Search results for 'Paul W. Franks' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Paul W. Franks (2005). All or Nothing: Systematicity, Transcendental Arguments, and Skepticism in German Idealism. Harvard University Press.score: 590.0
    In this work, the first overview of the German Idealism that is both conceptual and methodological, Paul W. Franks offers a philosophical reconstruction that is ...
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  2. Paul Franks (2002). From Kant to Post-Kantian Idealism: German Idealism: Paul Franks. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 76 (1):229–246.score: 480.0
  3. W. Paul Franks (2009). Why a Believer Could Believe That God Answers Prayers. Sophia 48 (3).score: 270.0
    In a previous issue of this journal Michael Veber argued that God could not answer certain prayers because doing so would be immoral. In this article I attempt to demonstrate that Veber’s argument is simply the logical problem of evil applied to a possible world. Because of this, his argument is susceptible to a Plantinga-style defense.
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  4. Sebastian Gardner & Paul Franks (2002). From Kant to Post-Kantian Idealism. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 76:211 - 246.score: 240.0
    [Sebastian Gardner] German idealism has been pictured as an unwarranted deviation from the central epistemological orientation of modern philosophy, and its close historical association with German romanticism is adduced in support of this verdict. This paper proposes an interpretation of German idealism which seeks to grant key importance to its connection with romanticism without thereby undermining its philosophical rationality. I suggest that the fundamental motivation of German idealism is axiological, and that its augment of Kant's idealism is intelligible in terms (...)
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  5. Paul Franks (2001). Hegel's Hermeneutics. Paul Redding. Mind 110 (439):817-821.score: 210.0
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  6. Paul Franks (2008). Review of William F. Bristow, Hegel and the Transformation of Philosophical Critique. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (8).score: 120.0
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  7. Paul Franks (1999). Comment on Rolf-Peter Horstmann's 'What is Hegel's Legacy and What Should We Do with It?'. European Journal of Philosophy 7 (2):288–291.score: 120.0
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  8. Paul Franks (1997). A Primer on German Enlightenment, With a Translation of Karl Leonhard Reinhold's the Fundamental Concepts and Principles of Ethics. Philosophical Review 106 (1):141-144.score: 120.0
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  9. Paul Franks (2007). Neo-Kantianism. In Brian Leiter & Michael Rosen (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Continental Philosophy. Oxford University Press.score: 120.0
     
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  10. Paul Franks (2010). Should Jews and Christians Fear the Gifts of the Greeks? : Reflections on Levinas, Translation, and Atheistic Theology. In Kevin Hart & Michael Alan Signer (eds.), The Exorbitant: Emmanuel Levinas Between Jews and Christians. Fordham University Press.score: 120.0
     
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  11. Paul Franks (2008). Sinai Since Spinoza : Reflections on Revelation in Modern Jewish Thought. In George J. Brooke, Hindy Najman & Loren T. Stuckenbruck (eds.), The Significance of Sinai: Traditions About Sinai and Divine Revelation in Judaism and Christianity. Brill.score: 120.0
  12. N. P. Franks & W. R. Lieb (1998). The Molecular Basis of General Anesthesia: Current Ideas. In Stuart R. Hameroff, Alfred W. Kaszniak & A. C. Scott (eds.), Toward a Science of Consciousness II. MIT Press.score: 120.0
     
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  13. N. P. Franks & W. R. Lieb (2000). The Role of NMDA Receptors in Consciousness: What We Learn From Anesthetic Mechanisms? In Thomas Metzinger (ed.), Neural Correlates of Consciousness. MIT Press.score: 120.0
     
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  14. W. Dudley (2009). Review: Paul W. Franks: All or Nothing: Systematicity, Transcendental Arguments, and Skepticism in German Idealism. [REVIEW] Mind 118 (469):167-170.score: 93.0
  15. Brian O'Connor (2006). Review of Paul W. Franks, All or Nothing: Systematicity, Transcendental Arguments, and Skepticism in German Idealism. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (3).score: 90.0
  16. Frank Ankersmit, Herman Paul & Reinbert A. Krol (2010). The Meaning of Historicism for Our Time. Journal of the Philosophy of History 4 (2):119-120.score: 40.0
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  17. William L. Davidson, R. R. Marett, C. C. J. Webb, W. H. Fairbrother, Sidney Ball, J. L. McIntyre, Frank Granger, T. Loveday, F. C. S. Schiller & B. W. (1902). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 11 (41):110-129.score: 40.0
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  18. Michael Veber (2009). Reply on Behalf of Joe. Sophia 48 (4).score: 27.0
    This is a reply to W. Paul Franks’ critique (‘Why a Believer Could Believe that God Answers Prayers’) of my recent paper in Sophia (2007). I argue that Franks’ Plantinga-inspired criticism fails because it turns on the dubious assumption that the efficacy of prayer could provide evidence for the existence of God.
