Search results for 'S. Laurens' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. S. Laurens (2008). Hidden Effects of Influence and Persuasion. Diogenes 55 (1):9-21.score: 120.0
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  2. David L. Hull, Andrew Lugg, Robert E. Butts & I. C. Jarvie (1979). Review Symposium : Laurens Laudan. Progress and its Problems: Toward a Theory of Scientific Growth. Berkeley and Los Angeles: The University of California Press, 1977. Pp. X + 257. $10.00. Laudan's Progress and its Problems. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 9 (4):457-465.score: 36.0
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  3. Bruce Gibson (2000). LE TOMBEAU DE STACE F. Delarue, S. Georgacopoulou, P. Laurens, A.-M. Taisne (Edd.): Epicedion: Hommage à P. Papinius Statius, 96–1996 . Pp. 344. Poitiers: La Iicorne: UFR: Langues Littératures Poitiers, 1997. Paper, Frs. 150. ISBN: 2-911044-08-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (02):446-.score: 36.0
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  4. Clyde L. Hardin & Alexander Rosenberg (1982). In Defense of Convergent Realism. Philosophy of Science 49 (4):604-615.score: 12.0
    Many realists have maintained that the success of scientific theories can be explained only if they may be regarded as approximately true. Laurens Laudan has in turn contended that a necessary condition for a theory's being approximately true is that its central terms refer, and since many successful theories of the past have employed central terms which we now understand to be non-referential, realism cannot explain their success. The present paper argues that a realist can adopt a view of (...)
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  5. Philip J. Ivanhoe (1995). On the Metaphysical Foundations of Neo-and New Confucianism: Reflections on Lauren Pfister's Essay on Religious Confucianism. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 22 (1):81-89.score: 12.0
  6. Michael Bowler (2010). Review of Lauren Swayne Barthold, Gadamer's Dialectical Hermeneutics. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (4).score: 12.0
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  7. Ian Hacking (ed.) (1981). Scientific Revolutions. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
    Bringing together important writings not easily available elsewhere, this volume provides a convenient and stimulating overview of recent work in the philosophy of science. The contributors include Paul Feyerabend, Ian Hacking, T.S. Kuhn, Imre Lakatos, Laurens Laudan, Karl Popper, Hilary Putnam, and Dudley Shapere. In addition, Hacking provides an introductory essay and a selective bibliography.
     
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  8. Laurens ten Kate (2008). Intimate Distance: Rethinking the Unthought God in Christianity. Sophia 47 (3).score: 6.0
    The work of the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy shares with the thinkers of the ‘theological turn in phenomenology’ the programmatic desire to place the ‘theological’, in the broad sense of rethinking the religious traditions in our secular time, back on the agenda of critical thought. Like those advocating a theological turn in phenomenology, Nancy’s deconstructive approach to philosophical analysis aims to develop a new sensibility for the other, for transcendence, conceptualized as the non-apparent in the realm of appearing phenomena. This (...)
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  9. Laurens van Apeldoorn (2012). Reconsidering Hobbess Account of Practical Deliberation. Hobbes Studies 25 (2):143-165.score: 6.0
    Thomas Hobbes has been frequently criticised for his account of deliberation that purportedly consists merely of, in his own words, an `alternate succession of appetite and fear' and therefore lacks the judgement and reflection commentators think is essential if he is to provide an adequate treatment of practical rationality. In this paper Hobbes's account of deliberation is analysed in detail and it is argued that it is not vulnerable to this critique. Hobbes takes so-called `mental discourse' to be partly constitutive (...)
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  10. Paulo Sousa & Lauren Swiney (forthcoming). Thought Insertion: Abnormal Sense of Thought Agency or Thought Endorsement? Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences.score: 5.0
    Abstract The standard approach to the core phenomenology of thought insertion characterizes it in terms of a normal sense of thought ownership coupled with an abnormal sense of thought agency. Recently, Fernández ( 2010 ) has argued that there are crucial problems with this approach and has proposed instead that what goes wrong fundamentally in such a phenomenology is a sense of thought commitment, characterized in terms of thought endorsement. In this paper, we argue that even though Fernández raises new (...)
