Results for 'Mm Walker'

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  1. Transfer along a continuum in the discriminative learning of honeybees.Me Bitterman, Mm Walker & Y. Lee - 1989 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (6):498-498.
  2. Higher education pedagogies: a capabilities approach.Melanie Walker - 2006 - New York: Open University Press.
    This book sets out to generate new ways of reflecting ethically about the purposes and values of contemporary higher education in relation to agency, learning, public values and democratic life, and the pedagogies which support these.
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  3.  33
    Beyond Primates: Research Protections and Animal Moral Value.Rebecca L. Walker - 2016 - Hastings Center Report 46 (4):28-30.
    Should monkeys be used in painful and often deadly infectious disease research that may save many human lives? This is the challenging question that Anne Barnhill, Steven Joffe, and Franklin G. Miller take on in their carefully argued and compelling article “The Ethics of Infection Challenges in Primates.” The authors offer a nuanced and even-handed position that takes philosophical worries about nonhuman primate moral status seriously and still appreciates the very real value of such research for human welfare. Overall, they (...)
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  4.  47
    Mother Time: Women, Aging, and Ethics.Margaret Urban Walker (ed.) - 1999 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Fifteen original essays open up a novel area of inquiry: the distinctively ethical dimensions of women's experiences of and in aging. Contributors distinguished in the fields of feminist ethics and the ethics of aging explore assumptions, experiences, practices, and public policies that affect women's well-being and dignity in later life. The book brings to the study of women's aging a reflective dimension missing from the empirical work that has predominated to date. Ethical studies of aging have so far failed to (...)
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  5. How Narrow is Aristotle's Contemplative Ideal?Matthew D. Walker - 2017 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 94 (3):558-583.
    In Nicomachean Ethics X.7–8, Aristotle defends a striking view about the good for human beings. According to Aristotle, the single happiest way of life is organized around philosophical contemplation. According to the narrowness worry, however, Aristotle's contemplative ideal is unduly Procrustean, restrictive, inflexible, and oblivious of human diversity. In this paper, I argue that Aristotle has resources for responding to the narrowness worry, and that his contemplative ideal can take due account of human diversity.
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  6.  8
    The contribution of Angels Fear to metaReality: Gregory Bateson and Roy Bhaskar’s idiosyncratic approaches to the sacred.Rob Faure Walker - 2024 - Journal of Critical Realism 23 (2):224-236.
    Gregory Bateson’s career from anthropologist, through his development of cybernetics and systems theory, to developing ideas around ‘the sacred’, has parallels with Roy Bhaskar’s intellectual journey. This paper proposes that as well as Bateson’s theory of cybernetics and systemic thought making a contribution to basic and dialectic critical realism, his final and posthumously published Angels Fear: Towards and Epistemology of the Sacred adds to our understanding of Bhaskar’s metaReality. Similarities between the development of Bateson’s work from 1936 to 1987 and (...)
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  7.  40
    Panel: Lines on Paper Lynda Barry, Ivan Brunetti, R. Crumb, Gary Panter.Hamza Walker - 2014 - Critical Inquiry 40 (3):237-254.
  8. Aristotle, Isocrates, and Philosophical Progress: Protrepticus 6, 40.15-20/B55.Matthew D. Walker - 2020 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 23 (1):197-224.
    In fragments of the lost Protrepticus, preserved in Iamblichus, Aristotle responds to Isocrates’ worries about the excessive demandingness of theoretical philosophy. Contrary to Isocrates, Aristotle holds that such philosophy is generally feasible for human beings. In defense of this claim, Aristotle offers the progress argument, which appeals to early Greek philosophers’ rapid success in attaining exact understanding. In this paper, I explore and evaluate this argument. After making clarificatory exegetical points, I examine the argument’s premises in light of pressing worries (...)
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  9. Working virtue: virtue ethics and contemporary moral problems.Rebecca L. Walker & Philip J. Ivanhoe (eds.) - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In Working Virtue: Virtue Ethics and Contemporary Moral Problems, leading figures in the fields of virtue ethics and ethics come together to present the first ...
  10.  64
    Philosophy and the Maternal Body: Reading Silence.Michelle Boulous Walker - 1998 - New York: Routledge.
    _Philosophy and the Maternal Body_ gives a new voice to the mother and the maternal body which have often been viewed as silent within philosophy. Michelle Boulous Walker clearly shows how some male theorists have appropriated maternity, and suggests new ways of articulating the maternal body and women's experience of pregnancy and motherhood.
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  11. Instalados en la teologia de Pentecostés. Pobreza agustiniana.Mm Campelo - 1987 - Ciudad de Dios 200 (2-3):311-332.
     
