Search results for 'Jeffrey G. Lawrence' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Jeffrey G. Lawrence & Adam C. Retchless (2010). The Myth of Bacterial Species and Speciation. Biology and Philosophy 25 (4):569-588.score: 290.0
    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 As a result, one argues, the Tree of Life becomes confounded as the original branching structure is gradually superseded (...)
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  2. A. W. Lawrence (1951). Greek Altars Constantine G. Yavis: Greek Altars: Origins and Typology. An Archaeological Study in the History of Religion. (St. Louis University Studies, Monograph Series. Humanities, No. 1.) Pp. Xxiii + 266: 93 Ill. St. Louis, Mo.: St. Louis University Press, 1949. Cloth, $6. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 1 (02):112-113.score: 120.0
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  3. A. W. Lawrence (1951). Excavations at Dura-Europos: Final Report IV. Part IV, Fasc. 1: The Bronze Objects. By Teresa G. Frisch and N. P. Toll. Pp. Viii+69; 17 Plates, 14 Figs. Fasc. 2: The Greek and Roman Pottery. By Dorothy Hannah Cox. Pp. Vi+26; 5 Plates, Many Figs. New Haven: Yale University Press (London: Oxford University Press), 1949. Paper, 11s. 6d., 5s. 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 1 (01):56-57.score: 120.0
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  4. A. W. Lawrence (1980). Stephen G. Miller: The Prytaneion. Its Function and Architectural Form. Pp. Xiv + 258; 52 Illustrations on 16 Plates. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 1978. £10·25. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 30 (01):164-165.score: 120.0
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  5. Kurt Marko, K. M. Jensen, M. C. Chapman, Michael M. Boll, Mitchell Aboulafia, Charles E. Ziegler, Trudy Conway, Thomas A. Shipka, Fred Lawrence, James G. Colbert, John W. Murphy, Robert B. Louden & Maureen Henry (1983). Reviews. [REVIEW] Studies in East European Thought 25 (2).score: 120.0
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  6. G. Lawrence (1997). Nonaggregatability, Inclusiveness, and the Theory of Focal Value: Nicomachean Ethics 1.7.1097b16-20. Phronesis 42 (1):32-76.score: 120.0
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  7. G. S. Chung, R. E. Lawrence, F. A. Curlin, V. Arora & D. O. Meltzer (2012). Predictors of Hospitalised Patients' Preferences for Physician-Directed Medical Decision-Making. Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (2):77-82.score: 120.0
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  8. A. W. Lawrence (1950). G. Bakalakis: 'Ελληνικ Τραπεζοφόρα. (University of Mississippi & Johns Hopkins Studies in Archaeology, No. 39.) Pp. 55; 4 Plates, 15 Figs. Salonica: Privately Printed, 1948. Paper, $2.(To Be Obtained From Professor D. M. Robinson, University, Mississippi.). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 64 (01):36-.score: 120.0
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  9. A. W. Lawrence (1932). Sculptured Portraits of Greek Statesmen, with a Special Study of Alexander the Great. By Elmer G. Suhr. (Johns Hopkins University Studies in Archaeology, No. 13.) Pp. Xxi+189; 23 Illustrations on 21 Half-Tone Plates. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1931. 24s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 46 (04):184-.score: 120.0
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  10. Joseph P. Lawrence (1988). Introduction to the Lectures on the History of Philosophy. By G. W. F. Hegel. The Modern Schoolman 65 (4):274-277.score: 120.0
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  11. Joseph P. Lawrence (1988). Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion: Volume I: Introduction and the Concept of Religion. By G. W. F. Hegel. The Modern Schoolman 65 (3):214-215.score: 120.0
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  12. Richard Holmes (1984). Reason in the Age of Science Hans-Georg Gadamer Translated by Frederick G. Lawrence Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1981. Pp. Xxxiii, 179. [REVIEW] Dialogue 23 (01):175-177.score: 42.0
