Search results for 'Jonathan Schonscheck' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Jonathan Schonscheck (1997). Privacy and Discrete "Social Spheres". Ethics and Behavior 7 (3):221 – 228.score: 120.0
    To be human is to be engaged in relationships of friendship, trust, and love. These relationships cannot flourish unless information essential to each relationship is kept within the confines of that relationship--unless the individuals involved have knowledge of, and control over, the information about themselves that is available within their particular relationships. This knowledge of and control over information about oneself is the core of "privacy"; privacy's role in maintaining relationships explains its importance to us. Technological advances in computing have (...)
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  2. Ruth Jonathan (2000). Cultural Diversity and Public Education: Reasonable Negotiation and Hard Cases. Journal of Philosophy of Education 34 (2):377–393.score: 30.0
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  3. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Educational 'Goods': Value and Benefit. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):59–82.score: 30.0
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  4. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Liberalism and Education. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):181–216.score: 30.0
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  5. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Bibliography. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):217–220.score: 30.0
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  6. Ruth Jonathan (1985). Education, Philosophy of Education and Context. Journal of Philosophy of Education 19 (1):13–25.score: 30.0
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  7. Ruth Jonathan (1990). State Education Service or Prisoner's Dilemma: The 'Hidden Hand' as Source of Education Policy. Educational Philosophy and Theory 22 (1):16–24.score: 30.0
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  8. Ruth Jonathan (1993). Educating the Virtues: A Problem in the Social Development of Consciousness? Journal of Philosophy of Education 27 (1):115–124.score: 30.0
  9. Ruth Jonathan (1995). Liberal Philosophy of Education: A Paradigm Under Strain. Journal of Philosophy of Education 29 (1):93–107.score: 30.0
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  10. Ruth Jonathan & Nigel Blake (1988). Philosophy in Schools: A Request for Clarification. Journal of Philosophy of Education 22 (2):221–227.score: 30.0
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  11. Ruth Jonathan (1993). Education, Philosophy of Education and the Fragmentation of Value. Journal of Philosophy of Education 27 (2):171–178.score: 30.0
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  12. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Introduction. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):1–12.score: 30.0
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  13. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Re-Ordering Society: Re-Forming Education. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):13–29.score: 30.0
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  14. Ruth Jonathan (1995). Education and Moral Development: The Role of Reason and Circumstance. Journal of Philosophy of Education 29 (3):333–353.score: 30.0
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  15. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Freedom and the Individual. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):109–141.score: 30.0
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  16. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Right and Choices: Illusory Freedoms. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):83–107.score: 30.0
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  17. Ruth Jonathan (1989). Gender Socialisation and the Nature/Culture Controversy: The Dualist's Dilemma. Educational Philosophy and Theory 21 (2):40–48.score: 30.0
  18. Ruth M. Jonathan (1982). Two Concepts of Education? A Reply to D. J. O'Connor. Journal of Philosophy of Education 16 (2):147–154.score: 30.0
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  19. Ruth Jonathan (1987). What is an Educational Practice? A Reply to Wilfred Carr. Journal of Philosophy of Education 21 (2):177–180.score: 30.0
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  20. Ruth M. Jonathan (1983). Education in a Destitute Time[1]. (A Heideggarian Approach to the Problem of Education in the Age of Modern Technology). Journal of Philosophy of Education 17 (1):21–33.score: 30.0
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  21. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Reform: Rhetoric, Rationale and Representation. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):31–57.score: 30.0
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  22. Ruth Jonathan (1986). Cultural Elitism Explored: G. H. Bantock's Educational Theory. Journal of Philosophy of Education 20 (2):265–277.score: 30.0
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  23. Ruth M. Jonathan (1983). Education, Gender and the Nature/Culture Controversy. Journal of Philosophy of Education 17 (1):5–20.score: 30.0
  24. Ruth Jonathan (1997). Persons and Their Preferences. Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (1):143–179.score: 30.0
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  25. Jonathan Edwards (2009). Jonathan Edwards, Freedom of the Will, The Works of Jonathan Edward, Vol. I. Yale University Press.score: 21.0
    Presents an analysis of Jonathan Edwards' theological position. This book includes a study of his life and the intellectual issues in the America of his time, and examines the problem of free will in connection with Leibniz, Locke, and Hume.