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  12.  32
    The right to die?Richard Walker - 1997 - North Mankato, MN: Sea to Sea Publications.
    Discusses the moral and ethical aspects of euthanasia and related topics.
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  13. Aristotle on the Utility and Choiceworthiness of Friends.Matthew D. Walker - 2014 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 96 (2):151-182.
    Aristotle’s views on the choiceworthiness of friends might seem both internally inconsistent and objectionably instrumentalizing. On the one hand, Aristotle maintains that perfect friends or virtue friends are choiceworthy and lovable for their own sake, and not merely for the sake of further ends. On the other hand, in Nicomachean Ethics IX.9, Aristotle appears somehow to account for the choiceworthiness of such friends by reference to their utility as sources of a virtuous agent’s robust self-awareness. I examine Aristotle’s views on (...)
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  14. The Functions of Apollodorus.Matthew D. Walker - 2016 - In Mauro Tulli & Michael Erler (eds.), The Selected Papers of the Tenth Symposium Platonicum. pp. 110-116.
    In Plato’s Symposium, the mysterious Apollodorus recounts to an unnamed comrade, and to us, Aristodemus’ story of just what happened at Agathon’s drinking party. Since Apollodorus did not attend the party, however, it is unclear what relevance he could have to our understanding of Socrates’ speech, or to the Alcibiadean “satyr and silenic drama” (222d) that follows. The strangeness of Apollodorus is accentuated by his recession into the background after only two Stephanus pages. What difference—if any—does Apollodorus make to the (...)
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  15.  46
    The incompatibility of the virtues.A. D. M. Walker - 1993 - Ratio 6 (1):44-60.
    The paper examines a single, apparently simple argument for the existence of incompatibilities between the virtues as traits of character. This argument appeals not to empirical truths about human psychology or human nature but to the possibility of conflict between the exercise of different virtues in action. There are, for example, situations in which we can exercise the virtue of truthfulness only at the expense of not exercising the virtue of tact, as when we are asked a question to which (...)
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  16.  4
    Enjoyment and the Activity of Mind: Dialogues on Whitehead and Education.Foster N. Walker (ed.) - 2000 - BRILL.
    This book urges educational institutions to contemplate the harm they have caused to individual and society by their tragic suppression of the energy essential to the flowering of the mind's full potential. No more strident and uncompromising a voice is to be found on this topic than Whitehead's, in _The Aims of Education and Other Essays_. Walker's interpretation of these essays is set in a story of the lives of several teachers, education students, parents, and a professor. Whitehead's presence (...)
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  17.  36
    Virtue and Character.A. D. M. Walker - 1989 - Philosophy 64 (249):349 - 362.
  18.  11
    Regelbefolgen und die Kohärenztheorie der Wahrheit.Ralph C. S. Walker - 1985 - In Dieter Birnbacher & Armin Burkhardt (eds.), Sprachspiel und Methode: zum Stand der Wittgenstein-Diskussion. New York: de Gruyter. pp. 27-46.
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  19. Regelbefolgen und die Kohärenztheorie der Wahrheit.Ralph C. S. Walker - 1985 - In Dieter Birnbacher & Armin Burkhardt (eds.), Sprachspiel und Methode: zum Stand der Wittgenstein-Diskussion. New York: de Gruyter.
     