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  19. Lisa Keränen (2012). Arthur W. Frank's: Letting Stories Breathe: A Socio-Narratology. Journal of Medical Humanities 33 (4):287-289.score: 14.0
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  20. M. Davies (1997). Book Reviews : New Testament Ethics: The Legacies of Jesus and Paul, by Frank J. Matera. Louisville: Kentucky/Westminster: John Knox Press, 1996. 325pp. Hb. US$30. [REVIEW] Studies in Christian Ethics 10 (2):102-103.score: 14.0
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  21. Frank Thilly (1908). Book Review:Die Kultur der Gegenwart. Paul Hinneberg, W. Dilthey, A. Riehl, W. Wundt, W. Ostwald, H. Ebbinghaus, R. Eucken, Fr. Paulsen, W. Muench, Th. Lipps. [REVIEW] Ethics 19 (1):118-.score: 13.0
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  22. Frank M. Oppenheim (1991). Lonergan's Retrieval of the Notion of Human Being: Clarifications of and Reflections on the Argument of Insight, Chapters 1-18. By Frank Paul Braio. [REVIEW] The Modern Schoolman 69 (1):69-70.score: 13.0
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  23. W. W. Tait (2011). Curtis Franks The Autonomy of Mathematical Knowledge: Hilbert's Program Revisited. History and Philosophy of Logic 32 (2):177 - 183.score: 12.0
    History and Philosophy of Logic, Volume 32, Issue 2, Page 177-183, May 2011.
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  24. Juliette Kennedy & Roman Kossak (eds.) (2012). Set Theory, Arithmetic, and Foundations of Mathematics: Theorems, Philosophies. Cambridge University Press.score: 12.0
    Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction Juliette Kennedy and Roman Kossak; 2. Historical remarks on Suslin's problem Akihiro Kanamori; 3. The continuum hypothesis, the generic-multiverse of sets, and the [OMEGA] conjecture W. Hugh Woodin; 4. [omega]-Models of finite set theory Ali Enayat, James H. Schmerl and Albert Visser; 5. Tennenbaum's theorem for models of arithmetic Richard Kaye; 6. Hierarchies of subsystems of weak arithmetic Shahram Mohsenipour; 7. Diophantine correct open induction Sidney Raffer; 8. Tennenbaum's theorem and recursive reducts James H. (...)
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  25. Martin Heidegger (1991). Letters to Elisabeth Blochmann (Translated by Frank H. W. Edler). Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 14 (2/1):563-577.score: 12.0
  26. Thomas M. McCoog (2008). The Jesuits II: Cultures, Sciences, and the Arts, 1540-1773. Ed. John W. O'Malley, S.J., Gauvin Alexander Bailey, Steven J. Harris, and T. Frank Kennedy, S.J. [REVIEW] Heythrop Journal 49 (6):1079-1082.score: 12.0
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  27. Bertrand Russell (1932). The Foundations of Mathematics and Other Logical Essays. By Frank Plumpton Ramsey M.A., Fellow and Director of Studies in Mathematics of King's College, Lecturer in Mathematics in the University of Cambridge. Edited by R. B. Braithwaite M.A., Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. With a Preface by G. E. Moore Litt.D., Hon. LL.D., (St. Andrews), F.B.A., Fellow of Trinity College, and Professor of Mental Philosophy and Logic in the University of Cambridge. (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. 1931. Pp. Xviii + 292. Price 15s.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 7 (25):84-.score: 12.0
  28. John Briscoe (1987). Frank W. Walbank: Selected Papers: Studies in Greek and Roman History and Historiography. Pp. Xiii + 371. Cambridge University Press, 1985. £35. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 37 (01):123-.score: 12.0
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  29. W. R. Chalmers (1976). Malcolm Todd: Everyday Life of the Barbarians: Goths, Franks and Vandals. Pp. Viii + 184; 88 Ill. London: Batsford, 1972. Cloth, £1·90. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 26 (01):145-146.score: 12.0
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  30. Mary Douglas (1988). Book Review:Cosmogony and Ethical Order: New Studies in Comparative Ethics Robin W. Lovin, Frank E. Reynolds. [REVIEW] Ethics 98 (2):407-.score: 12.0
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  31. Patrick Curry (2008). A Response to Frank W. Derringh's Review of Ecological Ethics. Environmental Ethics 30 (2):223-224.score: 12.0
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  32. Helen M. Smith (1930). The Growth of Reason. By Frank Lorimer. (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. 1929. Pp. Xii + 231. Price 10s. 6d. Net.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 5 (18):302-.score: 12.0
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  33. Leonard Angel (2005). Compositional Science and Religious Philosophy. Religious Studies 41 (2):125-143.score: 9.0
    Religious thought often assumes that the principle of physical causal completeness (PCC) is false. But those who explicitly deny or doubt PCC, including William Alston, W. D. Hart, Tim Crane, Paul Moser and David Yandell, Charles Taliaferro, Keith Yandell, Dallas Willard, William Vallicella, Frank Dilley, and, recently, David Chalmers, have ignored not only the explicit but also the implicit grounds for acceptance of PCC. I review the explicit grounds, and extend the hitherto implicit grounds, which together constitute a greater (...)
