Search results for 'Juan Cole' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Jeffrey Cole (1990). Book Review: Media Ethics in the Newsroom and Beyond: A Book Review by Jeffrey Cole. [REVIEW] Journal of Mass Media Ethics 5 (1):63 – 65.score: 120.0
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  2. Juan Cole (2005). The Reelection of Bush and the Fate of Iraq. Constellations 12 (2):164-172.score: 120.0
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  3. Oliver Sacks, Jonathan Cole & Ian Waterman (2000). On the Immunity Principle: A View From a Robot. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4 (5).score: 60.0
    Preprint of Cole, Sacks, and Waterman. 2000. "On the immunity principle: A view from a robot." Trends in Cognitive Science 4 (5): 167, a response to Shaun Gallagher, S. 2000. "Philosophical conceptions of the self: implications for cognitive science," Trends in Cognitive Science 4 (1):14-21. Also see Shaun Gallagher, Reply to Cole, Sacks, and Waterman Trends in Cognitive Science 4, No. 5 (2000): 167-68.
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  4. Shaun Gallagher & Jonathan Cole (1995). Body Image and Body Schema in a Deafferented Subject. Journal of Mind and Behavior 16:369-390.score: 60.0
    In a majority of situations the normal adult maintains posture or moves without consciously monitoring motor activity. Posture and movement are usually close to automatic; they tend to take care of themselves, outside of attentive regard. One's body, in such cases, effaces itself as one is geared into a particular intentional goal. This effacement is possible because of the normal functioning of a body schema. Body schema can be defined as a system of preconscious, subpersonal processes that play a dynamic (...)
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  5. David Cole (2009). Jerry Fodor, Lot 2: The Language of Thought Revisited , New York: Oxford University Press, 2008, X+228, $37.95, Isbn 978-0-119-954877-. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 19 (3):439-443.score: 60.0
    Jerry Fodor, LOT 2: The Language of Thought Revisited , New York: Oxford University Press, 2008, x+228, $37.95, ISBN 978-0-119-954877-4 Content Type Journal Article Pages 439-443 DOI 10.1007/s11023-009-9164-4 Authors David Cole, University of Minnesota-Duluth Department of Philosophy 369 A B Anderson Hall Duluth MN 55812 USA Journal Minds and Machines Online ISSN 1572-8641 Print ISSN 0924-6495 Journal Volume Volume 19 Journal Issue Volume 19, Number 3.
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  6. K. C. Cole (2001). The Hole in the Universe: How Scientists Peered Over the Edge of Emptiness and Found Everything. Harcourt.score: 60.0
    Welcome to the world of cutting-edge math, physics, and neuroscience, where the search for the ultimate vacuum, the point of nothingness, ground zero of theory, has rendered the universe deep, rich, and juicy. "Modern physics has animated the void," says K. C. Cole in her entrancing journey into the heart of Nothing. Every time scientists and mathematicians think they have reached the ultimate void, new stuff appears: a black hole, an undulating string, an additional dimension of space or time, (...)
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  7. Christopher Heath Wellman & Phillip Cole (2011). Debating the Ethics of Immigration: Is There a Right to Exclude? OUP USA.score: 60.0
    Do states have the right to prevent potential immigrants from crossing their borders, or should people have the freedom to migrate and settle wherever they wish? Christopher Heath Wellman and Phillip Cole develop and defend opposing answers to this timely and important question. Appealing to the right to freedom of association, Wellman contends that legitimate states have broad discretion to exclude potential immigrants, even those who desperately seek to enter. Against this, Cole argues that the commitment to the (...)
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  8. Stephen Cole (1992). Making Science: Between Nature and Society. Harvard University Press.score: 60.0
    In Making Science, Cole shows how social variables and cognitive variables interact in the evaluation of frontier knowledge.
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  9. Thomas Cole (2009). Bryan S. Turner: Can We Live Forever? A Social and Moral Inquiry. Medicine Studies 1 (3):301-303.score: 60.0
    Bryan S. Turner: Can We Live Forever? A Social and Moral Inquiry Content Type Journal Article Category Book Review Pages 301-303 DOI 10.1007/s12376-009-0024-6 Authors Thomas R. Cole, University of Texas-Houston School of Medicine McGovern Center for Health, Humanities, and the Human Spirit Houston TX 77030 USA Journal Medicine Studies Online ISSN 1876-4541 Print ISSN 1876-4533 Journal Volume Volume 1 Journal Issue Volume 1, Number 3.
