Search results for 'Mary Beth West' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Mary Beth West & Joan McIver Gibson (1992). Facilitating Medical Ethics Case Review: What Ethics Committees Can Learn From Mediation and Facilitation Techniques. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (01):63-.score: 290.0
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  2. Mary Beth West, Kate Brown, Annette Dula & David Costanza (1992). A PVS Patient on Dialysis. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (03):253-.score: 290.0
  3. William Nelson, Mary Ann Greene & Alan West (2010). Rural Healthcare Ethics: No Longer the Forgotten Quarter. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (04):510-517.score: 140.0
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  4. Alison Stone, Unthought Nature : Reply to Penelope Deutscher and Mary Beth Mader.score: 42.0
    In response to Mader's and Deutscher's questions, the author defends her approach to reading Irigaray and Butler, which entails extending the ideas of these thinkers into areas of thought with which they do not engage directly themselves. This involves relating Irigaray's ideas to the tradition of the philosophy of nature and interpreting Butler as offering, in spite of her focus on the genealogy of claims about sex, also a theory of sex itself, a theory of sex as an effect entirely (...)
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  5. Robert E. Page (2007). Confessions of an Evolutionary Biologist: Developmental Plasticity and Evolution Mary Jane West-Eberhard Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003 (794 Pp; £35,99 Hbk; ISBN- ISBN-10: 0-19-512235-6). [REVIEW] Biological Theory 2 (2):207-208.score: 42.0
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  6. Sally J. Scholz (2007). Simone de Beauvoir: Philosophical Writings Edited by Margaret A. Simons with Marybeth Timmermann and Mary Beth Mader. Hypatia 22 (3):197-201.score: 42.0
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  7. A. G. Lee (1956). Mary M. Innes: The Metamorphoses of Ovid. A New Translation. Pp. 394. West Drayton: Penguin Books, 1955. Paper, 3s 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 6 (3-4):308-.score: 36.0
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  8. Ruth Abbey (1999). Back to the Future: Marriage as Friendship in the Thought of Mary Wollstonecraft. Hypatia 14 (3):78-95.score: 18.0
    : If liberal theory is to move forward, it must take the political nature of family relations seriously. The beginnings of such a liberalism appear in Mary Wollstonecraft's work. Wollstonecraft's depiction of the family as a fundamentally political institution extends liberal values into the private sphere by promoting the ideal of marriage as friendship. However, while her model of marriage diminishes arbitrary power in family relations, she seems unable to incorporate enduring sexual relations between married partners.
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  9. Kwang-Sae Lee (2005). East and West: Fusion of Horizons. Homa & Sekey Books.score: 18.0
    The book discusses some general methodological problems pertaining to the Meeting of East and West, Confucianism and Kantian moral philosophy, Heidegger, ...
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  10. Douglas Allen & Ashok Kumar Malhotra (eds.) (1997). Culture and Self: Philosophical and Religious Perspectives, East and West. Westview Press.score: 18.0
    Traditional scholars of philosophy and religion, both East and West, often place a major emphasis on analyzing the nature of “the self.” In recent decades, there has been a renewed interest in analyzing self, but most scholars have not claimed knowledge of an ahistorical, objective, essential self free from all cultural determinants. The contributors to this volume recognize the need to contextualize specific views of self and to analyze such views in terms of the dynamic, dialectical relations between self (...)
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  11. Daniel Stoljar & Yujin Nagasawa (2003). Introduction to There's Something About Mary. In Peter Ludlow, Daniel Stoljar & Yujin Nagasawa (eds.), There's Something About Mary.score: 15.0
    Mary is confined to a black-and-white room, is educated through black-and-white books and through lectures relayed on black-and white television. In this way she learns everything there is to know about the physical nature of the world. She knows all the physical facts about us and our environment, in a wide sense of 'physical' which includes everything in completed physics, chemistry, and neurophysiology, and all there is to know about the causal and relational facts consequent upon all this, including (...)
     
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  12. Gereon Kopf (2010). Nietzsche, Buddha, Zarathustra: Eine West-Ost Konfiguration (Review). Philosophy East and West 60 (4):560-564.score: 15.0
    In Nietzsche, Buddha, Zarathustra: Eine West-Ost Konfiguration, Michael Skowron sets out to develop a comparative philosophy of "self-overcoming," "transformation," and "process" (p. 7). Skowron's main interest is to retrace Friedrich Nietzsche's "genealogical thinking back to where the Eastern and the Western way began their separate direction in order to unearth the only place where they can be unified in its original form." The goal of this project is "to uncover the religious and postreligious dimensions of his [Nietzsche's] thinking" (p. (...)
