, From Thales of Miletus (ca. 620-540 b.c.), "The first natural scientist and analytical philosopher in Western intellectual history," to W.V.O. Quine (1908-2000): "Only science can tell us the truth about the world" Philosophy is a thorough and accessible introduction to the Western intellectual tradition, covering philosophical, scientific, and religious thought over a period of 2,500 years. Offering brief summaries of the work of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, as well as Copernicus, Machiavelli, Galileo, Spinoza, Voltaire, Adam Smith, Mary (...)
     
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  94. Kate Abramson & Adam Leite (2011). Love as a Reactive Emotion. Philosophical Quarterly 61 (245):673-699.score: 2.0
    One variety of love is familiar in everyday life and qualifies in every reasonable sense as a reactive attitude. ‘Reactive love’ is paradigmatically (a) an affectionate attachment to another person, (b) appropriately felt as a non-self-interested response to particular kinds of morally laudable features of character expressed by the loved one in interaction with the lover, and (c) paradigmatically manifested in certain kinds of acts of goodwill and characteristic affective, desiderative and other motivational responses (including other-regarding concern and a desire (...)
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  95. Adam Sennet (2011). Semantic Plasticity and Epistemicism. Philosophical Studies 161 (2):273-285.score: 2.0
    This paper considers the connections between semantic shiftiness (plasticity), epistemic safety and an epistemic theory of vagueness as presented and defended by Williamson (1996a, b, 1997a, b). Williamson explains ignorance of the precise intension of vague words as rooted in insensitivity to semantic shifts: one’s inability to detect small shifts in intension for a vague word results in a lack of knowledge of the word’s intension. Williamson’s explanation, however, falls short of accounting for ignorance of intension.
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  96. Antti Karjalainen & Adam Morton (2003). Contrastive Knowledge. Philosophical Explorations 6 (2):74 – 89.score: 2.0
    We describe the three place relation of contrastive knowledge, which holds between a person, a target proposition, and a contrasting proposition. The person knows that p rather than that q. We argue for three claims about this relation. (a) Many common sense and philosophical ascriptions of knowledge can be understood in terms of it. (b) Its application is subject to fewer complications than non-contrastive knowledge is. (c) It applies over a wide range of human and nonhuman cases.
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  97. Michael B. Gill (2010). From Cambridge Platonism to Scottish Sentimentalism. Journal of Scottish Philosophy 8 (1):13-31.score: 2.0
    The Cambridge Platonists were a group of religious thinkers who attended and taught at Cambridge from the 1640s until the 1660s. The four most important of them were Benjamin Whichcote, John Smith, Ralph Cudworth, and Henry More. The most prominent sentimentalist moral philosophers of the Scottish Enlightenment – Hutcheson, Hume, and Adam Smith – knew of the works of the Cambridge Platonists. But the Scottish sentimentalists typically referred to the Cambridge Platonists only briefly and in passing. The surface of Hutcheson, (...)
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  98. Ian Evans, Don Fallis, Peter Gross, Terry Horgan, Jenann Ismael, John Pollock, Paul D. Thorn, Jacob N. Caton, Adam Arico, Daniel Sanderman, Orlin Vakerelov, Nathan Ballantyne, Matthew S. Bedke, Brian Fiala & Martin Fricke (2007). An Objectivist Argument for Thirdism. Analysis.score: 2.0
    Bayesians take “definite” or “single-case” probabilities to be basic. Definite probabilities attach to closed formulas or propositions. We write them here using small caps: PROB(P) and PROB(P/Q). Most objective probability theories begin instead with “indefinite” or “general” probabilities (sometimes called “statistical probabilities”). Indefinite probabilities attach to open formulas or propositions. We write indefinite probabilities using lower case “prob” and free variables: prob(Bx/Ax). The indefinite probability of an A being a B is not about any particular A, but rather about the (...)
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