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  10. Jonathan Cole, Natalie Depraz & Shaun Gallagher, Unity and Disunity in Bodily Awareness: Phenomenology and Neuroscience.score: 30.0
  11. David J. Cole (2002). The Function of Consciousness. In James H. Fetzer (ed.), Consciousness Evolving. John Benjamins.score: 30.0
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  12. David J. Cole (1991). Artificial Intelligence and Personal Identity. Synthese 88 (September):399-417.score: 30.0
    Considerations of personal identity bear on John Searle's Chinese Room argument, and on the opposed position that a computer itself could really understand a natural language. In this paper I develop the notion of a virtual person, modelled on the concept of virtual machines familiar in computer science. I show how Searle's argument, and J. Maloney's attempt to defend it, fail. I conclude that Searle is correct in holding that no digital machine could understand language, but wrong in holding that (...)
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  13. Julian C. Cole (2010). Mathematical Structuralism Today. Philosophy Compass 5 (8):689-699.score: 30.0
    Two topics figure prominently in recent discussions of mathematical structuralism: challenges to the purported metaphysical insight provided by sui generis structuralism and the significance of category theory for understanding and articulating mathematical structuralism. This article presents an overview of central themes related to these topics.
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  14. David J. Cole, Inverted Spectrum Arguments.score: 30.0
    Formerly a spectral apparition that haunted behaviorism and provided a puzzle about our knowledge of other minds, the inverted spectrum possibility has emerged as an important challenge to functionalist accounts of qualia. The inverted spectrum hypothesis raises the possibility that two individuals might think and behave in the same way yet have different qualia. The traditional supposition is of an individual who has a subjective color spectrum that is inverted with regard to that had by other individuals. When he looks (...)
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  15. David J. Cole (1994). Thought and Qualia. Minds and Machines 4 (3):283-302.score: 30.0
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  16. Allen Buchanan, Tony Cole & Robert O. Keohane (2011). Justice in the Diffusion of Innovation. Journal of Political Philosophy 19 (3):306-332.score: 30.0
  17. David J. Cole (1984). Thought and Thought Experiments. Philosophical Studies 45 (May):431-44.score: 30.0
  18. U. M. D. Cole, The Over-Extended Mind.score: 30.0
    There’s a possibly more interesting general question: does technology transform and extend the mind and our mental powers? In a widely discussed 1998 paper titled “The Extended Mind”, Andy Clark and David Chalmers argue that mind and cognition can extend outside the head and can include items and processes in the world. In their thought experiment, Otto has alzheimer’s syndrome but does not lose his ability to function because he records information he learns in a notebook that he always carries. (...)
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  19. David Cole (2011). Michael Tye, Consciousness Revisited: Materialism Without Phenomenal Concepts. Minds and Machines 21 (1):103-106.score: 30.0
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  20. David Cole, The Chinese Room Argument. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 30.0
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  21. David Cole, Against Derived Intentionality.score: 30.0
    Intentionality is a property of an important class of things: things that represent, or are about something. Thus a belief or sentence or story is about something, a painting or photo is of something, a sign is a sign of something, and a desire is a desire for something. These disparate things all display intentionality. They have content; they represent some state of affairs beyond themselves. The represented state of affairs need not be actual, and is not in the cases (...)
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  22. David J. Cole (1990). Functionalism and Inverted Spectra. Synthese 82 (2):207-22.score: 30.0
    Functionalism, a philosophical theory, has empirical consequences. Functionalism predicts that where systematic transformations of sensory input occur and are followed by behavioral accommodation in which normal function of the organism is restored such that the causes and effects of the subject's psychological states return to those of the period prior to the transformation, there will be a return of qualia or subjective experiences to those present prior to the transform. A transformation of this type that has long been of philosophical (...)
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  23. David Cole (2012). Richard Menary (Ed): The Extended Mind. Minds and Machines 22 (1):47-51.score: 30.0
  24. David J. Cole, Dretske on Naturalizing the Mind.score: 30.0
    Dretske’s Naturalizing the Mind sets out the case for holding that mental states in general are natural representers of reality. Mental states have functions; for many states the function is to indicate what is going on in the world. Among such indicator states are beliefs. The content of these states is given by what they are supposed to represent. So if a state is supposed to indicate that it’s dark, then “it’s dark” is the content of the state. Thus we (...)