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  34. Nitin Trasi, Francis X. Clooney, Maria Hibbets, George Cronk, Brian A. Hatcher, Robin Rinehart, Karen Pechilis Prentiss, Hal W. French, Francis X. Clooney, Lisa Bellantoni, Frank J. Korom, Robert Menzies, Constantina Rhodes Bailly, Gavin Flood, Rebecca J. Manring, Loriliai Biernacki, Brian K. Pennington, John Grimes, Richard D. MacPhail, Glenn Wallis, John J. Thatamanil, John Grimes, Thomas Forsthoefel, Denise Cush, Yasmin Saikia, Joseph A. Bracken, Lise F. Vail, Jacqueline Suthren Hirst, Judson B. Trapnell, Ellison Banks Findly, Paul Waldau, D. L. Johnson & John Grimes (2000). Book Reviews and Notices. [REVIEW] International Journal of Hindu Studies 4 (1).score: 9.0
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  35. Arthur W. Frank (2004). The Renewal of Generosity: Illness, Medicine, and How to Live. University of Chicago Press.score: 8.7
    Contemporary health care often lacks generosity of spirit, even when treatment is most efficient. Too many patients are left unhappy with how they are treated, and too many medical professionals feel estranged from the calling that drew them to medicine. Arthur W. Frank tells the stories of ill people, doctors, and nurses who are restoring generosity to medicine--generosity toward others and to themselves. The Renewal of Generosity evokes medicine as the face-to-face encounter that comes before and after diagnostics, pharmaceuticals, and (...)
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  36. P. W. Bridgman, Philipp Frank & Gerald James Holton (eds.) (1971). Science and the Modern Mind. Freeport, N.Y.,Books for Libraries Press.score: 8.7
    Introduction, by G. Holton.--Three eighteenth-century social philosophers: scientific influences on their thought, by H. Guerlac.--Science and the human comedy: Voltaire, by H. Brown.--The seventeenth-century legacy: our mirror of being, by G. de Santillana.--Contemporary science and the contemporary world view, by P. Frank.--The growth of science and the structure of culture, by R. Oppenheimer.--The Freudian conception of man and the continuity of nature, by J. S. Bruner.--Quo vadis, by P. W. Bridgman.--Prospects for a new synthesis: science and the humanities as complementary (...)
     
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  37. Laurence Paul Hemming & Susan Frank Parsons (eds.) (2002/2003). Restoring Faith in Reason: With a New Translation of the Encyclical Letter, Faith and Reason of Pope John Paul Ii: Together with a Commentary and Discussion. University of Notre Dame.score: 7.0
     
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  38. Paul Ibbotson, Anna L. Theakston, Elena V. M. Lieven & Michael Tomasello (2012). Semantics of the Transitive Construction: Prototype Effects and Developmental Comparisons. Cognitive Science 36 (7):1268-1288.score: 6.0
    This paper investigates whether an abstract linguistic construction shows the kind of prototype effects characteristic of non-linguistic categories, in both adults and young children. Adapting the prototype-plus-distortion methodology of Franks and Bransford (1971), we found that whereas adults were lured toward false-positive recognition of sentences with prototypical transitive semantics, young children showed no such effect. We examined two main implications of the results. First, it adds a novel data point to a growing body of research in cognitive linguistics and (...)
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  39. Arthur W. Frank (1995). The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and Ethics. University of Chicago Press.score: 5.0
    In At the Will of the Body , Arthur Frank told the story of his own illnesses, heart attack and cancer. That book ended by describing the existence of a "remission society," whose members all live with some form of illness or disability. The Wounded Storyteller is their collective portrait. Ill people are more than victims of disease or patients of medicine they are wounded storytellers. People tell stories to make sense of their suffering when they turn their diseases into (...)
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  40. Frank Kermode (2000). The Sense of an Ending: Studies in the Theory of Fiction: With a New Epilogue. Oxford University Press.score: 5.0
    Frank Kermode is one of our most distinguished and beloved critics of English literature. Here, he contributes a new epilogue to his collection of classic lectures on the relationship of fiction to age-old concepts of apocalyptic chaos and crisis. Prompted by the approach of the millennium, he revisits the book which brings his highly concentrated insights to bear on some of the most unyielding philosophical and aesthetic enigmas. Examining the works of writers from Plato to William Burrows, Kermode shows how (...)