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  13. Lin Ma & J. Brakevanl (2006). Heidegger's Comportment Toward East-West Dialogue. Philosophy East and West 56 (4):519-566.score: 15.0
    : The primary purpose here is to ascertain what Heidegger's comportment toward East-West dialogue is most plausibly like in the light of his philosophical concerns and orientations. Considering that one should not uncritically take at face value occasional remarks by Heidegger that seem to suggest that he is preparing an East-West dialogue, we will proceed from Heidegger's own path of thinking and bring to light fundamental presuppositions in his thought and the response he may accordingly give to the (...)
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  14. Mary Tiles (1995). Living in a Technological Culture: Human Tools and Human Values. Routledge.score: 15.0
    Holding the promise of both emancipation and oppression, technology at once terrifies and disturbs the social order. Its dazzles, seduces, yet it also unsettles and raises the specter of the loss of human values and our replacement by machines and silicon. In Living with Technology , Hans Oberdiek and Mary Tiles explore the cultural and philosophical tensions shrouding technology and its place in society. Examing the relationship between instrumental reason and technology, fact and value, efficient and responsibility, Oberdiek and (...)
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  15. Mary Midgley (2005). The Essential Mary Midgley. Routledge.score: 15.0
    Feared and admired in equal measure, Mary Midgely has carefully, yet profoundly challenged many of the scientific and moral orthodoxies of the twentieth century. The Essential Mary Midgley collects for the first time the very best of this famous philosopher's work, described by the Financial Times as "commonsense philosophy of the highest order." This anthology includes carefully chosen selections from her best-selling books, including Wickedness, Beast and Man, Science and Poetry and The Myths We Live By . It (...)
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  16. Oliver Leaman (ed.) (1995). Friendship East and West: Philosophical Perspectives. Curzon.score: 15.0
    Cultures other than those in Christian Europe have had important and interesting observations to make on the nature of friendship, and in this collection there ...
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  17. Ian M. Sullivan (2011). Expanding Process: Exploring Philosophical and Theological Transformations in China and the West (Review). Philosophy East and West 61 (4):741-744.score: 15.0
    Expanding Process: Exploring Philosophical and Theological Transformations in China and the West, by John Berthrong, is a model study of processive motifs in Chinese traditions and their contributions to global process-relational philosophy. Process-relational philosophy, which became a full-fledged school of thought in the twentieth century with the works of Alfred North Whitehead and the American Pragmatists, conceives of reality as constant flux. This metaphysical view is opposed to the substance-ontological view, which understands reality as a composition of timeless, discrete (...)
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  18. James Buchanan (1996). Report on the Seventh East-West Philosophers' Conference, "Justice and Democracy: A Philosophical Exploration". Philosophy East and West 46 (3):309-336.score: 15.0
    The East-West Philosophers' Conference is a series that began in 1939. It has brought philosophers from around the globe to the University of Hawai'i to reflect on issues in comparative philosophy. The seventh such conference was held in January 1995.
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  19. Aleksandr Is͡khokin (1998). Containing the West: The Sense, Nonsense, and Anathema of "Democracy". Moscow Philosophical Foundation.score: 15.0
     
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  20. Chenyang Li (2005). Dao Yu Xi Fang de Xiang Yu: Zhong Xi Bi Jiao Zhe Xue Zhong Yao Wen Ti Yan Jiu = the Tao Encounters the West: Explorations in Comparative Philosophy. Zhongguo Ren Min da Xue Chu Ban She.score: 15.0
     
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  21. Min Lin (2001). Certainty as a Social Metaphor: The Social and Historical Production of Certainty in China and the West. Greenwood Press.score: 15.0
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  22. Earl McKenzie (2009). Philosophy in the West Indian Novel. University of the West Indies Press.score: 15.0
    Aims of education: historicism and In the castle of my skin -- The meaning of life and Black lightning -- The inner radiance of the shelf in Palace of the peacock -- Knowledge and human understanding in A house for Mr Biswas -- Existentialism and The children of Sisyphus -- Tragic vision in Wide Sargasso Sea -- African conceptions of a person and Myal -- The law of karma in Sastra -- The moralty of reparations in Salt -- Plato versus (...)
     
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  23. George F. McLean, N. S. Kirabaev & I͡U. M. Pochta (eds.) (2004). Philosophical Traditions and Contemporary World: Russia-West-East. Publishing House of Peoplesʹ Friendship University of Russia.score: 15.0
     
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  24. Mary Midgley (2005). The Owl of Minerva: A Memoir. Routledge.score: 15.0
    "Charming, interesting, thought-provoking and a great read." Rosalind Hursthouse The daughter of a pacifist rector who answered "No!" when his congregation asked him "Is everything in the bible true?", perhaps Mary Midgley was destined to become a philosopher. Yet few would have thought this inquisitive, untidy, nature-loving child would become "one of the sharpest critical pens in the west." This is her remarkable story. Probably the only philosopher to have been in Vienna on the eve of its invasion (...)