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  26. Jonathan Edwards (1995). A Jonathan Edwards Reader. Yale University Press.score: 21.0
    Prepared by editors of the distinguished series The Works of Jonathan Edwards, this authoritative anthology includes selected treatises, sermons, and autobiographical material by early America’s greatest theologian and philosopher.
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  27. William Wainwright, Jonathan Edwards. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 18.0
    Jonathan Edwards (1703–1758) is widely acknowledged to be America's most important and original philosophical theologian. His work as a whole is an expression of two themes — the absolute sovereignty of God and the beauty of God's holiness. The first is articulated in Edwards' defense of theological determinism, in a doctrine of occasionalism, and in his insistence that physical objects are only collections of sensible “ideas” while finite minds are mere assemblages of “thoughts” or “perceptions.” As the only real (...)
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  28. María G. Navarro (2011). Review of 'Reasoning. Studies of Human Inference and Its Foundations' by Jonathan E. Adler and Lance J. Rips. [REVIEW] Anuario Filosófico 44 (3):629-632.score: 15.0
  29. Jonathan L. Kvanvig (2003). ``Jonathan Edwards on Hell&Quot. In Paul Helm & Oliver Crisp (eds.), Jonathan Edwards: Philosophical Theologian. Burlington, Vt: Ashgate Publishing Co..score: 15.0
     
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  30. Oliver D. Crisp (2003). Jonathan Edwards on Divine Simplicity. Religious Studies 39 (1):23-41.score: 12.0
    In this article I assess the coherence of Jonathan Edwards's doctrine of divine simplicity as an instance of an actus purus account of perfect-being theology. Edwards's view is an idiosyncratic version of this doctrine. This is due to a number of factors including his idealism and the Trinitarian context from which he developed his notion of simplicity. These complicating factors lead to a number of serious problems for his account, particularly with respect to the opera extra sunt indivisa principle. (...)
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  31. Jonathan Bricklin & W. James (2005). William James: The Notion of Consciousness --Communication Made (in French) at the 5th International Congress of Psychology, Rome, 30 April (a New Translation by Jonathan Bricklin). [REVIEW] Journal of Consciousness Studies 12 (7):55-64.score: 12.0
    I should like to convey to you some doubts which have occurred to me on the subject of the notion of consciousness that prevails in all our treatises on psychology.
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  32. H. G. Callaway (2011). Witherspoon, Edwards and 'Christian Magnanimity'. In K. P. Minkema, A. Neele & K. van Andel (eds.), Jonathan Edwards and Scotland. Dunedin Academic Press.score: 12.0
    This paper focuses on John Witherspoon (1723-1794) and the religious background of the American conception of religious liberty and church-state separation, as found in the First Amendment. Witherspoon was strongly influenced by debates and conflicts concerning liberty of conscience and the independence of the congregations in his native Scotland; and he brought to his work, as President of the (Presbyterian) College of New Jersey, a moderate Calvinism challenging the conception of “true virtue” found in Jonathan Edwards. Witherspoon was teacher (...)
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  33. Richard Moran, Comments on Jonathan Lear‟s Tanner Lectures November 2009 Harvard University.score: 12.0
    In an 1896 letter to Wilhelm Fliess, the first and primary confidante for his fledgling ideas, the young Sigmund Freud wrote: “I see that you are using the circuitous route of medicine to attain your first ideal, the physiological understanding of man, while I secretly nurse the hope of arriving by the same route at my own original objective, philosophy. For that was my original ambition, before I knew what I was intended to do in the world.”1 When philosophy is (...)