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  13. James M. Giarelli (1976). Lawrence Kohlberg and G. E. Moore on the Naturalistic Fallacy. Educational Theory 26 (4):348-354.score: 36.0
  14. Mark Tushnet (2006). Lawrence G. Sager, Justice in Plain Clothes: A Theory of American Constitutional Practice:Justice in Plain Clothes: A Theory of American Constitutional Practice. Ethics 116 (3):607-611.score: 36.0
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  15. John Luccdea (1959). Book Review:In Search of Man Andre Missenard, Lawrence G. Blochman. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 26 (1):53-.score: 36.0
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  16. Robinson Ellis (1894). Two Editions of Catullus, by Merrill and Owen Catullus. Edited by Elmer Tufsdell Merrill, Rich Professor of Latin in Wesleyan University. Boston : Ginn. 1893. Catullus: With the Pervigilium Veneris. Edited by S. G. Owen. Illustrated by J. R. Weguelin. London : Lawrence and Bullen. 1893. 16s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 8 (1-2):38-40.score: 36.0
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  17. Simeon O. Ilesanmi (2000). Review: Just War Theory in Comparative Perspective: A Review Essay. [REVIEW] Journal of Religious Ethics 28 (1):137 - 155.score: 27.0
    The late twentieth century has provided both reasons and occasions for reassessing just war theory as an organizing framework for the moral analysis of war. Books by G. Scott Davis, James T. Johnson, and John Kelsay, together with essays by Jeffrey Stout, Charles Butterworth, David Little, Bruce Lawrence, Courtney Campbell, and Tamara Sonn, signal a remarkable shift in war studies as they enlarge the cultural lens through which the interests and forces at play in political violence are identified (...)
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  18. Peter G. Woolcock (2012). Are Science and Religion Natural Enemies? Australian Humanist, The (108):1.score: 15.0
    Woolcock, Peter G A topic much exercising the minds of religious believers at the moment is whether or not science and religion are natural enemies. The Religion and Ethics program on the ABC's Radio National, for example, has recently provided access on its website to a series of articles on the topic, with titles such as Science or Naturalism? The Contradictions of Richard Dawkins; Christianity and the Rise of Western Science; Did Darwin Defeat God?; Does Science Make Belief in God (...)
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  19. Suzanne C. Wagner & G. Lawrence Sanders (2001). Considerations in Ethical Decision-Making and Software Piracy. Journal of Business Ethics 29 (1-2):161 - 167.score: 14.0
    Individuals are faced with the many opportunities to pirate. The decision to pirate or not may be related to an individual''s attitudes toward other ethical issues. A person''s ethical and moral predispositions and the judgments that they use to make decisions may be consistent across various ethical dilemmas and may indicate their likelihood to pirate software. This paper investigates the relationship between religion and a theoretical ethical decision making process that an individual uses when evaluating ethical or unethical situations. An (...)
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  20. Jacqueline A. Sullivan (2009). The Multiplicity of Experimental Protocols: A Challenge to Reductionist and Non-Reductionist Models of the Unity of Neuroscience. Synthese 167 (3):511 - 539.score: 12.0
    Descriptive accounts of the nature of explanation in neuroscience and the global goals of such explanation have recently proliferated in the philosophy of neuroscience (e.g., Bechtel, Mental mechanisms: Philosophical perspectives on cognitive neuroscience. New York: Lawrence Erlbaum, 2007; Bickle, Philosophy and neuroscience: A ruthlessly reductive account. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishing, 2003; Bickle, Synthese, 151, 411–434, 2006; Craver, Explaining the brain: Mechanisms and the mosaic unity of neuroscience. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007) and with them new understandings of the <span (...)