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  25. Charles Alexander Moore (ed.) (1962). Philosophy and Culture--East and West. Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press.score: 15.0
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  26. Nancy Wilson Ross (1971). Asian Wisdom & the Modern West. Big Sur Recordings.score: 15.0
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  27. Ninian Smart & B. Srinivasa Murthy (eds.) (1996). East-West Encounters in Philosophy and Religion. Long Beach Publications.score: 15.0
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  28. Tathagatananda (2002). Journey of the Upanishads to the West. Vedanta Society.score: 15.0
     
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  29. Alan Watts (1961). Psychotherapy, East and West. [New York]Pantheon Books.score: 15.0
     
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  30. Robert B. Zeuschner (2000). Classical Ethics, East and West: Ethics From a Comparative Perspective. Mcgraw-Hill.score: 15.0
    This text combines discussions of major classical Western philosophical ethical systems (primarily Greek and Judeo-Christian) and, in equal depth, discussions of three non-Western ethical traditions (Indian Buddhist, Chinese Confucian, and Chinese Taoist) in a multi-cultural historical framework.
     
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  31. Laura A. Siminoff & Mary Beth Mercer (2001). Public Policy, Public Opinion, and Consent for Organ Donation. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 10 (4):377-386.score: 14.0
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  32. Mary Beth Ingham (2011). Medieval Trinitarian Thought From Aquinas to Ockham. By Russell L. Friedman. Heythrop Journal 52 (5):828-829.score: 14.0
  33. Mary Beth Mader (2010). Foucault's 'Metabody'. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 7 (2):187-203.score: 14.0
    The paper treats several ontological questions about certain nineteenth-century and contemporary medical and scientific conceptualizations of hereditary relation. In particular, it considers the account of mid-nineteenth century psychiatric thought given by Foucault in Psychiatric Power: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1973–1974 and Abnormal: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1974–1975 . There, Foucault argues that a fantastical conceptual prop, the ‘metabody,’ as he terms it, was implicitly supposed by that period’s psychiatric medicine as a putative ground for psychiatric pathology. (...)
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  34. Massimo Pigliucci (2003). The New Evolutionary Synthesis: Around the Corner, or Impossible Chimaera? [REVIEW] Quarterly Review of Biology 78 (4):449-453.score: 14.0
    In the fall of 1990 I had just began my doc- toral studies at the University of Connecticut. Freshly arrived from Italy, I came to the United States to work with Carl Schlichting on something to do with phenotypic plastic- ity. I spent most of that semester discussing with other graduate students what I thought was a momentous paper by Mary Jane West- Eberhard (1989) in the Annual Review of Ecol- ogy and Systematics. That paper, entitled Phe- notypic (...)
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  35. Mary Beth Armstrong (1994). Confidentiality. Professional Ethics, a Multidisciplinary Journal 3 (1):71-88.score: 14.0
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  36. Mary Beth Mader (2003). All Too Familiar: Luce Irigaray's Recent Thought on Sexuation and Generation. Continental Philosophy Review 36 (4):367-390.score: 14.0
    In recent works, Luce Irigaray offers arguments for the establishment of sexed rights that rely upon certain presuppositional accounts of the development of relational sexuate identity and difference. The paper advances a series of objections to these accounts, in addition to examining some of Irigaray's proposals concerning women's indefinition, the category of the neuter, and female genealogy. Supplementing Luce Irigaray's argument that mother-daughter genealogy is under-symbolized in present Occidental cultures, it suggests, for reasons consonant with Irigaray's general project, additional corrective (...)