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  34. Andreas Lind & Johan Brännmark (2008). Particularism in Question: An Interview with Jonathan Dancy. Theoria 74 (1):3-17.score: 12.0
    Jonathan Dancy works within almost all fields of philosophy but is best known as the leading proponent of moral particularism. Particularism challenges “traditional” moral theories, such as Contractualism, Kantianism and Utilitarianism, in that it denies that moral thought and judgement relies upon, or is made possible by, a set of more or less well-defined, hierarchical principles. During the summer of 2006, the Philosophy Departments of Lund University (Sweden) and the University of Reading (England) began a series of exchanges to (...)
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  35. E. J. Coffman (forthcoming). Critical Notice of Jonathan Sutton, Without Justification. Philosophical Books.score: 12.0
    In Without Justification,[1] Jonathan Sutton undermines the orthodox view that a justified belief needn’t constitute knowledge; develops a battery of arguments for the unorthodox thesis that you justifiedly believe P iff you know P; and explores the topics of testimony and inference in light of his equation of justification and knowledge (J=K). This book is essential reading at epistemology’s cutting edge. In §I, we’ll take an extended tour of the book, raising various questions and objections along the way. In (...)
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  36. N. Ann Davis, Richard Keshen & Jeff McMahan (eds.) (2010). Ethics and Humanity: Themes From the Philosophy of Jonathan Glover. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
    Ethics and Humanity pays to tribute to Jonathan Glover, a pioneering figure whose thought and personal influence have had a significant impact on applied ...
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  37. Jasper William Reid (2003). Jonathan Edwards on Space and God. Journal of the History of Philosophy 41 (3):385-403.score: 12.0
    : This paper examines how Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) shifted from a broadly Newtonian conception of divine, absolute space to a more Berkeleian or Leibnizian theory of merely relative, ideal space. Setting Edwards' views within a context of contemporary European thought, it elucidates his early position, as expressed in the opening portion of his essay 'Of Being' (c. 1721), and then proceeds to chart the development of his more mature views, showing in particular how the development of his immaterialism during (...)
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  38. William Wainwright (2010). Jonathan Edwards, God, and “Particular Minds”. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 68 (1):201-213.score: 12.0
    Although philosophical theologians have sometimes claimed that human beings are necessarily dependent on God, few have developed the idea with any precision. Jonathan Edwards is a notable exception, providing a detailed and often novel account of humanity’s essential ontological, moral, and soteriological dependence on God.
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  39. Ki Joo Choi (2010). The Role of Perception in Jonathan Edwards's Moral Thought: The Nature of True Virtue Reconsidered. Journal of Religious Ethics 38 (2):269-296.score: 12.0
    This essay provides an interpretation of Jonathan Edwards's moral thought that calls attention to the motif of perception in his conception of true virtue. The aim is to illumine the extent to which Edwards's virtue ethics can be included in and contribute to prevailing approaches to virtue in contemporary theological ethics. To advance this proposal, this essay attends to the question of moral agency that Edwards's reflections on charity, the new spiritual sense, and religious affections raise. This procedure offers (...)
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  40. Ryan D. Tweney & Amy B. Wachholtz (2004). Wegner's “Illusion” Anticipated: Jonathan Edwards on the Will. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (5):676-676.score: 12.0
    Wegner's The Illusion of Conscious Will (2002) ignores an important aspect of the history of the concept: the determinism of Jonathan Edwards (1754) and the later response to this determinism by William James and others. We argue that Edwards's formulation, and James's resolution of the resulting dilemma, are superior to Wegner's.
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  41. Jonathan Kozol (1993). Savage Inequalities: An Interview with Jonathan Kozol. Educational Theory 43 (1):55-70.score: 12.0
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  42. Philip L. Quinn (2003). Honoring Jonathan Edwards. Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (2):299 - 321.score: 12.0
    In this response to the papers on Jonathan Edwards's ethical thought by Stephen A. Wilson, Gerald R. McDermott, William C. Spohn, and Roland A. Delattre, I comment on their efforts to show that ideas drawn from Edwards can be successfully appropriated for use in contemporary ethics. I conclude that the four authors build a strong cumulative case for the view that some elements of Edwards's thought can serve as resources for our ethical reflections. But I also argue for a (...)