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  21. Lawrence J. Mccrea & Parimal G. Patil (2006). Traditionalism and Innovation: Philosophy, Exegesis, and Intellectual History in Jñānaśrīmitra's Apohaprakara A. Journal of Indian Philosophy 34 (4):303-366.score: 12.0
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  22. Lewis A. Kornhauser & Lawrence G. Sager (2004). The Many as One: Integrity and Group Choice in Paradoxical Cases. Philosophy and Public Affairs 32 (3):249–276.score: 12.0
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  23. Christian List & Philip Pettit, On the Many as One.score: 12.0
    In a recent paper on ‘The Many as One’, Lewis A. Kornhauser and Lawrence G. Sager look at an issue that we take to be of great importance in political theory.i How far should groups in public life try to speak with one voice, and act with one mind? How far should public groups try to display what Ronald Dworkin calls integrity?ii We do not expect the many on the market to be integrated in this sense. But should we (...)
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  24. Anthony I. Jack, Consciousness Lost and Found.score: 12.0
    For thirty years, Lawrence Weiskrantz has been at the forefront of experimental research into neurological patients who have ‘lost’ awareness. This book provides a history and an overview of that research; which has focused on ‘blindsight’ patients, who report no visual awareness in part of their visual field, and ‘amnesic’ patients, who have no experience of remembering past events. Yet, the book aims to be much more than a review. Using findings from his patients, and taking in a great (...)
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  25. Lawrence G. Lavengood (2001). Thomas Donaldson and Thomas W. Dunfee, Ties That Bind: A Social Contracts Approach to Business Ethics:Ties That Bind: A Social Contracts Approach to Business Ethics. Ethics 111 (3):627-630.score: 12.0
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  26. Christian List & Philip Pettit (2005). On the Many as One: A Reply to Kornhauser and Sager. Philosophy and Public Affairs 33 (4):377–390.score: 12.0
    In a recent paper on ‘The Many as One’, Lewis A. Kornhauser and Lawrence G. Sager look at an issue that we take to be of great importance in political theory. How far should groups in public life try to speak with one voice, and act with one mind? How far should public groups try to display what Ronald Dworkin calls integrity? We do not expect the many on the market to be integrated in this sense. But should we (...)
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  27. Mary G. Dietz (1992). Book Review:A Truer Liberty: Simone Weil and Marxism. Lawrence A. Blum, Victor J. Seidler; Simone Weil: Waiting on Truth. J. P. Little; Simone Weil: "The Just Balance." Peter Winch. [REVIEW] Ethics 103 (1):184-.score: 12.0
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  28. John Bacon, Alan R. White, M. Glouberman, Lawrence H. Davis, Gershon Weiler, Michael Ruse, Jeffrey Bub, Ilkka Niiniluoto, Yehuda Melzer, Zeev Levy, S. Biderman, Joseph Raz & Irwin C. Lieb (1975). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] Philosophia 5 (3).score: 12.0
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  29. Roger G. Koppl, Robert Kurzban & Lawrence Kobilinsky (2008). Epistemics for Forensics. Episteme 5 (2):141-159.score: 12.0
    Forensic science error rates are needlessly high. Applying the perspective of veritistic social epistemology to forensic science could produce new institutional designs that would lower forensic error rates. We make such an application through experiments in the laboratory with human subjects. Redundancy is the key to error prevention, discovery, and elimination. In the “monopoly epistemics” characterizing forensics today, one privileged actor is asked to identify the truth. In “democratic epistemics,” several independent parties are asked. In an experiment contrasting them, democratic (...)
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  30. James F. Childress, Ruth R. Faden, Ruth D. Gaare, Lawrence O. Gostin, Jeffrey Kahn, Richard J. Bonnie, Nancy E. Kass, Anna C. Mastroianni, Jonathan D. Moreno & Phillip Nieburg (2002). Public Health Ethics: Mapping the Terrain. Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 30 (2):170-178.score: 12.0
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  31. Roger G. Koppl Robert Kurzban Lawrence Kobilinsky (2008). Epistemics for Forensics. Episteme 5 (2):pp. 141-159.score: 12.0
    Forensic science error rates are needlessly high. Applying the perspective of veritistic social epistemology to forensic science could produce new institutional designs that would lower forensic error rates. We make such an application through experiments in the laboratory with human subjects. Redundancy is the key to error prevention, discovery, and elimination. In the “monopoly epistemics” characterizing forensics today, one privileged actor is asked to identify the truth. In “democratic epistemics,” several independent parties are asked. In an experiment contrasting them, democratic (...)