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  25. David J. Cole (1999). I Don't Think So: Pinker on the Mentalese Monopoly. Philosophical Psychology 12 (3):283-295.score: 30.0
    Stephen Pinker sets out over a dozen arguments in The language instinct (Morrow, New York, 1994) for his widely shared view that natural language is inadequate as a medium for thought. Thus he argues we must suppose that the primary medium of thought and inference is an innate propositional representation system, mentalese. I reply to the various arguments and so defend the view that some thought essentially involves natural language. I argue mentalese doesn't solve any of the problems Pinker cites (...)
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  26. Jonathan Cole (2009). Impaired Embodiment and Intersubjectivity. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 8 (3).score: 30.0
    This paper considers the importance of the body for self-esteem, communication, and emotional expression and experience, through the reflections of those who live with various neurological impairments of movement and sensation; sensory deafferentation, spinal cord injury and Möbius Syndrome (the congenital absence of facial expression). People with severe sensory loss, who require conscious attention and visual feedback for movement, describe the imperative to use the same strategies to reacquire gesture, to appear normal and have embodied expression. Those paralysed after spinal (...)
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  27. Phillip Cole (2006). The Myth of Evil: Demonizing the Enemy. Praeger.score: 30.0
    Terrorism, torture, and the problems of evil -- Diabolical evil, searching for Satan -- Philosophies of evil -- Communities of fear -- The enemy within -- Bad seeds -- The character of evil -- Facing the Holocaust -- Twenty-first-century mythologies.
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  28. David J. Cole, Hearing Yourself Think: Natural Language, Inner Speech, and Thought.score: 30.0
    "Mantras were not viewed as the only means of expressing truth, however. Thought, which was defined as internalized speech, offered yet another aspect of truth. And if words and thoughts designated different aspects of truth, or reality, then there had to be an underlying unity behind all phenomena" (S. A. Nigosian 1994: World Faiths, p. 84).
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  29. Jonathan Cole, Shaun Gallagher & David McNeill (2002). Gesture Following Deafferentation: A Phenomenologically Informed Experimental Study. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1 (1):49-67.score: 30.0
    Empirical studies of gesture in a subject who has lost proprioception and the sense of touch from the neck down show that specific aspects of gesture remain normal despite abnormal motor processes for instrumental movement. The experiments suggest that gesture, as a linguistic phenomenon, is not reducible to instrumental movement. They also support and extend claims made by Merleau-Ponty concerning the relationship between language and cognition. Gesture, as language, contributes to the accomplishment of thought.
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  30. David Cole, Images and Thinking: Critique of Arguments Against Images as a Medium of Thought.score: 30.0
    The Way of Ideas died an ignoble death, committed to the flames by behaviorist empiricists. Ideas, pictures in the head, perished with the Way. By the time those empiricists were supplanted at the helm by functionalists and causal theorists, a revolution had taken place in linguistics and the last thing anyone wanted to do was revive images as the medium of thought. Currently, some but not all cognitive scientists think that there probably are mental images - experiments in cognitive psychology (...)
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  31. David J. Cole, Natural Language and Natural Meaning.score: 30.0
    In Book II of the _Essay_, at the beginning of his discussion of language in Chapter II ("Of the Signification of Words"), John Locke writes that we humans have a variety of thoughts which might profit others, but that unfortunately these thoughts lie invisible and hidden from others. And so we use language to communicate these thoughts. As a result, "words, in their primary or immediate signification,stand for nothing but _the ideas in the mind of him that uses them_.
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  32. David Cole, The Return of the Evil Genius.score: 30.0
    Descartes refuted skepticism in 1641. George Berkeley refuted skepticism in 1710. O.K. Bouwsma refuted skepticism in 1949. Hilary Putnam refuted skepticism in 1981. The locus classicus for the form of skepticism refuted is Descartes' Meditations -- which also goes on to set out a famous realist refutation of skepticism. Indeed, Descartes is the principal inventor of the philosophic enterprise of skepticism refutation so central to Modern philosophy and its epistemic preoccupations. What the cited successors of Descartes and many others have (...)
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  33. Jonathan Cole (2007). The Phenomenology of Agency and Intention in the Face of Paralysis and Insentience. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 6 (3):309-325.score: 30.0
    Studies of perception have focussed on sensation, though more recently the perception of action has, once more, become the subject of investigation. These studies have looked at acute experimental situations. The present paper discusses the subjective experience of those with either clinical syndromes of loss of movement or sensation (spinal cord injury, sensory neuronopathy syndrome or motor stroke), or with experimental paralysis or sensory loss. The differing phenomenology of these is explored and their effects on intention and agency discussed. It (...)