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  41. Paul Tomassi (1999). Logic. Routledge.score: 5.0
    Logic brings elementary logic out of the academic darkness into the light of day. Paul Tomassi makes logic fully accessible for anyone trying to come to grips with the complexities of this challenging subject. This book is written in a patient and user-friendly way which makes both the nature and value of formal logic crystal clear. This textbook proceeds from a frank, informal introduction to fundamental logical notions to a system of formal logic rooted in the best of our (...)
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  42. Charles W. Kegley (1959). Reflections on Philipp Frank's Philosophy of Science. Philosophy of Science 26 (1):35-40.score: 5.0
    Recent writings of Professor Frank raise basic questions concerning the nature of science and its relations to social, political, theological and metaphysical issues. This paper concentrates on several of these questions. What determines the acceptance of an hypothesis in the sciences? Is it explanation of the facts and confirmation by experimentation or is it the capacity of a theory to guide human conduct? Professor Frank's espousal of the latter criterion raises the question of whether this criterion can clearly be applied. (...)
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  43. Paul Bloom & Frank C. Keil (2001). Thinking Through Language. Mind and Language 16 (4):351–367.score: 4.7
    What would it be like to have never learned English, but instead only to know Hopi, Mandarin Chinese, or American Sign Language? Would that change the way you think? Imagine entirely losing your language, as the result of stroke or trauma. You are aphasic, unable to speak or listen, read or write. What would your thoughts now be like? As the most extreme case, imagine having been raised without any language at all, as a wild child. What—if anything—would it be (...)
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  44. Robert W. Copper, Garry L. Frank & Robert A. Kemp (2000). A Multinational Comparison of Key Ethical Issues, Helps and Challenges in the Purchasing and Supply Management Profession: The Key Implciations for Business and the Professions. Journal of Business Ethics 23 (1):83 - 100.score: 4.7
    This paper presents the findings of a study of purchasing and supply management professionals in India conducted to identify the key ethical issues they face in carrying out their work related responsibilities as well as to determine the extent to which various factors appear to be helpful or to present challenges to their efforts to act ethically in the course of their work. The Indian findings are then compared to those for studies conducted among purchasing and supply management professionals in (...)
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  45. Robert W. Cooper & Garry L. Frank (2005). The Highly Troubled Ethical Environment of the Life Insurance Industry: Has It Changed Significantly From the Last Decade and If so, Why? Journal of Business Ethics 58 (1-3):149 - 157.score: 4.7
    . This paper presents the findings of two surveys conducted in April 2003 of Chartered Life Underwriters (CLUs) and Chartered Financial Consultants (ChFCs) who are members of the Society of Financial Service Professionals. The first survey of 3000 CLUs and ChFCs – the life insurance industry’s most highly regarded professionals – was aimed at identifying the key ethical issues faced by professionals working in the life insurance industry today. A comparison of these findings with those of earlier studies conducted in (...)
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  46. Robert W. Cooper & Garry L. Frank (2002). Ethical Challenges in the Two Main Segments of the Insurance Industry: Key Considerations in the Evolving Financial Services Marketplace. Journal of Business Ethics 36 (1-2):5 - 20.score: 4.7
    Based on the findings of several research studies of professionals in both the property-liability insurance industry and the life insurance industry, the paper makes and supports several important points. First, ethical challenges in the insurance industry involve not only a series of ethical dilemmas frequently faced by those working in the business, but also a variety of factors that hinder those working in the industry as they seek to resolve the ethical dilemmas encountered in the course of their work. Both (...)
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  47. Robert W. Cooper & Garry L. Frank (1997). Helping Professionals in Business Behave Ethically: Why Business Cannot Abdicate its Responsibility to the Profession. Journal of Business Ethics 16 (12-13):1459-1466.score: 4.7
    This paper compares the findings of studies of seven groups of professionals in various key segments of the fields of accounting and insurance conducted during 1990 through 1994 in an effort to determine the extent to which they tend to rely on various factors in their business and professional environments for help in behaving ethically in the course of their work. Commonalities among the findings for these rather diverse groups are highlighted and their possible implications for business and the professions (...)
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  48. Robert W. Cooper & Garry L. Frank (1992). Professionals in Business: Where Do They Look for Help in Dealing with Ethical Issues? Business and Professional Ethics Journal 11 (2):41-56.score: 4.7
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  49. Timothy W. Edlund & Richard H. Franke (2009). Journal Ratings for Business & Society Scholars. Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 20:364-369.score: 4.7
    This report on research in progress lists ratings of journals useful for business & society scholars for publishing. Ratings by an expert panel of such scholars are presented. Included are journals focused largely on this and closely related fields, and also those that reach a wider audience involved with management studies.