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  11. Lauren Edelstein, Evan DeRenzo, Elizabeth Waetzig, Craig Zelizer & Nneka Mokwunye (2009). Communication and Conflict Management Training for Clinical Bioethics Committees. HEC Forum 21 (4):341-349.score: 5.0
    Communication and Conflict Management Training for Clinical Bioethics Committees Content Type Journal Article Pages 341-349 DOI 10.1007/s10730-009-9116-7 Authors Lauren M. Edelstein, Johns Hopkins Medicine’s Howard County General Hospital 5755 Cedar Lane Columbia MD 21044 USA Evan G. DeRenzo, Washington Hospital Center Center for Ethics 110 Irving St Washington, D.C. NW 20010 USA Elizabeth Waetzig, Change Matrix Inc. 485 Maylin St. Pasadena CA 91105 USA Craig Zelizer, Georgetown University Department of Government 3240 Prospect St. Washington, D.C. NW 20057 USA Nneka O. (...)
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  12. Lauren Freeman (2009). Recognition Reconsidered: A Re-Reading of Heidegger’s Being and Time §26. Philosophy Today 53 (1):85-89.score: 5.0
    This article argues that notwithstanding Martin Heidegger’s explicit intentions to the contrary, his existential analysis in Being and Time provides more than the mere conditions for the possibility of ethics. More specifically, Heidegger’s account of solicitude, where he distinguishes between leaping in for and leaping ahead of the other, can be read as an account of recognition that has normative implications. This account is developed in light of both Charles Taylor and Axel Honneth’s positions on recognition. It is concluded that (...)
     
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  13. Carolyn Suchy-Dicey (2009). It Takes Two: Ethical Dualism in the Vegetative State. Neuroethics 2 (3):125-136.score: 4.0
    To aid neuroscientists in determining the ethical limits of their work and its applications, neuroethical problems need to be identified, catalogued, and analyzed from the standpoint of an ethical framework. Many hospitals have already established either autonomy or welfare-centered theories as their adopted ethical framework. Unfortunately, the choice of an ethical framework resists resolution: each of these two moral theories claims priority at the exclusion of the other, but for patients with neurological pathologies, concerns about the patient’s welfare are treated (...)
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  14. Peter Singer, Adventures of the White Coat People the New York Times , March 28, 2004.score: 4.0
    The idea behind Lauren Slater's book is simple but ingenious: pluck 10 leading experiments in 20th-century psychology from the pages of the scientific journals in which they were first published, dust off the painfully academic style in which they were written up, add some personal details about the experimenters and retell them as intellectual adventures that help us to understand who we are and what our minds are like.
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  15. Kimberly R. Laurene, Richard F. Rakos, Marie S. Tisak, Allyson L. Robichaud & Michael Horvath (2011). Perception of Free Will: The Perspective of Incarcerated Adolescent and Adult Offenders. Review of Philosophy and Psychology 2 (4):723-740.score: 4.0
    The existence of free will has been both an enduring presumption of Western culture and a subject for debate across disciplines for millennia. However, little empirical evidence exists to support the almost unquestioned assumption that, in general, Westerners endorse the existence of free will. The few studies that measure belief in free will have methodological problems that likely resulted in underestimating the true extent of belief. Recently, Rakos et al. (Behavior and Social Issues 17:20–39, 2008 ) found a stronger endorsement (...)
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  16. Lauren S. Purnell & R. Edward Freeman (2012). Stakeholder Theory, Fact/Value Dichotomy, and the Normative Core: How Wall Street Stops the Ethics Conversation. Journal of Business Ethics 109 (1):109-116.score: 4.0
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  17. Lauren Hartzell (2011). Responsibility for Emissions: A Commentary on John Nolt's 'How Harmful Are the Average American's Greenhouse Gas Emissions?'. Ethics, Policy and Environment 14 (1):15-17.score: 4.0
  18. Courtney S. Campbell, Lauren A. Clark, David Loy, James F. Keenan, Kathleen Matthews, Terry Winograd & Laurie Zoloth (2007). The Bodily Incorporation of Mechanical Devices: Ethical and Religious Issues (Part 1). Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 16 (02).score: 4.0
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  19. Courtney S. Campbell, Lauren A. Clark, David Loy, James F. Keenan, Kathleen Matthews, Terry Winograd & Laurie Zoloth (2007). The Bodily Incorporation of Mechanical Devices: Ethical and Religious Issues (Part 2). Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 16 (03).score: 4.0
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  20. Lauren Pfister (2003). Th Century Contributions in Chinese Philosophy of Religion(S): From Deconstructive Contradiction to Constructive Reconsideration. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 30 (3-4):541-553.score: 4.0
  21. Peter Singer, Adventures of the White Coat People.score: 4.0
    The idea behind Lauren Slater's book is simple but ingenious: pluck 10 leading experiments in 20th-century psychology from the pages of the scientific journals in which they were first published, dust off the painfully academic style in which they were written up, add some personal details about the experimenters and retell them as intellectual adventures that help us to understand who we are and what our minds are like.