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  37. Mary Beth Armstrong (1990). Professional Ethics and Accounting Education. Business and Professional Ethics Journal 9 (1/2):181-191.score: 14.0
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  38. Mary Beth Ingham (2009). The Philosophy of John Duns Scotus. By Antonie Vos. Heythrop Journal 50 (2):314-315.score: 14.0
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  39. Mary Beth Ingham (2001). Letting Scotus Speak for Himself. Medieval Philosophy and Theology 10 (02).score: 14.0
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  40. Mary Beth Foglia, Robert Pearlman, Melissa Bottrell, Jane Altemose & Ellen Fox (2009). Ethical Challenges Within Veterans Administration Healthcare Facilities: Perspectives of Managers, Clinicians, Patients, and Ethics Committee Chairpersons. American Journal of Bioethics 9 (4):28-36.score: 14.0
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  41. Mary Beth Ingham (2010). Ockham and Political Discourse in the Late Middle Ages. By Takashi Shogimen. Heythrop Journal 51 (4):680-681.score: 14.0
  42. Mary Beth Ingham (2009). Au-Delà de l'Image, Une Archéologie du Visuel au Moyen Age, Ve–Xvie Siècle (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 47 (2):pp. 311-312.score: 14.0
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  43. Mary Beth Ingham (2000). Duns Scotus, Morality and Happiness. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 74 (2):173-195.score: 14.0
  44. Mary Beth Mader (2010). Editor's Introduction. Southern Journal of Philosophy 48:1-2.score: 14.0
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  45. Mary Beth Mader (2004). Fore-Given Forgiveness. Southern Journal of Philosophy 42 (S1):16-24.score: 14.0
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  46. Mary Beth Mader (2004). Between Deleuze and Derrida (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 42 (4):507-508.score: 14.0
  47. Julie Fairman & Mary Beth Happ (1998). For Their Own Good? A Historical Examination of Restraint Use. HEC Forum 10 (3-4):290-299.score: 14.0
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  48. Mary Beth Foglia, Robert Pearlman, Melissa Bottrell, Jane Altemose & Ellen Fox (2009). Response to Open Peer Commentaries for “Ethical Challenges Within Veterans Administration Healthcare Facilities: Perspectives of Managers, Clinicians, Patients, and Ethics Committee Chairpersons”. American Journal of Bioethics 9 (4):3-4.score: 14.0
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  49. Mary Beth Ingham (2012). Original Sin: A Cultural History. By Alan Jacobs. Pp. Xviii, 286, London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge 2008, $9.94/$6.00. [REVIEW] Heythrop Journal 53 (4):690-691.score: 14.0
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  50. Sara Beardsworth & Mary Beth Mader (2004). Editors' Introduction. Southern Journal of Philosophy 42 (S1):vii-vii.score: 14.0
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  51. Mary Beth Mader (2005). Antigone's Line. Bulletin de la Société Américaine de Philosophie de Langue Française 15 (1):18-40.score: 14.0
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  52. Mary Beth Morrissey (2011). Expanding Consciousness of Suffering at the End of Life. Schutzian Research 3:79-106.score: 14.0
    This analysis explores the phenomenology of suffering and temporal, genetic and social developmental aspects of suffering for seriously ill older adults. A phenomenological account of suffering is advanced using oral history data from in-depth interviews with a seriously ill, frail elderly woman. The analysis evaluates how a phenomenological account of suffering may inform ethics in end-of-life decision making, and may provide a further basis for an integrated ethical and gerontological response to suffering in palliative social work practice with seriously ill (...)
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  53. Mary Beth Ingham (1997). Duns Scotus, Metaphysician. Faith and Philosophy 14 (2):266-267.score: 14.0
  54. Mary Beth Ingham (2004). On Translation. The Review of Metaphysics 57 (4):868-869.score: 14.0
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  55. Mary Beth Ingham (2003). Scotus for Dunces: An Introduction to the Subtle Doctor. Franciscan Institute Publications.score: 14.0
  56. Mary Beth Ingham (2012). The Harmony of Goodness: Mutuality and Moral Living According to John Duns Scotus. Franciscan Institute Publications.score: 14.0
     
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  57. Mary Beth Ingham (2010). The Religions of the Book: Christian Perceptions, 1400–1660. Edited by Matthew Dimmock and Andrew Hadfield. Heythrop Journal 51 (5):901-902.score: 14.0
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  58. Mary Beth Ingham (2012). The Religions of the Book: Christian Perceptions, 1400-1660. Edited by MatthewDimmock and AndrewHadfield. Pp. Xv, 215, Basingstoke/NY, Palgrave MacMillan 2008, $32.10. [REVIEW] Heythrop Journal 53 (6):1031-1032.score: 14.0
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  59. Mary Beth Ingham (2003). World as Word. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 77 (1):146-148.score: 14.0
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  60. Mary Beth Mader (2010). Antigone and the Ethics of Kinship. In Elena Tzelepis & Athena Athanasiou (eds.), Rewriting Difference: Luce Irigaray and "the Greeks". State University of New York Press.score: 14.0
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  61. C. S. J. Mary Beth Ingham (2008). Das Problem der Willensschwäche in der Mittelalterlichen Philosophie. The Problem of Weakness of Will in Medieval Philosophy. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 82 (2):366-369.score: 14.0
     
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  62. Csj Mary Beth Ingham (unknown). Reason in an Age of Anxiety. .score: 14.0
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  63. Mary Beth Morrissey (2010). Rethinking Commonsense Psychology. Schutzian Research 2:216-224.score: 14.0
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  64. Robert van Gulick (2004). So Many Ways of Saying No to Mary. In Peter Ludlow, Yujin Nagasawa & Daniel Stoljar (eds.), There's Something About Mary: Essays on Phenomenal Consciousness and Frank Jackson's Knowledge Argument. MIT Press.score: 12.0
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  65. Luca Malatesti (2008). Mary's Scientific Knowledge. Prolegomena 7 (1):37-59.score: 12.0
    Frank Jackson’s knowledge argument (KA) aims to prove, by means of a thought experiment concerning the hypothetical scientist Mary, that conscious experiences have non-physical properties, called qualia. Mary has complete scientific knowledge of colours and colour vision without having had any colour experience. The central intuition in the KA is that, by seeing colours, Mary will learn what it is like to have colour experiences. Therefore, her scientific knowledge is incomplete, and conscious experiences have qualia. In this (...)