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  50. Stephen Finlay & Terence Cuneo (2008). Teaching & Learning Guide For: Moral Realism and Moral Nonnaturalism. Philosophy Compass 3 (3):570-572.score: 4.0
    Metaethics is a perennially popular subject, but one that can be challenging to study and teach. As it consists in an array of questions about ethics, it is really a mix of (at least) applied metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of language, and mind. The seminal texts therefore arise out of, and often assume competence with, a variety of different literatures. It can be taught thematically, but this sample syllabus offers a dialectical approach, focused on metaphysical debate over moral realism, which spans (...)
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  51. Frank Ankersmit, Mark Bevir, Paul Roth, Aviezer Tucker & Alison Wylie (2007). The Philosophy of History: An Agenda. Journal of the Philosophy of History 1 (1):1-9.score: 4.0
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  52. Yujin Nagasawa (2002). The Knowledge Argument Against Dualism. Theoria 68 (3):205-223.score: 4.0
    Paul Churchland argues that Frank Jackson.
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  53. Frank Jackson, Robert Pargetter & E. W. Prior (1982). Functionalism and Type-Type Identity Theories. Philosophical Studies 42 (September):209-25.score: 4.0
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  54. Jonathan D. Haidt, Moral Judgment, Affect, and Culture, or, Is It Wrong to Eat Your Dog?score: 4.0
    Graduate Group Chairperson Acknowledgments Above all I wish to thank my co-advisors, <span class='Hi'>Jonathan</span> Baron and Alan Fiske, and my additional committee members, John Sabini and Paul Rozin, for their wisdom and guidance over the years. This dissertation is the report of a collaborative research project, carried out with Silvia Helena Koller of the Universidade Federal de Rio Grande do Sul, in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and with Maria G. Dias of the Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, in Recife, Brazil. The (...)
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  55. Gary M. Hamburg & Randall Allen Poole (eds.) (2010). A History of Russian Philosophy 1830-1930: Faith, Reason, and the Defense of Human Dignity. Cambridge University Press.score: 4.0
    Machine generated contents note: List of contributors; Acknowledgments; Introduction: the humanist tradition in Russian philosophy G. M. Hamburg and Randall A. Poole; Part I. The Nineteenth Century: 1. Slavophiles, Westernizers, and the birth of Russian philosophical humanism Sergey Horujy; 2. Alexander Herzen Derek Offord; 3. Materialism and the radical intelligentsia: the 1860s Victoria S. Frede; 4. Russian ethical humanism: from populism to neo-idealism Thomas Nemeth; Part II. Russian Metaphysical Idealism in Defense of Human Dignity: 5. Boris Chicherin and human dignity (...)
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  56. George Cotkin (2003). Existential America. Johns Hopkins University Press.score: 4.0
    Europe's leading existential thinkers -- Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, and Albert Camus -- all felt that Americans were too self-confident and shallow to accept their philosophy of responsibility, choice, and the absurd. "There is no pessimism in America regarding human nature and social organization," Sartre remarked in 1950, while Beauvoir wrote that Americans had no "feeling for sin and for remorse" and Camus derided American materialism and optimism. Existentialism, however, enjoyed rapid, widespread, and enduring popularity among Americans. No (...)
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  57. Frank H. W. Edler (1997). Heidegger and Werner Jaeger on the Eve of 1933: A Possible Rapprochement? Research in Phenomenology 27 (1):122-149.score: 4.0
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  58. Frank Willems, Eddie Denessen, Chris Hermans & Paul Vermeer (2012). Students' Perceptions and Teachers' Self-Ratings of Modelling Civic Virtues: An Exploratory Empirical Study in Dutch Primary Schools. Journal of Moral Education 41 (1):99-115.score: 4.0
    This is a study of teachers? modelling of civic virtues in the classroom. It focusses on three virtues of good citizenship: justice, tolerance and solidarity. The aim is to explore the extent to which teachers can be regarded as models of these virtues. Questionnaires were developed for both students and teachers. Factor analyses showed that the three virtues could be empirically distinguished in teachers? behaviour. The students rated their teachers higher on the justice and solidarity scales than on the tolerance (...)