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  34. David Cole (2010). Anthony Chemero: Radical Embodied Cognitive Science. Minds and Machines 20 (3):475-479.score: 30.0
  35. Richard Cole (1968). Falsifiability. Mind 77 (305):133-135.score: 30.0
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  36. David Cole, Note on Analyticity and the Definability of "Bachelor".score: 30.0
    Those who have a brief against the analytic-synthetic distinction raise problems for what seem to supporters of the distinction to be some of the clearest cases. That bachelors are unmarried seems to many to be analytically true. But to hold this seems to imply that there is a definition of "bachelor" that includes being unmarried. But critics of the analytic-synthetic distinction, such as Jerry Fodor, deny that there are true definitions (reportive, not stipulative). So there can be no definition of (...)
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  37. David J. Cole, Sense and Sentience.score: 30.0
    Surely one of the most interesting problems in the study of mind concerns the nature of sentience. How is it that there are sensations, rather than merely sensings? What is it like to be a bat -- or why is it like anything at all? Why aren't we automata or responding but unfeeling Zombies? How does neural activity give rise to subjective experience? As Leibniz put the problem (Monadology section 17):
    _It must be confessed, however, that Perception_ [consciousness?]_, and (...)
    _anything to explain Perception._ [Montgomery trans.]. (shrink)
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  38. David R. Cole (2011). The Actions of Affect in Deleuze: Others Using Language and the Language That We Make .. Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (6):549-561.score: 30.0
    The actions of affect are prominent in the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and can be broken down for the purposes of education into two roles. The first alludes to the history of philosophy and the ways in which affect has been used by Spinoza (Deleuze, 1992) Nietzsche (Deleuze, 1983) or Bergson (Deleuze, 1991). In this role, Deleuze reinvigorates and challenges definitions of affect that would place them into systems of understanding that could take paths to metaphysics or to becoming paradigms (...)
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  39. P. Cole & D. Johnson, The Self as a Center of Narrative Gravity.score: 30.0
    This is a well-behaved concept in Newtonian physics. But a center of gravity is not an atom or a subatomic particle or any other physical item in the world. It has no mass; it has no color; it has no physical properties at all, except for spatio-temporal location. It is a fine example of what Hans Reichenbach would call an abstractum. It is a purely abstract object. It is, if you like , a theorist's fiction. It is not one of (...)
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  40. Elizabeth A. Cole (2008). Apology, Forgiveness, and Moral Repair. Ethics and International Affairs 22 (4):421-428.score: 30.0
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  41. Julian Cole & Stewart Shapiro (2003). Review: The Indispensability of Mathematics. [REVIEW] Mind 112 (446):331-336.score: 30.0
  42. P. Haggard & J. Cole (2007). Intention, Attention and the Temporal Experience of Action. Consciousness and Cognition 16 (2):211-220.score: 30.0
  43. David J. Cole, Pinker on the Thinker: Against Mentalese Monopoly.score: 30.0
    thought and problem solving in persons lacking natural language altogether would be a decisive challenge, but there is no clear evidence of any abstract thinking capabilities similar to those evinced by the scientists. Pinker cites languageless persons rebuilding broken locks - this is evidence of perhaps visual imagery, but not mentalese (at least not without quite a bit more detail and argument than we are given). Spiders, e.g., build marvelous things, but no inference to spiderese appears to be warranted. There (...)
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  44. Darrell Cole (2012). Torture and Just War. Journal of Religious Ethics 40 (1):26-51.score: 30.0
    I offer an argument for why torture, as an act of state-sponsored force to gain information crucial to the well-being of the common good, should be considered as a tactic of war, and therefore scrutinized in terms of just war theory. I argue that, for those committed to the justifiability of the use of force, most of the popular arguments against all acts of torture are unpersuasive because the logic behind them would forbid equally any act of mutilating or killing (...)
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  45. Julian C. Cole (2008). Gianluigi Oliveri. A Realist Philosophy of Mathematics. Texts in Philosophy;. Philosophia Mathematica 16 (3):409-420.score: 30.0
  46. Frank S. Kessel, P. M. Cole & D. L. Johnson (eds.) (1992). Self and Consciousness: Multiple Perspectives. Lawrence Erlbaum.score: 30.0
    This volume contains an array of essays that reflect, and reflect upon, the recent revival of scholarly interest in the self and consciousness. Various relevant issues are addressed in conceptually challenging ways, such as how consciousness and different forms of self-relevant experience develop in infancy and childhood and are related to the acquisition of skill; the role of the self in social development; the phenomenology of being conscious and its metapsychological implications; and the cultural foundations of conceptualizations of consciousness. Written (...)