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  20. Reconciling the Stoic and the Sceptic: Hume on Philosophy as a Way of Life and the Plurality of Happy Lives.Matthew Walker - 2013 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 21 (5):879 - 901.
    On the one hand, Hume accepts the view -- which he attributes primarily to Stoicism -- that there exists a determinate best and happiest life for human beings, a way of life led by a figure whom Hume calls "the true philosopher." On the other hand, Hume accepts that view -- which he attributes to Scepticism -- that there exists a vast plurality of good and happy lives, each potentially equally choiceworthy. In this paper, I reconcile Hume's apparently conflicting commitments: (...)
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  21.  12
    Philosophy and the Maternal Body: Reading Silence.Michelle Boulous Walker - 1998 - New York: Routledge.
    _Philosophy and the Maternal Body_ gives a new voice to the mother and the maternal body which have often been viewed as silent within philosophy. Michelle Boulous Walker clearly shows how some male theorists have appropriated maternity, and suggests new ways of articulating the maternal body and women's experience of pregnancy and motherhood.
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  22. Experience of nothingness, a form of humanistic religious-experience.Mm Raymond - 1989 - Journal of Dharma 14 (2):173-189.
     
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  23.  10
    Out of line: essays on the politics of boundaries and the limits of modern politics.R. B. J. Walker - 2016 - New York: Routledge.
    Despite All Critique (2014) -- World Politics and Western Reason (1980) -- The Doubled Outsides of the Modern International (2005) -- The Subject of Security (1995) -- The Protection of Nature and the Nature of Protection (2005) -- Social Movements/World Politics (1994) -- Europe is Not Where It is Supposed to Be (2000) -- They Seek it Here, They Seek it There : Looking for Politics in Clayoquot Sound (2003) -- Violence, Modernity, Silence : From Weber to International Relations (1993) (...)
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  24.  24
    Kant’s Theory of Science.Ralph C. S. Walker - 1979 - Philosophical Quarterly 29 (116):269-270.
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  25.  19
    Discussion: Sur le Principe formel de la pensée.Mm H. Mébville, D. Christoff, S. Gagnebin & Et F. Gonseth - 1953 - Dialectica 7 (2):95-98.
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  26.  25
    Nature, Obligation, and Transcendence: Reading Luce Irigaray with Mary Graham.Michelle Boulous Walker - 2022 - Sophia 61 (1):187-201.
    This paper addresses the relation between Luce Irigaray’s work and politics by asking what it means to read her work locally, in place. The philosophical work of Indigenous scholar, Mary Graham, on the law of obligation, serves to ground such a local reading presenting, simultaneously, a case for a uniquely Australian philosophy. By way of suggesting possible connections between the work of Irigaray and Graham, the paper places Graham’s work on obligation alongside Irigaray’s work on the importance of a symbolic (...)
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  27. The anti-leninist substance of the new philosophers concept of social revolution.Mm Jurukova - 1984 - Filosoficky Casopis 32 (5):640-645.
     
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  28. Personnel relationships and spiritual formation in the indian seminaries.Mm Vallipalam - 1988 - Journal of Dharma 13 (3):291-304.
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  29. Sartre as a Transcendental Realist.Mm Vandepitte - 1970 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 1 (2):22-26.
  30. A funny taste : immoral humour and unwilling amusement.Zoe Walker - 2023 - In Daniel O’Shiel & Viktoras Bachmetjevas (eds.), Philosophy of Humour: New Perspectives. Boston: BRILL.
     
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  31.  5
    Moral epistemology.Margaret Urban Walker - 1998 - In Alison M. Jaggar & Iris Marion Young (eds.), A companion to feminist philosophy. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell. pp. 361–371.
    Moral epistemology investigates sources and patterns of moral understanding. Its questions include: To what extent does morality consist in or depend on knowledge, and of what kind(s)? What makes possible moral knowledge, and how is such knowledge grounded or justified? What is the relation between philosophical claims about morality and the moral understanding any of us has, that is, what has ethics – the philosophical representation of morality – to do with morality itself? Feminist moral epistemology asks how social divisions (...)
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  32. Self-determination as an educational aim.James C. Walker - 1999 - In Roger Marples (ed.), The aims of education. New York: Routledge.
     