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  59. Arthur W. Frank (2007). Five Dramas of Illness. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 50 (3):379-394.score: 4.0
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  60. Paolo Fait (2004). Aristotle on a Puzzle About Logical Consequence: Necessity of Being Vs. Necessity of Saying. Topoi 23 (1):101-112.score: 4.0
    In the Posterior Analytics (I 6, 75a18–27) Aristotle discusses a puzzle which endangers the possibility of inferring a non-necessary conclusion. His solution relies on the distinction between the necessity of the conclusion's being the case and the necessity of admitting the conclusion once one has admitted the premisses. The former is a factual necessity, whereas the latter is meant to be a normative or deontic necessity that is independent of the facts stated by the premisses and the conclusion. This paper (...)
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  61. Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, Herbert Gintis, Richard McElreath, Michael Alvard, Abigail Barr, Jean Ensminger, Natalie Smith Henrich, Kim Hill, Francisco Gil-White, Michael Gurven, Frank W. Marlowe, John Q. Patton & David Tracer (2005). Models of Decision-Making and the Coevolution of Social Preferences. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (6):838-855.score: 4.0
    We would like to thank the commentators for their generous comments, valuable insights and helpful suggestions. We begin this response by discussing the selfishness axiom and the importance of the preferences, beliefs, and constraints framework as a way of modeling some of the proximate influences on human behavior. Next, we broaden the discussion to ultimate-level (that is evolutionary) explanations, where we review and clarify gene-culture coevolutionary theory, and then tackle the possibility that evolutionary approaches that exclude culture might be sufficient (...)
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  62. Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, Herbert Gintis, Richard McElreath, Michael Alvard, Abigail Barr, Jean Ensminger, Natalie Smith Henrich, Kim Hill, Francisco Gil-White, Michael Gurven, Frank W. Marlowe & John Q. Patton (2005). “Economic Man” in Cross-Cultural Perspective: Behavioral Experiments in 15 Small-Scale Societies. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (6):795-815.score: 4.0
    Researchers from across the social sciences have found consistent deviations from the predictions of the canonical model of self-interest in hundreds of experiments from around the world. This research, however, cannot determine whether the uniformity results from universal patterns of human behavior or from the limited cultural variation available among the university students used in virtually all prior experimental work. To address this, we undertook a cross-cultural study of behavior in ultimatum, public goods, and dictator games in a range of (...)
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  63. Frank Paul Le Veness & Marilynn Fleckenstein (2003). Globalization and the Nations of the South: Plan for Development or Path to Marginalization. Journal of Business Ethics 47 (4).score: 4.0
    Differences between the countries of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres recommend drastic changes in political, economic, and social attitudes, especially among the nations of the North. Especially significant is their influence on the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organization and their resulting imposition of policies favorable to their own interests at the cost of those of the Southern nations.
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  64. Rosamond Rhodes, Jody Azzouni, Stefan Bernard Baumrin, Keith Benkov, Martin J. Blaser, Barbara Brenner, Joseph W. Dauben, William J. Earle, Lily Frank, Nada Gligorov, Joseph Goldfarb, Kurt Hirschhorn, Rochelle Hirschhorn, Ian Holzman, Debbie Indyk & Ethylin Wang Jabs (2011). De MinimisRisk: A Proposal for a New Category of Research Risk. American Journal of Bioethics 11 (11):1-7.score: 4.0
    The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 11, Page 1-7, November 2011.
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  65. Armin Paul Frank (1972). T. S. Eliot's Objective Correlative and the Philosophy of F. H. Bradley. Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 30 (3):311-317.score: 4.0
  66. Arthur W. Frank & Therese Jones (2003). Bioethics and the Later Foucault. Journal of Medical Humanities 24 (3/4):179-186.score: 4.0
  67. Frank H. Knight (1950). Book Review:Work and History. Paul Schrecker; Meaning in History. Karl Lowith. [REVIEW] Ethics 60 (2):135-.score: 4.0
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  68. Charles W. Anderson (1983). Book Review:Politics, Values, and Public Policy: The Problem of Methodology. Frank Fischer. [REVIEW] Ethics 93 (3):625-.score: 4.0
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  69. Arthur W. Frank (2002). The Painter and the Cameraman: Boundaries in Clinical Relationships. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 23 (3).score: 4.0
    The issue of boundaries in clinician–patientencounters is considered through narrativeanalysis of four clinical stories in whichboundaries crossings are a self-conscioustopic. One story is by a physician as patient,two are by physicians, and one is by apalliative care nurse. The stories arediscussed using Walter Benjamin''s distinctionbetween the painter, who maintains distance andsees the whole, and the cameraman, who usestechnology to penetrate realities and thenreassembles fragments. The essay argues thatdistance and closeness are ethical issues thatconstitute the possibility of clinicalencounters but the encounter (...)