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  47. John D. Pringle & Donald C. Cole (forthcoming). Health Research in Complex Emergencies: A Humanitarian Imperative. Journal of Academic Ethics.score: 30.0
    Health researchers, research trainees, and ethics reviewers should be prepared for the special application of research ethics within complex humanitarian emergencies. This paper argues that as a precursor to published ethical guidelines for conducting research in complex emergencies, researchers and research ethics committees should observe the following primary ethical considerations: (1) the research is not at the expense of humanitarian action; (2) the research is justified in that it is needs-driven and relevant to the affected populations; and (3) the research (...)
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  48. David J. Cole (1991). Artificial Minds: Cam on Searle. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 69 (September):329-33.score: 30.0
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  49. David Cole (2010). Andy Clark: Supersizing the Mind. Minds and Machines 20 (1):145-147.score: 30.0
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  50. Jonathan Cole (2005). Imagination After Neurological Losses of Movement and Sensation: The Experience of Spinal Cord Injury. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (2).score: 30.0
    To what extent is imagination dependent on embodied experience? In attempting to answer such questions I consider the experiences of those who have to come to terms with altered neurological function, namely those with spinal cord injury at the neck. These people have each lost all sensation and movement below the neck. How might these new ways of living affect their imagination?
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  51. Julian C. Cole (2013). Towards an Institutional Account of the Objectivity, Necessity, and Atemporality of Mathematics. Philosophia Mathematica 21 (1):9-36.score: 30.0
    I contend that mathematical domains are freestanding institutional entities that, at least typically, are introduced to serve representational functions. In this paper, I outline an account of institutional reality and a supporting metaontological perspective that clarify the content of this thesis. I also argue that a philosophy of mathematics that has this thesis as its central tenet can account for the objectivity, necessity, and atemporality of mathematics.
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  52. David McNeill, Bennett Bertenthal, Jonathan Cole & Shaun Gallagher (2005). Gesture-First, but No Gestures? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (2):138-139.score: 30.0
    Although Arbib's extension of the mirror-system hypothesis neatly sidesteps one problem with the “gesture-first” theory of language origins, it overlooks the importance of gestures that occur in current-day human linguistic performance, and this lands it with another problem. We argue that, instead of gesture-first, a system of combined vocalization and gestures would have been a more natural evolutionary unit.
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  53. David Cole (2002). Jerry Fodor, Concepts: Where Cognitive Science Went Wrong. Minds and Machines 12 (3):443-448.score: 30.0
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  54. Julian C. Cole (2009). Creativity, Freedom, and Authority: A New Perspective On the Metaphysics of Mathematics. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 87 (4):589-608.score: 30.0
    I discuss a puzzle that shows there is a need to develop a new metaphysical interpretation of mathematical theories, because all well-known interpretations conflict with important aspects of mathematical activities. The new interpretation, I argue, must authenticate the ontological commitments of mathematical theories without curtailing mathematicians' freedom and authority to creatively introduce mathematical ontology during mathematical problem-solving. Further, I argue that these two constraints are best met by a metaphysical interpretation of mathematics that takes mathematical entities to be constitutively constructed (...)
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  55. Julian C. Cole, Mathematical Platonism. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 30.0
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  56. Jonathan Cole (2000). "Self-Consciousness and the Body": Commentary. Journal of Consciousness Studies 7 (6):50-52.score: 30.0
  57. M. Bobillo Alfredo, A. Rodriguez Sanz Juan & Fernando Tejerina Gaite (forthcoming). Investment Decisions, Liquidity, and Institutional Activism: An International Study. Journal of Business Ethics.score: 30.0
    The activism of institutional investors tends more and more toward the supervision and control of the behavior of the managers of big companies. In this article, we present a model based on the creation of an activism index that lets us evaluate such activism’s effect on the sensitivity of the investment policies of a company in the face of financial variables (such as cash flow and liquidity ratio) and market variables (ownership concentration and value creation index). To test our assertions, (...)