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  66. Alex Byrne (2002). Something About Mary. Grazer Philosophische Studien 63 (1):27-52.score: 12.0
    Jackson's black-and-white Mary teaches us that the propositional content of perception cannot be fully expressed in language.
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  67. Barbara Montero (2007). Physicalism Could Be True Even If Mary Learns Something New. Philosophical Quarterly 57 (227):176-189.score: 12.0
    Mary knows all there is to know about physics, chemistry and neurophysiology, yet has never experienced colour. Most philosophers think that if Mary learns something genuinely new upon seeing colour for the first time, then physicalism is false. I argue, however, that physicalism is consistent with Mary's acquisition of new information. Indeed, even if she has perfect powers of deduction, and higher-level physical facts are a priori deducible from lower-level ones, Mary may still lack concepts which (...)
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  68. Jay L. Garfield (1990). Epoche and Śūnyatā: Skepticism East and West. Philosophy East and West 40 (3):285-307.score: 12.0
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  69. Mary Jane West‐Eberhard (2008). Toward a Modern Revival of Darwin's Theory of Evolutionary Novelty. Philosophy of Science 75 (5):899-908.score: 12.0
    Darwin proposed that evolutionary novelties are environmentally induced in organisms “constitutionally” sensitive to environmental change, with selection effective owing to the inheritance of constitutional responses. A molecular theory of inheritance, pangenesis , explained the cross‐generational transmission of environmentally induced traits, as required for evolution by natural selection. The twentieth‐century evolutionary synthesis featured mutation as the source of novelty, neglecting the role of environmental induction. But current knowledge of environmentally sensitive gene expression, combined with the idea of genetic accommodation of mutationally (...)
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  70. Pete Mandik, Swamp Mary Semantics: A Case for Physicalism Without Gaps.score: 12.0
    I argue for the superiority of non-gappy physicalism over gappy physicalism. While physicalists are united in denying an ontological gap between the phenomenal and the physical, the gappy affirm and the non-gappy deny a relevant epistemological gap. Central to my arguments will be contemplation of Swamp Mary, a being physically intrinsically similar to post-release Mary (a physically omniscient being who has experienced red) but has not herself (the Swamp being) experienced red. Swamp Mary has phenomenal knowledge of (...)
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  71. Timothy Bays (2009). Beth's Theorem and Deflationism. Mind 118 (472):1061-1073.score: 12.0
    In 1999, Jeffrey Ketland published a paper which posed a series of technical problems for deflationary theories of truth. Ketland argued that deflationism is incompatible with standard mathematical formalizations of truth, and he claimed that alternate deflationary formalizations are unable to explain some central uses of the truth predicate in mathematics. He also used Beth’s definability theorem to argue that, contrary to deflationists’ claims, the T-schema cannot provide an ‘implicit definition’ of truth. In this article, I want to challenge (...)
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  72. Robert P. Lovering (2004). Mary Anne Warren on “Full” Moral Status. Southern Journal of Philosophy 42 (4):509-530.score: 12.0
    In the contemporary debate on moral status, it is not uncommon to find philosophers who embrace the following basic moral principle: -/- The Principle of Full Moral Status: The degree to which an entity E possesses moral status is proportional to the degree to which E possesses morally relevant properties until a threshold degree of morally relevant properties possession is reached, whereupon the degree to which E possesses morally relevant properties may continue to increase, but the degree to which E (...)