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  43. Charles B. Cross (1985). Jonathan Bennett on 'Even If'. Linguistics and Philosophy 8 (3):353-357.score: 12.0
    I show that given Jonathan Bennett's theory of 'even if,' the following statement is logically true iff the principle of conditional excluded is valid: (SE) If Q and if P wouldn't rule out Q, then Q even if P. Hence whatever intuitions support the validity of (SE) support the validity of Conditional Excluded Middle, too. Finally I show that Bennett's objection to John Bigelow's theory of the conditional can be turned into a (perhaps) more telling one, viz. that on (...)
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  44. James P. Danaher (2001). David Hume and Jonathan Edwards on Miracles and Religious Faith. Southwest Philosophy Review 17 (2):13-24.score: 12.0
    David Hume (1711-1776) and Jonathan Edwards (1703- 1758) had very different reputations concerning the Christian faith. In spite of this, they both had very similar positions concerning miracles and the supernatural. It is argued that although Hume rejects one type of miracle, he acknowledges another type. Edwards does essentially the same thing and rejects the same kind of miracle that Hume rejects, while acknowledging the kind of miracles that Hume acknowledges.
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  45. Elizabeth Agnew Cochran (2011). Consent, Conversion, and Moral Formation: Stoic Elements in Jonathan Edwards's Ethics. Journal of Religious Ethics 39 (4):623-650.score: 12.0
    The contemporary revival of virtue ethics has focused primarily on retrieving central moral commitments of Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, and the Neoplatonist traditions. Christian virtue ethicists would do well to expand this retrieval further to include the writings of the Roman Stoics. This essay argues that the ethics of Jonathan Edwards exemplifies major Stoic themes and explores three noteworthy points of intersection between Stoic ethics and Edwards's thought: a conception of virtue as consent to a benevolent providence, the identification of (...)
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  46. Sang Hyun Lee (2000). The Philosophical Theology of Jonathan Edwards. Princeton University Press.score: 12.0
    This book demonstrates the originality and coherence of Jonathan Edwards' philosophical theology using his dynamic reconception of reality as the interpretive key. The author argues that what underlies Edwards' writings is a radical shift from the traditional Western metaphysics of substance and form to a new conception of the world as a network of dispositions: active and abiding principles that possess reality apart from their manifestations in actions and events. Edwards' dispositional ontology enables him to restate the Augustinian-Calvinist tradition (...)
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  47. Nancy Sherman (2009). The Fate of a Warrior Culture: Nancy Sherman on Jonathan Lear's "Radical Hope" (Harvard: 2006). Philosophical Studies 144 (1):71 - 80.score: 12.0
    Jonathan Lear in "Radical Hope" tackles the idea of cultural devastation, in the specific case of the Crow Indians. What do we mean by "annihilation" of a culture? The moral point of view that he imagines as he reconstructs the eve and aftermath of this annihilation is not second personal, of obligation, but first personal, in the collective and singular, as told by the Crows, with Lear as "analyst." "Radical Hope" is a study of representative character of a people—of (...)
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  48. Dirk Haubrich, 'Economism and its Limits' Dirk Haubrich and Jonathan Wolff.score: 12.0
    Jonathan Wolff is Professor of Philosophy at University College London. He is the author of Robert Nozick (1991), An Introduction to Political Philosophy (1996) and Why Read Marx Today (2002). He is currently working on a number of topics at the intersection of political philosophy and public policy.
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  49. Jasper Reid (2006). The Metaphysics of Jonathan Edwards and David Hume. Hume Studies 32 (1):53-82.score: 12.0
    This article compares Hume’s metaphysical views with those of his contemporary, the American theologian and philosopher, Jonathan Edwards. It shows how, although the two men developed their theories in isolation from one another, their minds were nevertheless following almost identical paths on several of the most central issues in metaphysics (including the natures of body and mind, personal identity, causation, and free will). Their final conclusions were, however, radically different. In short, wherever Hume came to rest in a skeptical (...)