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  58. David Cole, A Defence of Mill's Theory of Names.score: 30.0
    Michael Devitt and Kim Sterelny, in their text _Language and Reality: An Introduction to Philosophy of Language_, rehearse four well-known arguments against Mill's theory. They conclude that we should follow Frege and postulate senses; the only other alternative is to follow Meinong and Lewis and inflate ontology. I will defend Mill's theory and try to show how we can respond to each of the four objections without postulating senses or inflating ontology.
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  59. Andrew Cole & D. Vance Smith (eds.) (2010). The Legitimacy of the Middle Ages: On the Unwritten History of Theory. Duke University Press.score: 30.0
    Offers an assessment of the place of the Middle Ages in critical theory.
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  60. Darrell Cole (2011). War and Intention. Journal of Military Ethics 10 (3):174-191.score: 30.0
    Abstract Right intention is one of the staple criteria of traditional just war theory. In classical terms, right intention is met when a belligerent aims to achieve a just and peaceful order. I will address the problem of determining when a belligerent has satisfied the criterion of right intention. I will argue that right intention is determined by observing a belligerent's acts during and after a conflict. Intention is not merely a private mental act known ultimately only by the people (...)
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  61. Phillip Cole (2008). Migration and the Human Right to Health. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18 (01):70-.score: 30.0
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  62. Phillip Cole (2000). Embracing the “Nation”. Res Publica 6 (3).score: 30.0
    The idea of the “nation” has played only a small role in modern political philosophy because of its apparent irrationalism and amoralism. David Miller, however, sets out to show that these charges can be overcome: nationality is a rational element of one’s cultural identity, and nations are genuinely ethical communities. In this paper I argue that his project fails. The defence against the charge of irrationalism fails because Miller works within a framework of ethical particularism which leads to a position (...)
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  63. David Robert Cole (2010). The Reproduction of Philosophical Bodies in Education with Language. Educational Philosophy and Theory 42 (8):816-829.score: 30.0
    This paper articulates a feminist poststructural philosophy of education by combining the work of Luce Irigaray and Michel Foucault. This acts as an underpinning for a philosophy of desire (McWilliam, 1999) in education, or as a minor philosophy of education where multiple movements of bodies are enacted through theoretical methodologies and research. These methods include qualitative analysis and critical discourse analysis; where the conjunction Irigaray-Foucault is a paradigm for dealing with educational phenomena. It is also a rigorous materialism (Braidotti, 2005) (...)
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  64. Barbara Abbott, Annette Herskovits, Philip L. Peterson, Alfred R. Mele, David J. Cole, Daniel Crevier, Francis Jeffry Pelletier, Istvan S. N. Berkeley, Brendan J. Kitts, Mike Brown & George Paliouras (1996). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 6 (2).score: 30.0
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  65. David J. Cole (2003). Gerald Edelman and Giulio Tononi, a Universe of Consciousness: How Matter Becomes Imagination, New York: Basic Books, 2000, XIII+ 274 Pp., $17.00 (Paper), ISBN 0-465-01377-. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 13 (3):445-449.score: 30.0
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  66. David J. Cole (1979). Meaning and Knowledge. Philosophical Studies 36 (3):329 - 331.score: 30.0
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  67. Jonathan Cole & Oliver Sacks, On the Immunity Principle: A View From a Robot.score: 30.0
    In his excellent and thought provoking article Gallagher (2000) suggests that there are no exceptions to the immunity principle, that one cannot use the first person pronoun and be incorrect in one's reference. He discusses Wittgenstein's differentiation between the "I"‚ as subject and as object, and suggests that misidentification may be possible in the latter instance, when one is, for instance, viewing an arm moving and incorrectly thinks it one's own. In amplifying this distinction Gallagher introduces the two related aspects (...)
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  68. Peter Cole (1985). Quantifier Scope and the ECP. Linguistics and Philosophy 8 (2):283 - 289.score: 30.0
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  69. G. D. H. Cole (1925). Loyalties. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 26:151 - 170.score: 30.0
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  70. Richard Cole (1962). Ptolemy and Copernicus. Philosophical Review 71 (4):476-482.score: 30.0
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  71. Phillip Cole (2007). The Body Politic: Theorising Disability and Impairment. Journal of Applied Philosophy 24 (2):169–176.score: 30.0
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  72. Erwin M. Segal, Meredith Williams, David J. Cole, James Geller, Yorick Wilks, Shoshana Loeb, Kim Sterelny, Jerry Fodor, Sara Heinämaa & Ausonio Marras (1993). Book Reviews. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 3 (3).score: 30.0
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  73. David Cole, Critique of Arguments Against Images as a Medium of Thought.score: 30.0
    The Way of Ideas died an ignoble death, committed to the flames by behaviorist empiricists. Ideas, pictures in the head, perished with the Way. By the time those empiricists were supplanted at the helm by functionalists and causal theorists, a revolution had taken place in linguistics and the last thing anyone wanted to do was revive images as the medium of thought. Currently, some but not all cognitive scientists think that there probably are mental images - experiments in cognitive psychology (...)
