Search results for 'Richard M. Golden' (try it on Scholar)

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Profile: Richard Golden (UC Berkeley -LHS)
  1. Richard M. Golden (1997). Model-Based Learning Problem Taxonomies. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (1):73-74.score: 290.0
    A fundamental problem with the Clark & Thornton definition of a type-1 problem (requirement 2) is identified. An alternative classical statistical formulation is proposed where a type-1 (learnable) problem corresponds to the case where the learning machine is capable of representing its statistical environment.
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  2. Richard M. Golden (2000). Some Cautionary Remarks on the “Localist Model” Concept. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (4):478-478.score: 290.0
    The notion of a “familiar example” used in Page's definition of a “localist model” is shown to be meaningful only with respect to the types of tasks faced by the connectionist model. It is also shown that the modeling task ultimately dictates which choice of model: “localist” or “distributed” is most appropriate.
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  3. M. Golden (1997). Review. Senectus: La Vecchiaia Nel Mondo Classico: Vol. 1: Grecia; Vol 2: Roma. U Mattioli. The Classical Review 47 (2):375-376.score: 120.0
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  4. John M. Golden (2010). WARF's Stem Cell Patents and Tensions Between Public and Private Sector Approaches to Research. Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (2):314-331.score: 120.0
    While society debates whether and how to use public funds to support work on human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), many scientific groups and businesses debate a different question — the extent to which patents that cover such stem cells should be permitted to limit or to tax their research. The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF), a non-profit foundation that manages intellectual property generated by researchers at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, owns three patents that have been at the heart (...)
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  5. Reyes Bertolín (2010). Sport in Greece (M.) Golden Greek Sport and Social Status. Pp. Xviii + 214. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2008. Cased, US$50. ISBN: 978-0-292-71869-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 60 (01):183-.score: 42.0
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  6. Dean Hammer (2010). The Classics in America (C.J.) Richard The Golden Age of the Classics in America. Greece, Rome, and the Antebellum United States. Pp. Xiv + 258. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 2009. Cased, £33.95, €40.50, US$45. ISBN: 978-0-674-03264-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 60 (02):593-595.score: 42.0
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  7. Stephen G. Miller (2004). From Start to Finish M. Golden: Sport in the Ancient World From a to Z . Pp. XXIV + 184, Map, Ills. London and New York: Routledge, 2004. Cased, £45. Isbn: 0-415-24881-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 54 (02):531-.score: 42.0
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  8. Nigel Nicholson (2010). (M.) Golden Greek Sport and Social Status. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2008. Pp. Xvi + 214. $50. 9780292718692. Journal of Hellenic Studies 130:239-240.score: 42.0
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  9. E. J. Kenney (2000). Grandis Fabvla M. Zimmerman, V. Hunink, Th. D. Mccreight, D. Van Mal-Maeder, S. Panayotakis, V. Schmidt, B. Wesseling (Edd.): Aspects of Apuleius' Golden Ass, II: Cupid and Psyche. Pp. XII + 236, 13 Ills. Groningen: Egbert Forsten, 1998. Cased. Isbn: 90-6980-121-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (02):462-.score: 36.0
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  10. G. A. J. Rogers (1978). The Golden Lands of Thomas Hobbes By Miriam M. Reik Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1977, 240 Pp., $15·95Hobbes: Morals and Politics By D. D. Raphael London: George Allen and Unwin, 1977, 104 Pp., £6.50, £2.45 Paper. [REVIEW] Philosophy 53 (206):573-.score: 36.0
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  11. W. H. D. Rouse (1910). Apuleius of Medaura Apulei Platonici Madaurensis de Philosophia Libri. Ed. P. Thomas. 1908. Teubner. Florida: 1910. Ed. R. Helm. Teubner. Die Apologie des Apuleius von Medaura Und Die Antike Zauberei. Von Adam Abt. Giessen: Töpelmann. M. 7.50. The Metamorphosis or Golden Ass of Apuleius. Translated by H. E. Butler. 2 Vols. Apologia and Florida. Translated by the Same. Clarendon Press. 3s. 6d. Net Each Vol. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 24 (03):90-92.score: 36.0
  12. W. Warde Fowler (1891). Frazer's Golden Bough The Golden Bough; a Study in Comparative Religion. By J. G. Frazer, M.A. (Macmillan & Co.). The Classical Review 5 (1-2):48-52.score: 36.0