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  70. John Grimes, Robin Rinehart, Hillary Rodrigues, John M. Koller, Elaine Craddock, Ludo Rocher, Will Sweetman, Boyd H. Wilson, Edward C. Dimock, Thomas Forsthoefel, Hal W. French, Timothy C. Cahill, William J. Jackson, John Powers, Frederick M. Smith, Gavin Flood, Lelah Dushkin, Sheila McDonough, Frank J. Hoffman, Karni Pal Bhati, Anne E. Monius, Fred Dallmayr, Marcia Hermansen, Joseph A. Bracken, Carl Olson, William P. Harman, Donatella Rossi, Anna B. Bigelow & Jeffrey J. Kripal (1998). Book Reviews and Notices. [REVIEW] International Journal of Hindu Studies 2 (2).score: 4.0
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  71. Michael W. Howard (2004). Theories of Democracy: A Critical Introduction Frank Cunningham Routledge Contemporary Political Philosophy New York: Routledge, 2002, 248 Pp. [REVIEW] Dialogue 43 (04):822-.score: 4.0
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  72. D. W. Lucas (1960). David Grene and Richmond Lattimore (Editors): The Complete Greek Tragedies. Vol. Iii: Hecuba Translated by William Arrowsmith; Andromache by John Frederick Nims; Trojan Women by Richmond Lattimore, Ion by Ronald Frederick Willetts. Vol. Iv: Rhesus Translated by Richmond Lattimore, Suppliant Women by Frank Jones, Orestes by William Arrowsmith, Iphigenia in Aulis by Charles R. Walker. Pp. 255, 307. Chicago, University of Chicago Press (London: Cambridge University Press), 1958, 1959. Cloth, 30s. Net Each. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 10 (03):256-.score: 4.0
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  73. Frank W. Stevenson (2006). Zhuangzi's. Philosophy East and West 56 (2).score: 4.0
    : This interpretation of Zhuangzi's Dao, particularly in the "Qi Wu Lun," as "background noise" begins from Zhuangzi's question as to whether any human statements—and human language itself—can ultimately be distinguished from the "peeps of baby birds." The essay explores a tentative model of Dao that sees it as neither fully "linguistic" nor "non-linguistic" but as "pre-linguistic," the potential ground of emergence of words, statements, and meanings. To develop this model we turn to the notion of background noise in physics, (...)
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  74. George Thompson, Gerald J. Larson, Alex Wayman, Shalva Weil, Stephanie W. Jamison, Carl Olson, Dorothy M. Figueria, Frank J. Korom & Peter Heehs (1997). Book Reviews and Notices. [REVIEW] International Journal of Hindu Studies 1 (2).score: 4.0
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  75. Frank Witzleben, Paul Lorenzen & Jiro Hayakawa (1979). Rezensionen. Journal for General Philosophy of Science 10 (1).score: 4.0
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  76. Frank W. Derringh (2001). Is Coerced Fertility Reduction to Preserve Nature Justifiable? Philosophy in the Contemporary World 8 (1):21-30.score: 4.0
    Human population growth must end, and the sooner the better, for both nature and a humanity that pursues boundlessly increasing affluence. Poisoning of organisms and massive extinctions result, exacerbated by population momentum. Infliction of pain and death largely for trivial reasons constitutes the ignoble dénouement of our history. Reducing human numbers would be only one fitting response to recognition of this situation. Reliance on voluntary socio-economic reforms, including even the empowennent of women, appears unlikely to lead to below-replacement-level fertility, since (...)
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  77. David John Frank & John W. Meyer (2002). The Profusion of Individual Roles and Identities in the Postwar Period. Sociological Theory 20 (1):86-105.score: 4.0
    In recent decades, the individual has become more and more central in both national and world cultural accounts of the operation of society. This continues a long historical process, intensified by the consolidation of a more global polity and the weakening of the primordial sovereignty of the national state. Increasingly, society is culturally rooted in the natural, historical, and spiritual worlds through the individual, rather than through corporate entities or groups. The shift has produced a proliferation and specification of individual (...)
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  78. A. W. Frank (2009). Why I Wrote... The Wounded Storyteller: A Recollection of Life and Ethics. Clinical Ethics 4 (2):106-108.score: 4.0
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  79. Frank W. Lutz (1965). Power Structure Theory and the School Board Decision Making Process. Educational Theory 15 (1):19-25.score: 4.0
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  80. Jessica Richmond Moeller, Teresa H. Albanese, Kimberly Garchar, Julie M. Aultman, Steven Radwany & Dean Frate (2012). Functions and Outcomes of a Clinical Medical Ethics Committee: A Review of 100 Consults. [REVIEW] HEC Forum 24 (2):99-114.score: 4.0
    Abstract Context: Established in 1997, Summa Health System’s Medical Ethics Committee (EC) serves as an educational, supportive, and consultative resource to patients/families and providers, and serves to analyze, clarify, and ameliorate dilemmas in clinical care. In 2009 the EC conducted its 100th consult. In 2002 a Palliative Care Consult Service (PCCS) was established to provide supportive services for patients/families facing advanced illness; enhance clinical decision-making during crisis; and improve pain/symptom management. How these services affect one another has thus far been (...)