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  73. Martina Fürst (2011). What Mary's Aboutness Is About. Acta Analytica 26 (1):63-74.score: 12.0
    The aim of this paper is to reinforce anti-physicalism by extending the hard problem to a specific kind of intentional states. For reaching this target, I investigate the mental content of the new intentional states of Jackson’s Mary. I proceed in the following way: I start analyzing the knowledge argument, which highlights the hard problem tied to phenomenal consciousness. In a second step, I investigate a powerful physicalist reply to this argument: the phenomenal concept strategy. In a third step, (...)
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  74. Jeffrey Ketland (2009). Beth's Theorem and Deflationism — Reply to Bays. Mind 118 (472):1075-1079.score: 12.0
    Is the restricted, consistent, version of the T-scheme sufficient for an ‘implicit definition’ of truth? In a sense, the answer is yes (Haack 1978 , Quine 1953 ). Section 4 of Ketland 1999 mentions this but gives a result saying that the T-scheme does not implicitly define truth in the stronger sense relevant for Beth’s Definability Theorem. This insinuates that the T-scheme fares worse than the compositional truth theory as an implicit definition. However, the insinuation is mistaken. For, as (...)
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  75. Inder P. Khera (2001). Business Ethics East Vs. West: Myths and Realities. Journal of Business Ethics 30 (1):29 - 39.score: 12.0
    The West has a stereotypical image of businesses, officials, and politicians, etc., in the East (Third World) countries being pervasively corrupt while it views itself as being almost completely uncorrupt. One closer look, however, realities turn out to be quite different. Business corruption is much more universal that Westerners are generally willing to accept. The major differences are that corruption in the East is practiced so blatantly that it makes major news. Western businesses, on the other hand, have, over (...)
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  76. David Bradshaw (2004). Aristotle East and West: Metaphysics and the Division of Christendom. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    This book traces the varying conceptions of the nature of God's existence from Aristotle, through the pagan Neoplatonists, to thinkers such as Augustine, Boethius, and Aquinas (in the West) and Dionysius the Areopagite, Maximus the Confessor, and Gregory Palamas (in the East). The result is a powerful comparative history of philosophical thought in Christendom that provides documentation for the schism between the Eastern and Western churches.
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  77. Aaron Simmons (2007). A Critique of Mary Anne Warren's Weak Animal Rights View. Environmental Ethics 29 (3):267-278.score: 12.0
    In her book, Moral Status, Mary Anne Warren defends a comprehensive theory of the moral status of various entities. Under this theory, she argues that animals may have some moral rights but that their rights are much weaker in strength than the rights of humans, who have rights in the fullest, strongest sense. Subsequently, Warren believes that our duties to animals are far weaker than our duties to other humans. This weakness is especially evident from the fact that Warren (...)
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  78. Brian Pennington (2011). Review of Arvind-Pal S. Mandair, Religion and the Specter of the West: Sikhism, India, Postcoloniality, and the Politics of Translation. [REVIEW] Sophia 50 (3):499-501.score: 12.0
    Review of Arvind-Pal S. Mandair, Religion and the Specter of the West: Sikhism, India, Postcoloniality, and the Politics of Translation Content Type Journal Article Pages 499-501 DOI 10.1007/s11841-011-0250-8 Authors Brian K. Pennington, Division of Humanities, Maryville College, 502 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy, Maryville, TN 37804, USA Journal Sophia Online ISSN 1873-930X Print ISSN 0038-1527 Journal Volume Volume 50 Journal Issue Volume 50, Number 3.
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  79. John M. Hobson & Rajiv Malhotra, Rediscovering Indian Civilization: Indian Contributions to the Rise of the Modern West.score: 12.0
    This paper presents a challenge to Eurocentric world history on the grounds that it reifies and exaggerates the role of the West in the creation of modernity, while simultaneously ignoring India's seminal contributions. The groundwork is prepared in the first three sections, which refute the parochial biases of Eurocentrism by revealing India's impressive early developmental record and its place near the center of a nascent global economy. The paper culminates in an approach that places the "dialogue of civilizations" center-stage (...)
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  80. Heather L. Reid (2010). Athletic Virtue: Between East and West. Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 4 (1):16 – 26.score: 12.0
    Despite the rich philosophical heritage of the East, the connection between athletics and education for character or virtue is more commonly associated with the West. Classical Eastern philosophy does focus on virtue, but it seems to exclude sport as a means of cultivation since the Confucian is uninterested in victory and the Daoist seeks passivity and avoids contention. A closer look reveals, however, that Eastern conceptions of virtue have much in common with those of Ancient Greece so often linked (...)