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  50. Stephen A. Wilson (2003). Jonathan Edwards's Virtue: Diverse Sources, Multiple Meanings, and the Lessons of History for Ethics. Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (2):201 - 228.score: 12.0
    The incompleteness of the task of integrating the influences made upon Jonathan Edwards by Calvinism and the moral sense leaves open a great many questions central to identifying his ethical position with any detail. This should worry ethicists, theologians, and church historians alike. For the puzzle of what Edwards meant by virtue is at the heart not only of his ethics but of a great many strands of his thought. It must be pieced together from diverse sources; and there (...)
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  51. Leon Chai (1998). Jonathan Edwards and the Limits of Enlightenment Philosophy. OUP USA.score: 12.0
    Jonathan Edwards has most often been considered in the context of the Puritanism of New England. In many ways, however, he was closer to the thinkers of the European Enlightenment. In this book. Leon Chai explores that connection, analysing Edwards's thought in light of a number of the issues that preoccupied such Enlightenment figures as Locke, Descartes, Malebranche, and Leibniz. The book comprises three parts, each of which begins with a detailed analysis of a crucial passage from a classic (...)
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  52. William C. Spohn (2003). Spirituality and Its Discontents: Practices in Jonathan Edwards's "Charity and Its Fruits". Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (2):253 - 276.score: 12.0
    The contemporary interest in spiritual experience has some theological and ethical ambiguity. To what extent does it reflect genuine engagement with the sacred, to what extent is it dabbling in experience without adequate interpretation or moral commitment? Jonathan Edwards faced similar challenges in his sermons on 1 Cor 13, "Charity and Its Fruits". Alasdair Maclntyre and Pierre Hadot have explored the constitutive role of practices in forming of virtues and transmitting a way of life. Their writings help show the (...)
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  53. George B. Kauffman (2012). Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent and Jonathan Simon: Chemistry, the Impure Science. Foundations of Chemistry 14 (1):97-98.score: 12.0
    Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent and Jonathan Simon: Chemistry, the impure science Content Type Journal Article Category Book Review Pages 1-2 DOI 10.1007/s10698-011-9132-y Authors George B. Kauffman, Department of Chemistry, California State University, Fresno, Fresno, CA 93740-8034, USA Journal Foundations of Chemistry Online ISSN 1572-8463 Print ISSN 1386-4238.
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  54. Jonathan L. Kvanvig (1984). Comment: Jonathan L. Kvanvig. Southwest Philosophy Review 1:182-186.score: 12.0
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  55. Jonathan Barnes, Benjamin Morison & Katerina Ierodiakonou (eds.) (2011). Episteme, Etc.: Essays in Honour of Jonathan Barnes. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
     
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  56. Jonathan Edwards (1955/1972). The Philosophy of Jonathan Edwards From His Private Notebooks. Westport, Conn.,Greenwood Press.score: 12.0
  57. Jonathan Edwards (1957). The Works of Jonathan Edwards. Yale University Press.score: 12.0
    v. 1. Freedom of the will -- v. 2. Religious affections -- v. 3. Original sin -- v. 4. The Great Awakening -- v. 5. Apocalyptic writings -- v. 6. Scientific and philosophical writings -- v. 7. The life of David Brainerd -- v. 8. Ethical writings -- v. 9. A history of the work of redemption -- v. 10. Sermons and discourses, 1720-1723 -- v. 13. The "miscellanies" (entry nos. a-z, aa-zz, 1-500) -- v. 15. Notes on Scripture -- (...)
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  58. Jonathan Kvanvig, “Five Questions” by Jonathan L. Kvanvig.score: 12.0
    I came to epistemology through an interest in the concept of rationality, and especially through the attacks on the rationality of religious believers. My thoughts at the time focused on the disappointing quality of the arguments for and against religious belief, and I recall being astonished at the time that philosophers capable of such penetrating insight in other areas had nothing that seemed either penetrating or original. The defenders sounded too much like mere apologists for the faith, and the attackers (...)