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  81. Frank E. Hartung (1954). Book Review:The Primitive World and its Transformations. Robert Redfield; The World of Primitive Man. Paul Radin. [REVIEW] Ethics 64 (3):234-.score: 4.0
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  82. W. Franke (2005). Franz Rosenzweig and the Emergence of a Postsecular Philosophy of the Unsayable. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 58 (3):161 - 180.score: 4.0
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  83. James P. Frank (1977). G. W. F. Hegel: An Introduction to the Science of Wisdom. Journal of the History of Philosophy 15 (2):241-245.score: 4.0
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  84. Paul L. Frank (1952). Realism and Naturalism in Music. Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 11 (1):55-60.score: 4.0
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  85. Frank Pearce, Jon Frauley & Ronjon Paul Datta (2010). Situation Critical: For a Critical, Reflexive, Realist, Emancipatory Social Science. Journal of Critical Realism 9 (2):227-247.score: 4.0
    This paper articulates the commitments, contours and justifications for a pluralist but non-eclectic critical, realist, reflexive social science with emancipatory aims. In it, we stress that social science can and should be used to guide the conceptualization of desirable and viable forms of social organization and their conditions of realization. In this regard, we advocate explanatory theorizing as an ethical duty of social scientists and as a moral good in itself as well as being an inherent epistemological component of scientific (...)
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  86. Frank W. Derringh (2009). Environmental Values. Environmental Ethics 31 (1):89-92.score: 4.0
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  87. Frank W. Derringh (2010). Gaia in Turmoil. Environmental Ethics 32 (4):439-442.score: 4.0
  88. Frank W. Stevenson (1993). Discourse and Disclosure in the I Ching. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 20 (2):159-179.score: 4.0
  89. Arthur W. Frank (1982). Improper Closings: The Art of Conversational Repudiation. Human Studies 5 (1):357 - 370.score: 4.0
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  90. Arthur W. Frank (1982). The Politics of the New Positivity: A Review Essay of Michel Foucault'sdiscipline and Punish. Human Studies 5 (1).score: 4.0
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  91. Arthur W. Frank (2005). The Perfect Storm of Enhancement. Hastings Center Report 35 (1):46-47.score: 4.0
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  92. Rich S. W. Masters, Jon P. Maxwell & Frank F. Eves (2009). Marginally Perceptible Outcome Feedback, Motor Learning and Implicit Processes. Consciousness and Cognition 18 (3):639-645.score: 4.0
  93. Frank W. Derringh (2007). Ecological Ethics: An Introduction. Environmental Ethics 29 (3):323-326.score: 4.0
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  94. Frank W. Derringh (2001). Ethics of Nature. Environmental Ethics 23 (1):99-102.score: 4.0
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  95. Frank H. W. Edler (1993). Heidegger's Interpretation of the German "Revolution". Research in Phenomenology 23 (1):153-171.score: 4.0
    From Heidegger's letters to Elisabeth Blochmann in 1932, it is apparent that he is on the verge of crossing the Rubicon into the political arena. On December 19, 1932, Heidegger tells her.
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  96. Arthur W. Frank (1978). Anxiety Aroused By the Dying: A Phenomenological Inquiry. Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 9 (1):99-113.score: 4.0
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  97. Frank Hartung (1952). Book Review:Physics: Principles and Applications Henry Margenau, William W. Watson, Carol G. Montgomery. [REVIEW] Philosophy of Science 19 (1):90-.score: 4.0
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  98. Frank W. Stevenson (2006). Zhuangzi's Dao as Background Noise. Philosophy East and West 56 (2):301-331.score: 4.0
    This interpretation of Zhuangzi's Dao, particularly in the "Qi Wu Lun," as "background noise" begins from Zhuangzi's question as to whether any human statements-and human language itself-can ultimately be distinguished from the "peeps of baby birds." The essay explores a tentative model of Dao that sees it as neither fully "linguistic" nor "non-linguistic" but as "pre-linguistic," the potential ground of emergence of words, statements, and meanings. To develop this model we turn to the notion of background noise in physics, especially (...)
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  99. Paul Helm (1999). Frank A. James III Peter Martyr Vermigli and Predestination. (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1998). Pp. X+290. £40.00 Hbk. Religious Studies 35 (3):371-384.score: 4.0
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  100. Gerald Holton, Edwin C. Kemble, W. V. Quine, S. S. Stevens & Morton G. White (1968). In Memory of Philipp Frank. Philosophy of Science 35 (1):1-5.score: 4.0
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