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  32. G. Coedes (1953). Reviews : The Ancient Khmer Empire by Lawrence Palmer Briggs (Volume Xli, Part I. Of the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society) Philadelphia, I95i. Pp. 277 and Index. 97 Ill., Gr. In-. [REVIEW] Diogenes 1 (1):115-118.score: 12.0
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  33. Sita Anantha Raman, Robert Nichols Richard, Joshua Searle-White, Heather T. Frazer, Timothy Lubin, Robin Rinehart, Joel R. Smith, Andrea Pinkney, David Gordon White, John Powers, Phyllis Herman, Lawrence A. Babb, Carl Olson, June McDaniel, Knut A. Jacobsen, John E. Cort, Gregory P. Fields & Jeffrey J. Kripal (2000). Book Reviews and Notices. [REVIEW] International Journal of Hindu Studies 4 (2).score: 12.0
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  34. Lawrence J. Dennis & Peter G. Whitehouse (1977). Music Appreciation: The Confrontation of Social Interest and Aesthetic Experience. Educational Theory 27 (2):141-147.score: 12.0
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  35. Lawrence G. Thomas (1967). Response to the Presidential Address. Educational Theory 17 (4):295-297.score: 12.0
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  36. Lawrence Blum (1992). Between the Human and the Divine: The Political Thought of Simone Weil, by Mary G. Dietz; and Simone Weil: "The Just Balance," by Peter Winch. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 52 (1):246-248.score: 12.0
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  37. Lawrence Blum (1990). Book Review:Between the Human and the Divine: The Political Thought of Simone Weil. Mary G. Dietz. [REVIEW] Ethics 101 (1):196-.score: 12.0
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  38. Calvin G. Normore (1983). Decadence and Objectivity: Ideals for Work in the Post-Consumer Society Lawrence Haworth Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1977. Pp. Xi, 169. $8.50. [REVIEW] Dialogue 22 (04):743-748.score: 12.0
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  39. Lawrence G. Thomas (1956). The Ontology of Experimentalism. Educational Theory 6 (3):177-183.score: 12.0
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  40. G. L. Cawkwell (1978). H. F. Harding: The Speeches of Thucydides. Pp. X + 373. Lawrence, Kansas: Coronado Press, 1973. Paper, $12.5O. The Classical Review 28 (02):346-.score: 12.0
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  41. David G. Ritchie (1897). Book Review:The Principles of International Law. T. J. Lawrence. [REVIEW] Ethics 7 (2):250-.score: 12.0
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  42. Stanley G. French (1965). Christian Philosophy. By Lawrence E. Lynch. Toronto: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1963. 108 Pages. $1.75. (Paperback $1.00).St. Thomas and Philosophy. By Anton C. Pegis. Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 1964. 104 Pages. $2.50. [REVIEW] Dialogue 3 (04):448-450.score: 12.0
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  43. Lawrence O. Gostin & James G. Hodge (2007). Global Health Law, Ethics, and Policy. Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 35 (4):519-525.score: 12.0
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  44. John L. Harrison (1976). Values Clarification: An Appraisal. Journal of Moral Education 6 (1):22-31.score: 12.0
    Abstract The paper presents a critique of the values clarification model as developed by Louis E. Raths and associates in such works as Values and Teaching: Working with Values in the Classroom and Values Clarification: A Handbook of Suggestions. After presenting an overview of the central recommendations of the authors, they are critically evaluated with reference to theoretical considerations and to other models of moral and values education. Values clarification methods are found to rest on untried empirical assumptions and seriously (...)