     
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  59. Jonathan Kvanvig, Jonathan Edwards on Hell.score: 12.0
    Every religion offers both hope and fear. They offer hope in virtue of the benefits promised to adherents, and fear in virtue of costs incurred by adversaries. In traditional Christianity, the costs incurred are expressed in terms of the doctrine of hell, according to which each person consigned to hell receives the same infinite punishment. This strong view of hell involves four distinct theses. First, it maintains that those in hell exist forever in that state (the Existence Thesis) and that (...)
     
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  60. Jonathan Kvanvig, Omniscience and Eternity: A Reply to Craig Jonathan L. Kvanvig.score: 12.0
    Craig claims that my treatment of temporal indexicals such as ‘now’ is inadequate, and that my theory gives no general account of tense. Craig’s argument misunderstands the theory of indexicals I give, and I show how to extend the theory to give a general account of tense.
     
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  61. K. Manktelow, D. E. Over & S. Elqayam (eds.) (2011). The Science of Reason: A Festschrift for Jonathan St B.T. Evans. Psychology Press.score: 12.0
    This volume is a state-of-the-art survey of the psychology of reasoning, based around, and in tribute to, one of the field "s most eminent figures: Jonathan St B.T. Evans.
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  62. Jonathan H. Marks (2008). Review of Jonathan Moreno. Mind Wars: Brain Research and National Defense. [REVIEW] American Journal of Bioethics 8 (2):50 – 51.score: 12.0
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  63. Ben Morison & Katerina Ierodiakonou (eds.) (2011). Episteme, Etc.: Essays in Honour of Jonathan Barnes. OUP Oxford.score: 12.0
    The sixteen essays written in honour of Jonathan Barnes for this volume reflect the impressive scope of his contributions to philosophy. Six are on knowledge, five on logic and metaphysics, five on ethics. The volume ranges widely over ancient philosophy, while also finding room for two contemporary papers on truth and vagueness. Aristotle is prominent in eight of the essays; Plato, Sextus Empiricus, the Stoics, the Epicureans, and ancient Greek medical writers are also discussed. The contributors include some of (...)
     
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  64. Alan Ryan (2009). Jonathan Glover. In N. Ann Davis, Richard Keshen & Jeff McMahan (eds.), Ethics and Humanity: Themes From the Philosophy of Jonathan Glover. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
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  65. Alan Ryan (2010). Part VI: Personal. Jonathan Glover. In N. Ann Davis, Richard Keshen & Jeff McMahan (eds.), Ethics and Humanity: Themes From the Philosophy of Jonathan Glover. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
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  66. Jonathan Z. Smith, Willi Braun & Russell T. McCutcheon (eds.) (2008). Introducing Religion: Essays in Honor of Jonathan Z. Smith. Equinox Pub..score: 12.0
     
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  67. Jonathan Ichikawa (2011). Experimentalist Pressure Against Traditional Methodology. Philosophical Psychology 25 (5):743 - 765.score: 9.0
    According to some critics, traditional armchair philosophical methodology relies in an illicit way on intuitions. But the particular structure of the critique is not often carefully articulated?a significant omission, since some of the critics? arguments for skepticism about philosophy threaten to generalize to skepticism in general. More recently, some experimentalist critics have attempted to articulate a critique that is especially tailored to affect traditional methods, without generalizing too widely. Such critiques are more reasonable, and more worthy of serious consideration, than (...)
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  68. Hubert L. Dreyfus (2009). Comments on Jonathan Lear's Radical Hope (Harvard: 2006). Philosophical Studies 144 (1):63 - 70.score: 9.0
    Cultural devastation, and the proper response to it, is the central concern of "Radical Hope". I address an uncertainty in Lear's book, reflected in a wavering over the difference between a culture's way of life becoming impossible and its way of life becoming unintelligible. At his best, Lear asks the radical ontological question: when the cultural collapse is such that the old way of life has become not only impossible but retroactively unimaginable,—when nothing one can do (or did) makes sense (...)