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  13. W. H. S. Jones (1910). A Literary History of Rome A Literary History of Rome From the Origins to the Close of the Golden Age. By J. Wight Duff, M.A. London and Leipsic: T. Fisher Unwin, 1909. Pp. Xvi + 695. 12s. 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 24 (02):65-66.score: 36.0
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  14. Yong Huang (2005). A Copper Rule Versus the Golden Rule: A Daoist-Confucian Proposal for Global Ethics. Philosophy East and West 55 (3):394-425.score: 21.0
    : Here a moral principle called the "Copper Rule" is developed and defended as an alternative to the Golden Rule. First, the article focuses on two problems with the Golden Rule's traditional formulation of "Do (or don't do) unto others what you would (or would not) have them do unto you": it assumes (1) the uniformity of human needs and preferences and (2) that whatever is universally desired is good. Second, it examines three attempts to reformulate the (...) Rule—Marcus Singer's general interpretation, Allan Gewirth's rationalization, and R. M. Hare's imaginative role reversal— to show why they all fail to save the Golden Rule from difficulty.Third, the rich resources of the Chinese Confucian-Daoist philosophical traditions are appropriated to develop a "Copper Rule" as an alternative moral principle: "Do (or don't do) unto others as they would (or would not) have us do unto them." This moral principle not only avoids the two problems, but also has additional advantages.Finally, the "Copper Rule" is defended against three objections or counterarguments: what if people ask you (forexample) (1) to kill someone else, (2) to kill them, or (3) to kill yourself? The appropriate response is merely to trace the implications of the "Copper Rule" rather than add any ad hoc arguments. (shrink)
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  15. R. M. Hare (1975). Abortion and the Golden Rule. Philosophy and Public Affairs 4 (3):201-222.score: 12.0
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  16. Nivedita Gangopadhyay, Michael Madary & Finn Spicer (eds.) (2010). Perception, Action, and Consciousness: Sensorimotor Dynamics and Two Visual Systems. Oxford University Press, Usa.score: 12.0
    Machine generated contents note: -- 1. Introduction -- Consciousness and Sensorimotor Dynamics: Methodological Issues -- 2. Computational consciousness, D. Ballard -- 3. Explaining what people say about sensory qualia, J. Kevin O'Regan -- 4. Perception, action, and experience: unraveling the golden braid, A. Clark -- The Two-Visual Systems Hypothesis -- 5. Cortical visual systems for perception and action, A.D. Milner and M.A. Goodale -- 6. Hermann Lotze's Theory of 'Local Sign': evidence from pointing responses in an illusory (...)
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  17. John Portmann (ed.) (2003). In Defense of Sin. Palgrave Macmillan.score: 12.0
    Intriguing, and occasionally unsettling, In Defense of Sin is a refreshingly frank exploration of some real facts of life. Portmann gathers an on-target collection of great writers on transgressions large and small. Read about defenses for promiscuity, greed, deceit, gossip, lust, breaking the golden rule, and more--and use this unusual guide to decide for yourself if sin has a place in our contemporary, and virtually unshockable, society. Provocative and illuminating, this book may change how you think about sin, morality, (...)
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  18. Justin Leiber (2006). Turing's Golden: How Well Turing's Work Stands Today. Philosophical Psychology 19 (1):13-46.score: 12.0
    A. M. Turing has bequeathed us a conceptulary including 'Turing, or Turing-Church, thesis', 'Turing machine', 'universal Turing machine', 'Turing test' and 'Turing structures', plus other unnamed achievements. These include a proof that any formal language adequate to express arithmetic contains undecidable formulas, as well as achievements in computer science, artificial intelligence, mathematics, biology, and cognitive science. Here it is argued that these achievements hang together and have prospered well in the 50 years since Turing's death.
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  19. Peter Simons, A Golden Age in Science and Letters: The Lwów–Warsaw Philosophical School, 1895–1939.score: 12.0
    The University of Warsaw has a splendid modern library with 60,000 m 2 of floor space. It resembles a shopping centre. The long and elegant modern building on ulica Dobra (a typical Varsovian street-name), on the low ground between the old University and the Vistula, was opened in 1998 replacing the previous hopelessly inadequate facilities. It has an imposing sequence of copper-green “great texts” on its front side in Greek, Arabic, Sanskrit, Hebrew, Latin, Polish, music, and mathematics. These are international (...)