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  45. Jeffrey Burkhardt (1993). Book Review:A Morally Deep World: An Essay on Moral Significance and Environmental Ethics. Lawrence E. Johnson. [REVIEW] Ethics 103 (2):403-.score: 12.0
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  46. G. B. Kerferd (1956). A Marxist Approach to the Pre-Socratics George Thomson: Studies in Ancient Greek Society. Vol. Ii: The First Greek Philosophers. Pp. 367; 10 Maps. London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1955. Cloth, 27s. 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 6 (3-4):255-257.score: 12.0
  47. R. G. Austin (1938). Greek and Latin Versions (1) W. Shewring: Greek and Latin Versions. Pp. 111. London: Dent, 1938. Cloth, 7s. 6d. (2) Sir Alexander Lawrence: Aliunde: Translations and Verses. Pp. Vii + 118. London: Milford, 1938. Cloth, 5s. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 52 (04):135-137.score: 12.0
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  48. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1999). G.W.F. Hegel--Political Writings. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    This major addition to the series of Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought seeks to give students with no specialist knowledge access to both the practical and the metaphysical aspects of Hegel's political thought. The ethical and metaphysical texts in this collection both illuminate and contrast with those political and historical texts in which Hegel draws important conclusions about the modern world from remarkable comparative analyses of recent developments in England, France and Germany. The translator of these texts, (...)
     
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  49. James G. Hodge, Lawrence O. Gostin, Kristine Gebbie & Deborah L. Erickson (2006). Transforming Public Health Law: The Turning Point Model State Public Health Act. Journal of Law, Medicine Ethics 34 (1):77-84.score: 12.0
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  50. B. J. & Lawrence G. Jones (1976). Reviews. [REVIEW] Studies in East European Thought 16 (1-2).score: 12.0
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  51. Lawrence Haworth (1955). Book Review:Historical Aspects of Organic Evolution Philip G. Fothergill. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 22 (3):237-.score: 12.0
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  52. Isabel Costa Lourenço, Jeffrey Lawrence Callen, Manuel Castelo Branco & José Dias Curto (forthcoming). The Value Relevance of Reputation for Sustainability Leadership. Journal of Business Ethics.score: 12.0
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  53. J. Roland Pennock & John William Chapman (eds.) (1985). Criminal Justice. New York University Press.score: 12.0
    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 (...)
     
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  54. S. P. Rosenbaum (1971). English Literature and British Philosophy. Chicago,University of Chicago Press.score: 12.0
    Fish, S. Georgics of the mind: Bacon's philosophy and the experience of his Essays.--Brett, R. L. Thomas Hobbes.--Watt, I. Realism and the novel.--Tuveson, E. Locke and Sterne.--Kampf, L. Gibbon and Hume.--Frye, N. Blake's case against Locke.--Abrams, M. H. Mechanical and organic psychologies of literary invention.--Ryle, G. Jane Austen and the moralists.--Schneewind, J. B. Moral problems and moral philosophy in the Victorian period.--Donagan, A. Victorian philosophical prose: J. S. Mill and F. H. Bradley.--Pitcher, G. Wittgenstein, nonsense, and Lewis Carroll.--Bolgan, A. C. (...)
