Search results for 'Marilyn L. Bach' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Marilyn L. Bach, Jeffery Smith, Kristine A. Diemer, Erin L. Magnus & Nicholas A. Bryant (1996). Professionals' Responsibilities to Foster the Autonomy of Future Adults. Professional Ethics, a Multidisciplinary Journal 5 (3):73-91.score: 290.0
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  2. Robert L. Bach (2002). New Priorities for Philanthropy. Ethics and International Affairs 16 (2):20–26.score: 120.0
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  3. Kent Bach, Minimalism for Dummies: Reply to Cappelen and Lepore.score: 60.0
    In my commentary on Herman Cappelen and Ernie Lepore’s aptly titled book, Insensitive Semantics, I stake out a middle ground between their version of Semantic Minimalism and Contextualism. My kind of Semantic Minimalism does without the “minimal propositions” posited by C&L. It allows that some sentences do not express propositions, even relative to contexts. Instead, they are semantically incomplete. It is not a form of contextualism, since being semantically incomplete is not a way of being context-sensitive. In their reply to (...)
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  4. Kent Bach, Performatives.score: 60.0
    Paradoxical though it may seem, there are certain things one can do just by saying what one is doing. This is possible if one uses a verb that names the very sort of act one is performing. Thus one can thank someone by saying 'Thank you', fire someone by saying 'You're fired', and apologize by saying 'I apologize'. These are examples of 'explicit performative utterances', statements in form but not in fact. Or so thought their discoverer, J. L. Austin, who (...)
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  5. Kent Bach, From the Strange to the Bizarre: Another Reply to Cappelen and Lepore.score: 60.0
    If you think that semantic minimalism is the only alternative to contextualism but you’d rather do without Cappelen and Lepore’s mysteriously minimal “propositions,” you can. You just have to recognize that being semantically incomplete does not make a sentence context-sensitive. You don’t have to go through the ritual of repeatedly incanting things like this: “John is ready” expresses the proposition that John is ready. Instead, you can opt for Radical Minimalism and suppose that “John is ready” and its ilk fall (...)
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  6. Herman Cappelen & Ernie Lepore, Kent Bach on Minimalism for Dummies.score: 21.0
    According to Kent Bach (forthcoming), our book, Insensitive Semantics (IS), suffers from its 'implicit endorsement' of (1): (1) Every complete sentence expresses a proposition (this is Propositionalism, a fancy version of the old grammar school dictum that every complete sentence expresses a complete thought) (Bach (ms.)) In response (C&L, forthcoming), we claim to be unaware of endorsing (1). No argument in IS depends on (1), we say. We don't claim to have shown that that there couldn't be grammatical (...)
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  7. Philippe Charru (2012). Un théologien à l'écoute de la musique. Laval Théologique Et Philosophique 68 (2):311-318.score: 21.0
    Philippe Charru | Résumé : Christoph Theobald travaille depuis de longues années en tant que théologien sur l’oeuvre de Jean-Sébastien Bach, en collaboration avec un musicien. On tente de faire entendre ici comment sa « manière de faire de la théologie », soucieuse de respecter l’autonomie des arts, le rend attentif à la réalité sensible des oeuvres musicales et à une conception génétique de leur forme où se profile « l’opération même du style », selon le mot de Merleau-Ponty. (...)
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  8. Lynsey Wolter (2010). Teaching & Learning Guide For: Demonstratives in Philosophy and Linguistics. Philosophy Compass 5 (1):108-111.score: 12.0
    Demonstrative noun phrases (e.g. this; that guy over there ) are intimately connected to the context of use in that their reference is determined by demonstrations and/or the speaker's intentions. The semantics of demonstratives therefore has important implications not only for theories of reference, but for questions about how information from the context interacts with formal semantics. First treated by Kaplan as directly referential , demonstratives have recently been analyzed as quantifiers by King, and the choice between these two approaches (...)
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  9. Paul Bach-Y.-Rita & Gaetano L. Aiello (2001). Brain Energetics and Evolution. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (2):280-281.score: 12.0
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