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  22. Thomas Nemeth, Lauren G. Leighton, Thomas A. Shipka, Irving H. Anellis, S. M. Easton, Tom Rockmore, John W. Murphy & F. A. Seddon (1983). Reviews. [REVIEW] Studies in East European Thought 25 (3).score: 4.0
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  23. Lauren F. Pfister (2007). Editor's Introduction. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 34 (1):3–4.score: 4.0
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  24. David Coughlan (2012). The Art of Everyday Haunting. Derrida Today 5 (2):199-213.score: 4.0
    The question of where ghosts live can hardly be addressed without speaking of a haunted house. This essay reads Don DeLillo's novel The Body Artist, in which there is a ghost called Mr. Tuttle who haunts the house of Lauren Hartke, the body artist, as a text grafted onto Jacques Derrida's Dissemination. The essay takes as its starting point the first words spoken in DeLillo's text, ‘I want to say something but what’, a quasi-question directed to Lauren by her husband (...)
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  25. Lauren F. Pfister (2012). Walking Forward Reflectively: Zhao Fusan's Intellectual Journey Since the 1980s. Contemporary Chinese Thought 43 (3):3-12.score: 4.0
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  26. Lauren Tillinghast (2004). Essence and Anti-Essentialism About Art. British Journal of Aesthetics 44 (2):167-183.score: 2.0
    I argue that clarity about essence provides the tools both to isolate a distinct concept of art and to see why anti-essentialism is a plausible, though incomplete, doctrine about it. While this concept is not the only concept currently expressed by our word ‘art’, it is an interesting, and might be an important, one. One of the challenges it poses to conceptual analysis is to explain what it is to be better than being good of a thing's kind, where this (...)
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  27. Lauren Freeman (2011). Reconsidering Relational Autonomy: A Feminist Approach to Selfhood and the Other in the Thinking of Martin Heidegger. Inquiry 54 (4):361-383.score: 2.0
    Abstract This paper examines a convergence between Heidegger's reconceptualization of subjectivity and intersubjectivity and some recent work in feminist philosophy on relational autonomy. Both view the concept of autonomy to be misguided, given that our capacity to be self-directed is dependent upon our ability to enter into and sustain meaningful relationships. Both attempt to overturn the notion of a subject as an isolated, atomistic individual and to show that selfhood requires, and is based upon, one's relation to and dependence upon (...)
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  28. Lauren Freeman (2010). Metontology , Moral Particularism, and the “Art of Existing:” A Dialogue Between Heidegger, Aristotle, and Bernard Williams. Continental Philosophy Review 43 (4):545-568.score: 2.0
    An important shift occurs in Martin Heidegger’s thinking one year after the publication of Being and Time , in the Appendix to the Metaphysical Foundations of Logic . The shift is from his project of fundamental ontology—which provides an existential analysis of human existence on an ontological level—to metontology . Metontology is a neologism that refers to the ontic sphere of human experience and to the regional ontologies that were excluded from Being and Time. It is within metontology, Heidegger states, (...)
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  29. Lauren Bialystok (2011). Refuting Polonius: Sincerity, Authenticity, and 'Shtick'. Philosophical Papers 40 (2):207 - 231.score: 2.0
    Abstract In this paper I probe the kinds of views about selfhood that inform our understanding of sincerity and authenticity and argue that the terms have separate, but related, boundaries. Borrowing Harry Frankfurt's notion of wholeheartedness, I argue that authenticity is a form of alignment or consistency within the self, which requires self-knowledge and intentionality in order to be actualized. Sincerity involves representing oneself truthfully to others but does not depend on the presence of authenticity. I contrast sincerity and authenticity (...)
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  30. Lauren Swayne Barthold (2000). Towards an Ethics of Love: Arendt on the Will and St Augustine. Philosophy and Social Criticism 26 (6):1-20.score: 2.0
    In The Life of the Mind, Hannah Arendt explores the relationship between thinking, willing and judging. She poses the question of whether these may be among those conditions that prevent a person from doing evil. While many consider her account of thinking and willing (she died before writing the third volume on judging) insufficient for treating this question, I argue that in order fully to understand Arendt's notion of the will, particularly as it relates to our ability to avoid doing (...)