     
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  55. Lawrence S. Stepelevich (ed.) (1993). Selected Essays on G.W.F. Hegel. Humanities Press.score: 12.0
     
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  56. Lawrence G. Thomas (1963). Education in Social and Cultural Perspectives. Studies in Philosophy and Education 3 (1):109-118.score: 12.0
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  57. Lawrence G. Thomas (1956). Prospects of Scientific Research Into Values. Educational Theory 6 (4):193-205.score: 12.0
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  58. Lawrence G. Thomas (ed.) (1972). Philosophical Redirection of Educational Research. [Chicago]Nsse; Distributed by the University of Chicago Press.score: 12.0
     
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  59. Lawrence G. Thomas (1956). Reply. Educational Theory 6 (4):213-253.score: 12.0
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  60. John Daniel Wild, James M. Edie, Francis H. Parker & Calvin O. Schrag (eds.) (1970). Patterns of the Life-World. Evanston,Northwestern University Press.score: 12.0
    Insight, by F. H. Parker.--Why be uncritical about the life-world? By H. B. Veatch.--Homage to Saint Anselm, by R. Jordan.--Art and philosophy, by J. M. Anderson.--The phenomenon of world, by R. R. Ehman.--The life-world and its historical horizon, by C. O. Schrag.--The Lebenswelt as ground and as Leib in Husserl: somatology, psychology, sociology, by E. Paci.--Life-world and structures, by C. A. van Peursen.--The miser, by E. W. Straus.--Monetary value and personal value, by G. Schrader.--Individualisms, by W. L. McBride.--Sartre the individualist, (...)
     
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  61. Lawrence A. Shapiro (1996). Representation From Bottom to Top. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 26 (4):523-42.score: 9.0
  62. Robert Richardson & Lawrence A. Shapiro, Evolution Without Adaptation?score: 6.0
    Within a decade or so following publication of Barkow, Cosmides and Tooby’s landmark book The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and the Generation of Culture (1992), evolutionary psychology had bulldozed its way into the public eye. Its topics were sexy, and not just figuratively. Among them were questions about why men prefer nubile women with large breasts, why women prefer broad-chested men who drive fancy automobiles, why men view sexual infidelity as more serious than emotional infidelity while women show the opposite (...)
     
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  63. Lawrence Cahoone (2008). Reduction, Emergence, and Ordinal Physicalism. Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 44 (1):pp. 40-62.score: 6.0
    A metaphysics of the world described by contemporary science faces the problem of the relative ontological status of microphysical constituents (e.g. elementary particles), ultimate mathematical structures (e.g. of the Standard Model and General Relativity), and complex macroscopic systems with their arguably emergent properties. Justus Buchler's ordinal metaphysics, which provides a "view from anywhere" by analyzing whatever is under consideration through its location in an order of relationships, refusing to privilege any type of being, contributes a fresh perspective to this discussion. (...)
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  64. John A. Wood, Justin G. Longenecker, Joseph A. McKinney & Carlos W. Moore (1988). Ethical Attitudes of Students and Business Professionals: A Study of Moral Reasoning. Journal of Business Ethics 7 (4):249 - 257.score: 6.0
    A questionnaire on business ethics was administered to business professionals and to upper-class business ethics students. On eight of the seventeen situations involving ethical dilemmas in business, students were significantly more willing to engage in questionable behavior than were their professional counterparts. Apparently, many students were willing to do whatever was necessary to further their own interests, with little or no regard for fundamental moral principles. Many students and professionals functioned within Lawrence Kohlberg's stage four of moral reasoning, the (...)
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  65. Lawrence A. Shapiro (2004). The Mind Incarnate. MIT Press.score: 6.0
    Shapiro tests these hypotheses against two rivals, the mental constraint thesis and the embodied mind thesis. Collecting evidence from a variety of sources (e.g., neuroscience, evolutionary theory, and embodied cognition) he concludes that the multiple realizability thesis, accepted by most philosophers as a virtual truism, is much less obvious than commonly assumed, and that there is even stronger reason to give up the separability thesis. In contrast to views of mind that tempt us to see the mind as simply being (...)
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  66. Jeffrey Berman (2010). The Talking Cure and the Writing Cure. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 17 (3).score: 6.0
    Few subjects have provoked more speculation or scholarly inquiry than the relationship between creativity and madness—or, in the case of Jason Thompson, the link between memoir writing and depression. Plato theorized that the poet’s madness is divinely inspired, and two thousand years later Sigmund Freud (1928/1961) admitted that “Before the problem of the creative artist analysis must, alas lay down its arms” (p. 177)—a cautionary injunction he then disregards. Should authors heed Thompson’s prudent advice not to write about present traumas, (...)