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  69. Amit Hagar (2010). Review of Simon Saunders, Jonathan Barrett, Adrian Kent, David Wallace (Eds.), Many Worlds? Everett, Quantum Theory, and Reality. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (10).score: 9.0
    Hugh Everett III died of a heart attack in July 1982 at the age of 51. Almost 26 years later, a New York Times obituary for his PhD advisor, John Wheeler, mentioned him and Richard Feynman as Wheeler’s most prominent students. Everett’s PhD thesis on the relative state formulation of quantum mechanics, later known as the “Many Worlds Interpretation”, was published (in its edited form) in 1957, and later (in its original, unedited form) in 1973, and since then has given (...)
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  70. Nicholas Unwin (1996). The Individuation of Events. Mind 105 (418):315-330.score: 9.0
    It is argued that current solutions to the question of how to individuate events do not work. Jonathan Bennett's thesis that the indeterminacy here is only semantic, not ontological, is refuted. An alternative account of why events resemble facts (although their identity criteria are less fine-grained) is defended.
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  71. Amedeo Giorgi (2011). IPA and Science: A Response to Jonathan Smith. Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 42 (2):195-216.score: 9.0
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  72. David Benatar (2007). Jonathan Glover, Choosing Children: The Ethical Dilemmas of Genetic Intervention. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 10 (2).score: 9.0
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  73. Alastair Wilson (forthcoming). Schaffer on Laws of Nature. Philosophical Studies.score: 9.0
    In 'Quiddistic Knowledge' (Schaffer [2005]), Jonathan Schaffer argued influentially against the view that the laws of nature are metaphysically necessary. In this reply I aim to show how a coherent and well-motivated form of necessitarianism can withstand his critique. Modal necessitarianism -- the view that the actual laws are the laws of all possible worlds -- can do justice to some intuitive motivations for necessitarianism, and it has the resources to respond to all of Schaffer's objections. It also has (...)
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  74. Uwe Steinhoff, Firth and Quong on Liability to Defensive Harm: A Critique.score: 9.0
    Joanna Mary Firth and Jonathan Quong argue that both an instrumental account of liability to defensive harm, according to which an aggressor can only be liable to defensive harms that are necessary to avert the threat he poses, and a purely noninstrumental account which completely jettisons the necessity condition, lead to very counterintuitive implications. To remedy this situation, they offer a “pluralist” account and base it on a distinction between “agency rights” and a “humanitarian right.” I argue, first, that (...)
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  75. Rebecca Roache (2008). Choosing Children: The Ethical Dilemmas of Genetic Intervention - by Jonathan Glover. Philosophical Books 49 (1):76-78.score: 9.0
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  76. Nathan Segars (2006). The Will and Evidence Toward Belief: A Critical Essay on Jonathan E. Adler's Belief's Own Ethics. Social Epistemology 20 (1):79 – 91.score: 9.0
    In this paper, I take a critical look at Adler's conceptual argument against doxastic voluntarism in his book, Belief's Own Ethics. In making his case, Adler defends evidentialism as the true version of how beliefs are acquired. That is, the will has no direct influence on belief. After a careful exposition of the argument itself, focus is placed on Adler's response to a particularly troubling objection to the form of evidentialism that results: Can evidentialism allow that doubt may be simultaneous (...)