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  81. G. S. Axtell (1991). Comparative Dialectics: Nishida Kitarō's Logic of Place and Western Dialectical Thought. Philosophy East and West 41 (2):163-184.score: 12.0
    Philosophical anthropologist Mircea Eliade once said that "the union of opposites" is a basic category of archaic ontology and comparative world religions. In this paper I develop the theory of contrariety or opposition as a prime focus for East/West comparative philosophy. The paper considers especially Nishida Kitaro's later works and the complex phrase "zettai mujuntekijikodbitsu," variously translated by Schinzinger as "absolute contradictory self-identity," "the self-identity of absolute contradictories," or more simply as "oneness" or "unity" of opposites.
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  82. Kalidas Bhattacharyya (1958). Classical Philosophies of India and the West. Philosophy East and West 8 (1/2):17-36.score: 12.0
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  83. Jack A. Goldstone (2000). The Rise of the West-or Not? A Revision to Socio-Economic History. Sociological Theory 18 (2):175-194.score: 12.0
    The debate over the "Rise of the West" has generally been over which factor or factors-cultural, geoographic, or material-in European history led Europe to diverge from the World's pre-industrial civilizations. This article aims to shift the terms of the debate by arguing that there were no causal factors that made Europe's industrialization inevitable or even likely. Rather, most of Europe would not and could not move toward industrialization any more than China or India or Japan. Rather, a very accidental (...)
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  84. Douglas Allchin (1996). Points East and West: Acupuncture and Comparative Philosophy of Science. Philosophy of Science 63 (3):115.score: 12.0
    Acupuncture, the traditional Chinese practice of needling to alleviate pain, offers a striking case where scientific accounts in two cultures, East and West, diverge sharply. Yet the Chinese comfortably embrace the apparent ontological incommensurability. Their pragmatic posture resonates with the New Experimentalism in the West--but with some provocative differences. The development of acupuncture in China (and not in the West) further suggests general research strategies in the context of discovery. My analysis also exemplifies how one might fruitfully (...)
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  85. Edgar Sheffield Brightman (1952). Goals of Philosophy and Religion, East and West. Philosophy East and West 1 (4):6-17.score: 12.0
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  86. Jay L. Garfield (2007). Educating for Virtuoso Living: Papers From the Ninth East-West Philosophers' Conference. Philosophy East and West 57 (3):285-289.score: 12.0
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  87. Ho-Fung Hung (2003). Orientalist Knowledge and Social Theories: China and the European Conceptions of East-West Differences From 1600 to 1900. Sociological Theory 21 (3):254-280.score: 12.0
    This paper examines the long-term development of Orientalism as an intellectual field, with the European learning of China between ca.1600 and ca.1900 as an exemplary case. My analysis will be aided by a theoretical framework based on a synthesis of the world-system and network perspectives on long-run intellectual change. Analyzing recurrent debates on China within European intellectual circles, I demonstrate that the Western conception of the East has been oscillating between universalism and particularism, and between naive idealization and racist bias. (...)
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  88. John Kaag (2008). Women and Forgotten Movements in American Philosophy: The Work of Ella Lyman Cabot and Mary Parker Follett. Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 44 (1):pp. 134-157.score: 12.0
    This paper recovers and investigates the work of two forgotten figures in the history of American philosophy: Ella Lyman Cabot and Mary Parker Follett. It focuses on Cabot's work, developed between 1889 and 1906. During this period, Cabot took several classes given by Josiah Royce at Radcliffe College. Cabot's work creatively extends Royce's early thinking on the issues of growth, unity, and loyalty. This paper claims that Cabot's writing serves as a valuable type of Roycean interpretation—an interpretation that sheds (...)
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  89. K. A. Appiah (2012). Misunderstanding Cultures: Islam and the West. Philosophy and Social Criticism 38 (4-5):425-433.score: 12.0
    This article aims to explain why the idea of the West is, for historical and philosophical reasons, an obstacle to dealing with the dangers posed by radical Islamists. Every proposed theory of the West has to account for the great internal cultural diversity both of European cultures and of those influenced by them around the world; and every serious historical account both of Europe and of Islam has to recognize the long-standing, substantial and ongoing interdependence of their intellectual (...)
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  90. Gabriel D. Donleavy, Kit-Chun Joanna Lam & Simon S. M. Ho (2008). Does East Meet West in Business Ethics: An Introduction to the Special Issue. Journal of Business Ethics 79 (1/2):1 - 8.score: 12.0
    This article introduces and summarizes selected papers from the first World Business Ethics Forum held in Hong Kong and Macau in November 2006, co-hosted by the Hong Kong Baptist University and by the University of Macau. Business Ethics in the East remain distinct from those in the West, but the distinctions are becoming less pronounced and the ethical traffic flows both ways.