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  74. J. Cole & Christian Edward Mortensen, Fixed Point Theorems for Inconsistent and Incomplete Formation of Large Categories.score: 30.0
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  75. David R. Cole (2011). Matter in Motion: The Educational Materialism of Gilles Deleuze. Educational Philosophy and Theory 44:3-17.score: 30.0
    This paper critically examines the materialism that Gilles Deleuze espouses in his oeuvre to the benefit of educational theory. In Difference and Repetition, he presented transcendental empiricism by underwriting Kant with realism (Deleuze, 1994). Later, in Capitalism & Schizophrenia I & II that were co-written with Félix Guattari (1984, 1988) and that they named Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze's philosophical approach is realigned into what I term here as transcendental materialism, and latterly as immanent materialism; that I claim effectively (...)
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  76. J. Cole (2007). Wittgenstein's Neurophenomenology. Medical Humanities 33 (1):59-64.score: 30.0
  77. Julian C. Cole (2005). Book Review: Jody Azzouni. Deflating Existential Consequence: A Case for Nominalism. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 46 (2):235-247.score: 30.0
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  78. John Anderson, David Armstrong & Creagh Cole, Front Matter.score: 30.0
    'With this scheme, John Anderson joins a very distinguished line of philosophers who have presented us with a set of categories. We have first Plato (the doctrine of Highest Kinds in his dialogue The Sophist), then Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, and Samuel Alexander.' - D. M. Armstrong, from the introduction. Space, Time and the Categories presents a unique record of personal influence and inspiration over three generations of philosophers in Australia, England and Scotland. This work is a vitally important text in (...)
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  79. Richard Cole (1963). On the Possible Impossibility of Metaphysics. Philosophical Studies 14 (3):43 - 48.score: 30.0
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  80. Darrell Cole (1999). Thomas Aquinas on Virtuous Warfare. Journal of Religious Ethics 27 (1):57 - 80.score: 30.0
    Thomas Aquinas, one of the "founding fathers" of just war theory, offers an account of virtuous warfare in practice. The author argues that Aquinas's approach to warfare, with its emphasis on justice and charity, is helpful in providing a coherent moral account of war to which Christians can subscribe. Particular attention is given to the role of charity, since this virtue is the distinguishing characteristic of the Christian soldier. Charity compels him to soldier justly, and by fighting justly, he is (...)
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  81. Rose Marie San Juan (1989). The Illustrious Poets in Signorelli's Frescoes for the Cappella Nuova of Orvieto Cathedral. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 52:71-84.score: 30.0
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  82. C. Ebach Malte, J. Morrone Juan & M. Williams David (2008). A New Cladistics of Cladists. Biology and Philosophy 23 (1).score: 30.0
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  83. David McNeill, Susan Duncan, Jonathan Cole, Shaun Gallagher & Bennett Bertenthal (2010). Growth Points From the Very Beginning. In M. Arbib D. Bickerton (ed.), The Emergence of Protolanguage: Holophrasis Vs Compositionality. John Benjamins.score: 30.0
    Did protolanguage users use discrete words that referred to objects, actions, locations, etc., and then, at some point, combine them; or on the contrary did they have words that globally indexed whole semantic complexes, and then come to divide them? Our answer is: early humans were forming language units consisting of global and discrete dimensions of semiosis in dynamic opposition. These units of thinking-for-speaking, or ‘growth points’ (GPs) were, jointly, analog imagery (visuo-spatio-motoric) and categorically-contrastive (-emic) linguistic encodings. This discrete-global duality (...)
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  84. Wiebe der Hoek Thomas Ågotnevans, A. Rodríguez-Aguilar Juan & Michael Wooldridge Carles Sierra (2009). Multi-Modal Ctl: Completeness, Complexity, and an Application. Studia Logica 92 (1).score: 30.0
    We define a multi-modal version of Computation Tree Logic ( ctl ) by extending the language with path quantifiers E δ and A δ where δ denotes one of finitely many dimensions, interpreted over Kripke structures with one total relation for each dimension. As expected, the logic is axiomatised by taking a copy of a ctl axiomatisation for each dimension. Completeness is proved by employing the completeness result for ctl to obtain a model along each dimension in turn. We also (...)