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  77. Oliver D. Crisp (2010). Jonathan Edwards's Ontology: A Critique of Sang Hyun Lee's Dispositional Account of Edwardsian Metaphysics. Religious Studies 46 (1):1-20.score: 9.0
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  78. Mark Schroeder (2009). Jonathan Dancy. Ethics Without Principles (Oxford University Press, 2004)Sean McKeever and Michael Ridge. Principled Ethics (Oxford University Press, 2006). [REVIEW] Noûs 43 (3):568-580.score: 9.0
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  79. A. Marmodoro (2011). Doing and Being: An Interpretation of Aristotle's Metaphysics Theta, by Jonathan Beere. Mind 119 (476):1138-1141.score: 9.0
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  80. Anca Gheaus (2010). Review of Jonathan Wolff and Avner de-Shalit Disadvantage. [REVIEW] Journal of Moral Philosophy 7 (1):148-50.score: 9.0
  81. Nicholas Denyer (2008). Truth, Etc.: Six Lectures on Ancient Logic – Jonathan Barnes. Philosophical Quarterly 58 (230):176–177.score: 9.0
  82. Michael R. Depaul & Stephen R. Grimm (2007). Review Essay on Jonathan Kvanvig's the Value of Knowledge and the Pursuit of Understanding. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 74 (2):498–514.score: 9.0
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  83. Peter Lewis (2012). Simon Saunders , Jonathan Barrett , Adrian Kent , and David Wallace , Many Worlds? Everett, Quantum Theory, and Reality . Oxford: Oxford University Press (2010), 618 Pp., $99.00. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 79 (1):177-181.score: 9.0
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  84. Fredrik Stjernberg (2008). The Knowability Paradox – by Jonathan Kvanvig. Theoria 74 (3):255-262.score: 9.0
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  85. Daniel Halliday (2011). Book Review: Jonathan Wolff, 'Ethics and Public Policy: A Philosophical Inquiry'. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2011.12.16).score: 9.0
  86. R. T. Cook (2012). The Force of Argument: Essays in Honor of Timothy Smiley * Edited by Jonathan Lear and Alex Oliver. Analysis 72 (1):175-177.score: 9.0
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  87. Mark Schroeder (2009). Review: A Matter of Principle. [REVIEW] Noûs 43 (3):568 - 580.score: 9.0
    This article is a joint critical notice of Sean McKeever and Michael Ridge's book Principled Ethics and Jonathan Dancy's book Ethics Without Principles.
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  88. A. C. Baier (2012). Meaning in Life and Why It Matters, by Susan Wolf, with an Introduction by Stephen Macedo, Comments by John Koethe, Robert M. Adams, Nomy Arpaly, and Jonathan Haidt, and Responses by Susan Wolf. Mind 120 (480):1330-1331.score: 9.0
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  89. Paul Helm (1969). John Locke and Jonathan Edwards: A Reconsideration. Journal of the History of Philosophy 7 (1):51-61.score: 9.0
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  90. Daniel Garber (1985). Book Review:A Study of Spinoza's Ethics. Jonathan Bennett. [REVIEW] Ethics 95 (4):961-.score: 9.0
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  91. 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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  92. Mark Jago (2009). Review: Jonathan A. Waskan: Models and Cognition. [REVIEW] Mind 118 (469):220-225.score: 9.0
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  93. Daniel Kahneman & Amos Tversky (1979). On the Interpretation of Intuitive Probability: A Reply to Jonathan Cohen. Cognition 7 (December):409-11.score: 9.0
  94. Mark Lance & Matthew McAdam (2005). Jonathan Dancy, Practical Reality:Practical Reality. Ethics 115 (2):393-396.score: 9.0
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  95. Samuel Scheffler (1989). Deontology and the Agent: A Reply to Jonathan Bennett. Ethics 100 (1):67-76.score: 9.0
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  96. Ingvar Johansson (2006). The Four-Category Ontology. A Metaphysical Foundation for Natural Science – E. Jonathan Lowe. Dialectica 60 (4):513–518.score: 9.0
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  97. Steven L. Ross (1984). Book Review:Imagining Religion: From Babylon to Jonestown. Jonathan Z. Smith. [REVIEW] Ethics 95 (1):169-.score: 9.0
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  98. Alan Ryan (1992). Book Review: Robert Nozick: Property, Justice, and the Minimal State. Jonathan Wolff. [REVIEW] Ethics 103 (1):154-.score: 9.0
  99. Keith Allen (2011). The Red and the Real: An Essay on Color Ontology, By Jonathan Cohen. European Journal of Philosophy 19 (2):315-318.score: 9.0
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  100. Peter Cave (2009). Reviews Truth, Etc. By Jonathan Barnes Clarendon Press, 2007. Philosophy 84 (3):463-467.score: 9.0
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