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  20. Richard Wollheim (1983). Flawed Crystals: James's the Golden Bowl and the Plausibility of Literature as Moral Philosophy. New Literary History 15 (1):185--191.score: 12.0
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  21. Costis M. Coveos (1990). Wittgenstein on Frazer's Golden Bough. Philosophy 65 (254):518-.score: 12.0
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  22. Richard Eldridge (1987). Hypotheses, Criterial Claims, and Perspicuous Representations: Wittgenstein's 'Remarks on Frazer's The Golden Bough'. Philosophical Investigations 10 (3):226-245.score: 12.0
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  23. Kai M. A. Chan (2004). The Golden Rule and the Potentiality Principle: Future Persons and Contingent Interests. Journal of Applied Philosophy 21 (1):33–42.score: 12.0
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  24. Richard Brook (1987). Justice and the Golden Rule: A Commentary on Some Recent Work of Lawrence Kohlberg. Ethics 97 (2):363-373.score: 12.0
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  25. A. M. Bowie (1983). The Themes of Greek Lyric Poetry David A. Campbell: The Golden Lyre. The Themes of the Greek Lyric Poets. Pp. Viii + 312. London: Duckworth, 1983. £28. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 33 (02):169-170.score: 12.0
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  26. M. L. Clarke (1964). Latin Literary Artistry L. P. Wilkinson: Golden Latin Artistry. Pp. Xiii+282. Cambridge: University Press, 1963. Cloth, 47s. 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 14 (01):60-62.score: 12.0
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  27. John M. Rist (1994). The Golden Chain: Studies in the Development of Platonism and Christianity. Ancient Philosophy 14 (2):467-468.score: 12.0
  28. J. M. C. Toynbee (1962). Roman Building Through the Ages Axel Boëthius: The Golden House of Nero. Some Aspects of Roman Architecture. Pp. Viii+195; 109 Figs. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1960. Cloth, £5. 5s. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 12 (03):292-294.score: 12.0
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  29. M. L. Clarke (1964). Virgil and the Golden Section. The Classical Review 14 (01):43-.score: 12.0
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  30. M. L. Clarke (1964). Virgil and the Golden Section George E. Duckworth: Structural Patterns and Proportions in Vergil's Aeneid. Pp. X+268. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1962. Cloth, $7.50. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 14 (01):43-45.score: 12.0
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  31. Richard Greene & Rachel Robison (eds.) (2009). The Golden Compass and Philosophy. Open Court.score: 12.0
     
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  32. M. Heseltine (1918). Apuleius: The Golden Ass Apuleius: The Golden Ass. Being the Metamorphoses of Lucius Apuleius. With an English Translation by W. Adlington (1566). Revised by S. Gaselee, Fellow and Librarian of Magdalene College, Cambridge. Frontispiece, Portrait of Apuleius on a Coin. One Vol. Pp. Xxiv+608. London: William Heinemann; New York: The Macmillan Co., 1915. 5s. Net. Loeb Classical Library. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 32 (1-2):41-42.score: 12.0
  33. Richard Ingrams (2008). Chesterton's Golden Key. The Chesterton Review 34 (1-2):107-111.score: 12.0
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  34. Jason M. Kelly (forthcoming). Turner's Golden Vision. Semiotics:269-279.score: 12.0
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  35. Steven E. Landsburg (2009). The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas From Mathematics, Economics, and Physics. Free Press.score: 12.0
    The beginning of the journey -- What this book is about : using ideas from mathematics, economics, and physics to tackle the big questions in philosophy : what is real? what can we know? what is the difference between right and wrong? and how should we live? -- Reality and unreality -- On what there is -- Why is there something instead of nothing? the best answer I have : mathematics exists because it must and everything else exists because it (...)
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  36. Eileen Morgan (1998). Navigating Cross-Cultural Ethics: What Global Managers Do Right to Keep From Going Wrong. Butterworth-Heinemann.score: 12.0
    Through the personal stories of managers running global business, this book takes an inside look into the dilemmas of managers who are asked to make profits ethically according to the dictates of their company's ethics code. It examines what companies `think" they are doing to help managers in those situations and how those managers are actually affected. Thanks to the boost from the 1991 Sentencing Guidelines which minimizes penalties for companies with ethics codes caught in ethical wrongdoing, more than 85% (...)