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  67. Lawrence Alexander (1984). Reiman's Libertarian Interpretation of Rawls' Difference Principle. Philosophy Research Archives 10:13-18.score: 6.0
    John Rawls’ Difference Principle, which requires that primary goods--income, wealth, and opportunities--be distributed so as to maximize the primary goods of the least advantaged class, has both a libertarian and a welfarist interpretation. The welfarist interpretation, which fits somewhat more easily with Rawls’ method for deriving principles of justice--rational contractors choosing principles behind the veil of ignorance--and with Rawls’ contention that there is a natural affirmative duty to aid others and to help establish and maintain just institutions, is the orthodox (...)
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  68. Gil G. Noam (1988). Self‐Complexity and Self‐Integration: Theory and Therapy in Clinical‐Developmental Psychology. Journal of Moral Education 17 (3):230-245.score: 6.0
    Abstract The growing field of clinical?developmental psychology has been influenced by Lawrence Kohlberg's theory of moral judgement. Too literal a use of structural theory, however, has hindered this field's advancement. This paper argues that a new theory of self is required to apply appropriately developmental theory to clinical practice. The model consists of two related dimensions of self: self?complexity and biographical themes (schemata and themata). A perspective on normal and atypical development given by the interactions between these components is (...)
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  69. Lawrence Busch (2002). The Homiletics of Risk. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 15 (1):17-29.score: 6.0
    Today there is considerable disagreement between the US and the EU with respect to food safety standards. Issues include GMOs, beef hormones, unpasteurized cheese, etc. In general, it is usually asserted that Europeans argue for the precautionary principle (with exceptions such as the Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement where ``substantial equivalence,'' a form of familiarity, is used) while Americans defend risk analysis or what is sometimes described as the familiarityprinciple. This is not to suggest that EUmember countries agree on how the (...)
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  70. Lawrence Hammar (1997). The Dark Side to Donovanosis: Color, Climate, Race and Racism in American South Venereology. Journal of Medical Humanities 18 (1):29-57.score: 6.0
    Medical experimentation on humans with classic sexually transmitted diseases (e.g., syphilis, gonorrhea) is not generally well known, but experimentation with others such as Granuloma inguinale, or Donovanosis, is even less so. Endemic to non-existent here, hyper-epidemic there, between 1880 and 1950 Donovanosis was linguistically and morally constructed as a disease of poor, sexually profligate, tropical, darkly-skinned persons. It was also experimentally produced on and in African-American patients in many charity hospitals in the American South. This essay analyzes Donovanosis literature of (...)
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  71. Lawrence C. Becker (2012). Habilitation, Health, and Agency: A Framework for Basic Justice. Oxford University Press.score: 6.0
    This book argues for adopting a new account of the circumstances of justice ("the habilitation framework") for philosophical theories of basic justice. It proposes a concept of basic health as a metric for such theories, and healthy agency as a target for them. It does not, however, propose a specific distributive rule or set of distributive principles. Nor does it propose a specific type of theory to pursue (e.g., utilitarian, contractarian, etc.). The book is thus meant to be largely theory-independent (...)
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  72. Bernard G. Prusak (2005). The Ancients, the Moderns, and the Court. Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 79:189-200.score: 6.0
    This paper examines the case of Lawrence v. Texas to bring out the philosophical commitments of Justices Anthony Kennedy and Antonin Scalia. It is proposed that Justices Kennedy and Scalia, while both Catholics, represent fundamentally different visions of the “ends and reasons” of democratic law. A close reading of the Justices’ opinions in Lawrence indicates that Justice Scalia belongs to the tradition of the “ancients” and Justice Kennedy to the tradition of the “moderns.” The paper focuses in particular (...)
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