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  31. Miles Rind & Lauren Tillinghast (2008). What is an Attributive Adjective? Philosophy 83 (1):77-88.score: 2.0
    Peter Geach’s distinction between logically predicative and logically attributive adjectives has gained a certain currency in philosophy. For all that, no satisfactory explanation of what an attributive adjective is has yet been provided. We argue that Geach’s discussion suggests two different ways of understanding the notion. According to one, an adjective is attributive just in case predications of it in combination with a noun fail to behave in inferences like a logical conjunction of two separate predications. According to the other, (...)
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  32. Selcuk R. Sirin, Mary M. Brabeck, Anmol Satiani & Lauren Rogers-Serin (2003). Validation of a Measure of Ethical Sensitivity and Examination of the Effects of Previous Multicultural and Ethics Courses on Ethical Sensitivity. Ethics and Behavior 13 (3):221 – 235.score: 2.0
    This article describes the development of a computerized version of a measure of ethical sensitivity to racial and gender intolerance, the Racial Ethical Sensitivity Test (REST; Brabeck et al., 2000). The REST was based on James Rest's (1983) 4-component model of moral development and the professional codes of ethics from school-based professions. The new version, Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Test-Compact Disk (REST-CD), consists of 5 videotaped scenarios (used in the original REST) followed by an interactive "interview" presented on compact discs. (...)
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  33. Lauren Swayne Barthold (2010). Friendship and the Ethics of Understanding. Epoché 14 (2):417-429.score: 2.0
    In the following essay I explore the hermeneutical significance of Gadamer’s writings on the relational, and thus ethical, components of understanding. First, I look at his discussion in Truth and Method of the significance of the “I-Thou” relation for interpretation. I then turn to his 1985 essay on Aristotle’s notion of friendship, “Friendship and Self-Knowledge: Reflections on the Role of Friendship in Greek Ethics.” My interest is to think about the implications of these writings for his theory of hermeneutics in (...)
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  34. Lauren Hartzell-Nichols (2012). How is Climate Change Harmful? Ethics and the Environment 17 (2):97-110.score: 2.0
    Discussions of harm are central in the climate ethics literature. Especially in the rapidly emerging body of work addressing the question of whether or not individuals are morally responsible for their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, whether or in what way individuals’ emissions are harmful is a hotly debated question. John Nolt’s recent paper, “How harmful are the average American’s greenhouse gas emissions?” illustrates the prevalence of this framing (Nolt 2011). Here I take a step back and ask what we mean (...)
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  35. Lauren Julius Harris & Jason B. Almerigi (2005). The Left-Side Bias for Holding Human Infants: An Everyday Directional Asymmetry in the Natural Environment. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):600-601.score: 2.0
    To Vallortigara & Rogers's (V&R's) evidence of everyday directional asymmetries in the natural environment of a variety of species, we offer one more example for human beings. It is the bias for holding an infant on the left side, and it illustrates several themes in the target article.
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  36. Lauren Edelstein, John Lynch, Nneka Mokwunye & Evan DeRenzo (2010). Curbside Consultation Re-Imagined: Borrowing From the Conflict Management Toolkit. HEC Forum 22 (1):41-49.score: 2.0
    Curbside ethics consultations occur when an ethics consultant provides guidance to a party who seeks assistance over ethical concerns in a case, without the consultant involving other stakeholders, conducting his or her own comprehensive review of the case, or writing a chart note. Some have argued that curbside consultation is problematic because the consultant, in focusing on a single narrative offered by the party seeking advice, necessarily fails to account for the full range of moral perspectives. Their concern is that (...)
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  37. Lauren Gail Berlant (2008). The Female Complaint: The Unfinished Business of Sentimentality in American Culture. Duke University Press.score: 2.0
    Poor Eliza -- Pax Americana : the case of Show boat -- National brands, national body : Imitation of life -- Uncle Sam needs a wife : citizenship and denegation -- Remembering love, forgetting everything else : Now, voyager -- "It's not the tragedies that kill us, it's the messes" : femininity, formalism, and Dorothy Parker -- The compulsion to repeat femininity : Landscape for a good woman and The life and loves of a she-devil.
     
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