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  85. Richard Cole (1977). Causes and Explanations. Noûs 11 (4):347-374.score: 30.0
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  86. Dennis Cole, M. Joseph Sirgy & Monroe Murphy Bird (2000). How Do Managers Make Teleological Evaluations in Ethical Dilemmas? Testing Part of and Extending the Hunt-Vitell Model. Journal of Business Ethics 26 (3):259 - 269.score: 30.0
    A study involving purchasing managers was conducted to test specific Hunt-Vitell theoretical propositions concerning the determinants of managers' teleological evaluations. We extended the Hunt-Vitell model by developing a new integrative construct, namely the desirability of consequences to self versus others. We hypothesized that desirability of consequences affects teleological evaluations in that the more desirable the consequences of a particular action, the more likely managers evaluate that action positively. The results of the present study provided support for this hypothesis. Furthermore, we (...)
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  87. C. A. Cole (2012). Implied Consent and Nursing Practice: Ethical or Convenient? Nursing Ethics 19 (4):550-557.score: 30.0
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  88. David R. Cole (2012). Introduction: The Future of Educational Materialism. Educational Philosophy and Theory 44:1-2.score: 30.0
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  89. Barbara C. Cole & Dennie L. Smith (1996). Perceptions of Business Ethics: Students Vs. Business People. Journal of Business Ethics 15 (8):889 - 896.score: 30.0
    The purpose of this study was to assess the perceptions of business students and of business practitioners regarding ethics in business. A survey consisting of a series of brief ethical situations was completed by 537 senior business majors and 158 experienced business people. They responded to the situations, first, as they believed the typical business person would respond and, second, as they believed the ethical response would be.The results indicate that both students and business people perceived a significant gap between (...)
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  90. Darrell Cole (2008). Whether Spies Too Can Be Saved. Journal of Religious Ethics 36 (1):125-154.score: 30.0
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  91. Richard Cole (1965). A Note on Informal Fallacies. Mind 74 (295):432-433.score: 30.0
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  92. Spencer Cole (2009). Cicero and History (M.) Fox Cicero's Philosophy of History. Pp. Xiv + 344. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. Cased, £65. ISBN: 978-0-19-921192-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 59 (02):457-.score: 30.0
  93. Richard Cole (1974). Causality and Sufficient Reason. The Review of Metaphysics 28 (1):3 - 23.score: 30.0
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  94. Brooklyn M. Cole & Manjula S. Salimath (forthcoming). Diversity Identity Management: An Organizational Perspective. Journal of Business Ethics.score: 30.0
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  95. Lindsay Cole, Jennifer Kesselheim & Aaron Kesselheim (2012). Ethical Issues in New Drug Prescribing. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 9 (1):77-83.score: 30.0
    We use the format of a hypothetical case study to review issues related to pharmaceutical product approval and physician prescribing practices. In this case, a new FDA-approved drug is recommended for a patient who subsequently experiences an adverse event that may or may not be related to the prescription. This case raises a number of ethical and legal considerations physicians routinely face when deciding whether to recommend such drugs for their patients. Despite the need for ongoing observation by the regulatory (...)
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  96. Phil Cole & Doris Schroeder (2004). Justice Beyond Borders. Res Publica 10 (2).score: 30.0
    Liberal theories of social justicefocus predominantly on the national, ratherthan international, level, and where they doaddress international concerns they insist thatprinciples of justice at the national levelhave priority over principles at theinternational level. We question the coherenceof this arrangement, given liberal theory'scommitment to moral equality of persons as suchrather than to that of particular sets of persons. What isat issue is whether liberal theory can providea coherent basis for international justice atall. If it is to do so, we suggest that (...)
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  97. Jeffrey Cole (1990). Media Ethics in the Newsroom and Beyond (Book). Journal of Mass Media Ethics 5 (1):63 – 65.score: 30.0
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  98. Eve Browning Cole (1994). Philosophy of the Ancients. Ancient Philosophy 14 (1):222-224.score: 30.0
  99. Eve Browning Cole (1991). Weaving and Practical Politics in Plato'sstatesman. Southern Journal of Philosophy 29 (2):195-208.score: 30.0
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