     
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  37. Richard B. Miller (2000). Humanitarian Intervention, Altruism, and the Limits of Casuistry. Journal of Religious Ethics 28 (1):3 - 35.score: 6.0
    This essay argues that the ethics of humanitarian intervention cannot be readily subsumed by the ethics of just war without due attention to matters of political and moral motivation. In the modern era, a just war draws directly from self-benefitting motives in wars of self-defense, or indirectly in wars that enforce international law or promote the global common good. Humanitarian interventions, in contrast, are intuitively admirable insofar as they are other-regarding. That difference poses a challenge to the casuistry of humanitarian (...)
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  38. Kenneth M. Hiltebeitel & Scott K. Jones (1992). An Assessment of Ethics Instruction in Accounting Education. Journal of Business Ethics 11 (1):37 - 46.score: 6.0
    Business school faculty have begun to increase ethics instruction, but very little has been done to assess the effectiveness of this instruction. Curricula-wide studies present conflicting results of the effect of ethics integration into the business curricula. Several studies suggest that courses like business ethics and business and society might have an effect on the ethical awareness or ethical reasoning of business students. A belief of many individuals interested in business ethics is that students must be exposed to ethical awareness (...)
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  39. Richard A. Spinello (2002). The Use and Abuse of Metatags. Ethics and Information Technology 4 (1):23-30.score: 6.0
    The web creates manyopportunities for encroachment on intellectualproperty including trademarks. Our principaltask in this paper is an investigation into anunusual form of such encroachment: theimproper use of metatags. A metatag is a pieceof HTML code that provides summary informationabout a web page. If used in an appropriatemanner, these metatags can play a legitimaterole in helping consumers locate information. But the ``keyword'' metatag is particularlysusceptible to manipulation. These tags can beeasily abused by web site creators anxious tobait search engines and bring (...)
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  40. Jonathan M. Metzl (2003). Selling Sanity Through Gender: The Psychodynamics of Psychotropic Advertising. Journal of Medical Humanities 24 (1/2):79-103.score: 6.0
    This paper provides a brief visual history of the ways women patients, and specifically women patients whose marital status is identified in conjunction with their illness, have been constructed as abnormal in the images of advertisements designed to promote psychotropic medications to an audience of psychiatrists. The advertisements I discuss come from the two largest circulation American psychiatric journals, The American Journal of Psychiatry and Archives of General Psychiatry, between the years 1964 and 2001. I use the ads to focus (...)
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  41. Alexander M. Sidorkin (2012). Mad Hatters, Jackbooted Managers, and the Massification of Higher Education. Educational Theory 62 (4):487-500.score: 6.0
    In this review of three recent books on higher education, Alexander Sidorkin shows how the disinterested discourse that appears to be anticapitalist and anticommercial is actually a way of obtaining income from state subsidies. What links the books under review—Cary Nelson's No University Is an Island: Saving Academic Freedom, Frank Donoghue's The Last Professors: The Corporate University and the Fate of the Humanities, and Jennifer Washburn's University, Inc.: The Corporate Corruption of Higher Education—is their critical evaluation of the corporatization and (...)
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  42. Richard Greene (2009). Why the Dead Choose Death. In Richard Greene & Rachel Robison (eds.), The Golden Compass and Philosophy. Open Court.score: 6.0
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  43. Ian Richard Netton (ed.) (2006). Islamic Philosophy and Theology: Critical Concepts in Islamic Thought. Routledge.score: 6.0
    Islam, one of the worlds great faiths, was born as a result of the revelation of the Quran to the Prophet Muhammad (c. 570-632) in Arabia. A proper understanding of the Islamic present depends on an accurate knowledge of the way in which Islamic thought developed from medieval times onwards. For instance, Islam evolved a sophisticated theology and set of philosophical systems of its own, which owed something to the impact of Greek thought, but became uniquely Islamic because of the (...)
     
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  44. C. M. Kraay (1956). Konrad Kraft: Der Goldene Kranz Caesars Und der Kampf Um Die Entlarvung des 'Tyrannen'. (From Jahrbuch für Numismatik Und Geldgeschichte, 3 and 4, 1952–53.) Pp. 97; 4 Plates. Kallmünz (Oberpf.): Michael Lessleben, 1955. Paper. DM. 10. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 6 (3-4):315-.score: 4.0
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  45. B. M. Levick (1971). Konrad Kraft: Der Goldene Kranz Caesars Und der Kampf Um Die Entlarvung des 'Tyrannenr'. Zweite, Überprüfte Und Ergänzte Auflage. Pp. 103; 4 Plates. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1969. Cloth, DM. 15.60. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 21 (03):460-461.score: 4.0
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