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  91. Joshua P. Kimber (2006). Synopsis of the Eighth Annual Building Bridges: East and West Graduate Student Philosophy Conference at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, November 4 and 5, 2005. [REVIEW] Philosophy East and West 56 (4):707-708.score: 12.0
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  92. Peter King, A (Very) Little About Me.score: 12.0
    I was born in Boston, Lincolnshire (actually in Wyberton West Hospital, which no longer exists), educated (if that's the word) first at St Mary's Primary School (run by nuns at the time, which probably explains a lot about my later career if you're a Freudian, which I'm not. Its new incarnation is here), then at Boston Grammar School . At the latter I successfully navigated 'O'-levels, but nearly half-way through my 'A'-levels I developed a number of extra-curricular interests (...)
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  93. Robert C. Solomon (1995). Some Notes on Emotion, "East and West". Philosophy East and West 45 (2):171-202.score: 12.0
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  94. D. P. Chattopadhyaya (1997). Sociology, Ideology, and Utopia: Socio-Political Philosophy of East and West. Brill.score: 12.0
    Yet this work is a sustained plea for improvable understanding between the East and the West and the transcultural value orientation of different cultures.
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  95. Philip Clayton (forthcoming). Panentheisms East and West. Sophia.score: 12.0
    In the West panentheism is known as the view that the world is contained within the divine, though God is also more than the world. I trace the history of this school of philosophy in both Eastern and Western traditions. Although the term is not widely known, the position in fact draws together a broad range of important positions in 20th and 21st century metaphysics, theology, and philosophy of religion. I conclude with some reflections on the practical importance of (...)
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  96. Robert Cummins, Martin Roth & Ian Harmon (forthcoming). Why It Doesn't Matter to Metaphysics What Mary Learns. Philosophical Studies.score: 12.0
    The Knowledge Argument of Frank Jackson has not persuaded physicalists, but their replies have not dispelled the intuition that someone raised in a black and white environment gains genuinely new knowledge when she sees colors for the first time. In what follows, we propose an explanation of this particular kind of knowledge gain that displays it as genuinely new, but orthogonal to both physicalism and phenomenology. We argue that Mary’s case is an instance of a common phenomenon in which (...)
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  97. Maria Rentetzi (2005). The Metaphorical Conception of Scientific Explanation: Rereading Mary Hesse. Journal for General Philosophy of Science 36 (2):377 - 391.score: 12.0
    In 1997, five decades after the publication of the landmark Hempel-Oppenheim article "Studies in the Logic of Explanation"([1948], 1970) Wesley Salmon published Causality and Explanation, a book that re-addresses the issue of scientific explanation. He provided an overview of the basic approaches to scientific explanation, stressed their weaknesses, and offered novel insights. However, he failed to mention Mary Hesse's approach to the topic and analyze her standpoint. This essay brings front and center Hesse's approach to scientific explanation formulated in (...)
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  98. Dunhua Zhao (2006). Metaphysics in China and in the West: Common Origin and Later Divergence. Frontiers of Philosophy in China 1 (1):22-32.score: 12.0
    There are two tendencies in the arguments of the legitimacy of metaphysics in ancient China: the tendency to argue that there was no metaphysics in ancient China and the tendency to argue that ancient Chinese metaphysics is totally different from that of the West. In this article, the author counters these tendencies and argues that Chinese and western metaphysics both originated from a dynamic cosmology and shared objects of investigation and characteristics of thinking in terms of Becoming. However, in (...)
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  99. Chhanda Chakraborti (2009). Pandemic Management and Developing World Bioethics: Bird Flu in West Bengal. Developing World Bioethics 9 (3):161-166.score: 12.0
    This paper examines the case of a recent H5N1virus (avian influenza) outbreak in West Bengal, an eastern state of India, and argues that poorly executed pandemic management may be viewed as a moral lapse. It further argues that pandemic management initiatives are intimately related to the concept of health as a social 'good' and to the moral responsibility of protection from foreseeable social harm from an infectious disease. The initiatives, therefore, have to be guided by special moral obligations towards (...)
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  100. Rick Kenney & Kimiko Akita (2008). When West Writes East: In Search of an Ethic for Cross-Cultural Interviewing. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 23 (4):280 – 295.score: 12.0
    Cross-cultural interviewing can pose challenges for journalists, given potential differences in language, word choice, volume, body posture, and group dynamics. This article explores some of the complexities of cross-cultural interviews with the dual aim of heightening awareness of ethical considerations for journalists who conduct them and of discussing ethical principles that may help in guiding their work. This article attempts to move the discussion of cross-cultural interviews beyond traditional Western ethics. Eastern moral philosophy and ideals of trust and human relations (...)
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