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  33. Moral luck and the virtues of impure agency.Margaret Urban Walker - 1991 - Metaphilosophy 22 (1-2):14-27.
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  34. Contemplation and Self–awareness in the Nicomachean Ethics.Matthew D. Walker - 2010 - Rhizai. A Journal for Ancient Philosophy and Science 7:221-238.
    I explore Aristotle’s account in the Nicomachean Ethics of how agents attain self-awareness through contemplation. I argue that Aristotle sets up an account of self-awareness through contemplating friends in Books VIII-IX that completes itself in Book X’s remarks on theoretical contemplation. I go on to provide an account of how contemplating the divine, on Aristotle’s view, elicits self-awareness.
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  35.  7
    Discussion: Sur le Principe formel de la pensée.D. Christoff Mm H. Mébville - 1953 - Dialectica 7 (2):95-98.
    ZusammenfassungPrinzipien und Dialektik. Zwei Arten Dialektik: Die Rückkehr zum «Anhypoteton» und das dialektisierende Denken. Beide Tendenzen sind gleichsam charakterisiert durch die Hervorhebung der Aktivität des Denkens. Das formale Denken aber sucht den Ursprung dieser Aktivität, während das dialektisierende Denken deren Anwendung feststellen will. Auf dem Suchen nach einem ersten Ursprung ist das formale Denken in Gefahr bloss formale Bedingungen zu erreichen. Das dialektisierende Denken will aber nur die Orientierung in dem gegebenen gegenwärtigen Suchen feststellen; dabei scheint es die Idee einer (...)
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  36. Bhiology and pilosophy.Cjvan Mm Klaauw - 1961 - In Raymond Klibansky (ed.), Philosophy in the mid-century. Firenze,: Nuova Italia. pp. 315.
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  37. Nafsiologi: suatu pendekatan alternatif atas psikologi.Sukanto Mm - 1985 - Jakarta: Integrita Press.
     
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  38. Paul Ricoeur: una ontologia militante P. R.: une ontologie militante.Fafian Mm - 1976 - Pensamiento 32 (126):131-156.
     
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  39.  7
    On Critical Realism.Mm Yanase - 1990 - Annals of the Japan Association for Philosophy of Science 7 (5):211-215.
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  40.  21
    On Limiting Procedures.Mm Yanase - 1988 - Annals of the Japan Association for Philosophy of Science 7 (3):125-129.
  41. L'évolution de la physique et la philosophie. « Pour ls Science ».Mm Bauer, Serrus de Broglie, L. Brunschvicg & A. Rey - 1936 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 43 (3):4-5.
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  42. Etudes sur la philosophie morale au XIXe siècle, leçons professées à l'école des hautes études sociales.Mm Belot, A. Darlu, Ch Gide, M. Bernès, A. Landry & J. Roberty - 1904 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 12 (5):4-4.
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  43. Rabia-al-adawiyya devotion to God.Mm Jaoudi - 1990 - Journal of Dharma 15 (3):232-239.
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  44. Kantian Humility: Our Ignorance of Things in Themselves.Ralph Walker - 2002 - Mind 111 (441):136-143.
  45.  6
    11 Hobbes on law.Mm Goldsmith - 1996 - In Tom Sorell (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Hobbes. Cambridge University Press. pp. 274.
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  46. Dix-huitième Semaine de Synthèse.Mm Kucharski, P. Masson-Oursel, B. Rochot, J. Delevsky, P. Sergescu & Fr Le Lionnais - 1952 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 57 (3):373-373.
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  47. L'éducation de la démocratie, leçons professées à l'Ecole des Hautes Etudes sociales.Mm Ernest Lavisse, Alfred Croiset, Ch Seignobos, P. Malapert, G. Lanson & J. Hadamard - 1903 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 11 (5):10-11.
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  48.  9
    A right to die?Richard Walker - 1997 - New York: Franklin Watts.
    Discusses the moral and ethical aspects of euthanasia and related topics.
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  49.  2
    Early philosophical Shiism: the Ismaili Neoplatonism of Abū Yaʻqūb al-Sijistānī.Paul Ernest Walker - 1993 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    The first book-length study of a leading tenth-century Ismaili theoretician Abu Ya'qub al-Sijistani.
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  50.  7
    Uneasy relations.Cherryl Walker - 2013 - Thesis Eleven 115 (1):77-94.
    This article addresses the tensions between the struggle for gender equality and the struggle for cultural rights in the particular form championed by traditionalists within the ANC after 1994. While both sets of rights are recognized in the 1996 Constitution, the right to equality takes precedence. Nevertheless, a ‘turn to tradition’ within the ANC has seen the consolidation of patriarchal traditional institutions in the communal areas. These developments reflect the predominance of very thin understandings of both gender equality and culture (...)
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