Search results for 'Walter Roy Laird' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Walter Roy Laird & Sophie Roux (eds.) (2008). Mechanics and Natural Philosophy Before the Scientific Revolution. Springer.score: 290.0
    This volume deals with a variety of moments in the history of mechanics when conflicts arose within one textual tradition, between different traditions, or ...
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  2. Srimati Basu, Heather T. Frazer, Dermot Killingley, James Blumenthal, Anne M. Blackburn, Roy W. Perrett, Kees W. Bolle, Donald R. Davis, Mariko Namba Walter & George W. Spencer (2002). Book Reviews and Notices. [REVIEW] International Journal of Hindu Studies 6 (3).score: 120.0
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  3. M. N. Roy (2004). M.N. Roy, Radical Humanist: Selected Writings. Prometheus Books.score: 120.0
    The failure of philosophy -- A new political philosophy -- Radical democracy -- Politics of freedom -- The future of democracy -- Decentralization of power -- A Humanist approach to elections -- A new approach to political and economic problems -- Human nature and humanist practice -- Humanist politics -- Integral humanism -- The way out -- New humanism -- The principles of radical democracy.
     
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  4. Jean-Michel Roy (2007). Heterophenomenology and Phenomenological Skepticism. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 6 (1-2).score: 60.0
    This paper is an attempt to clarify and assess Dennett’s opinion about the relevance of the phenomenological tradition to contemporary cognitive science, focussing on the very idea of a phenomenological investigation. Dennett can be credited with four major claims on this topic: (1) Two kinds of phenomenological investigations must be carefully distinguished: autophenomenology and heterophenomenology; (2) autophenomenology is wrong, because it fails to overcome what might be called the problem of phenomenological scepticism; (3) the phenomenological tradition mainly derived from Husserl (...)
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  5. Deboleena Roy (2008). Asking Different Questions: Feminist Practices for the Natural Sciences. Hypatia 23 (4):pp. 134-157.score: 60.0
    In this paper, Roy attempts to develop a semiprescriptive analysis for the natural sciences by examining more closely a skill that many feminist scientists have been reported to possess. Feminist scientists have often been lauded for their ability to “ask different questions.” Drawing from standpoint theory, strong objectivity, situated knowledges, agential realism, and the methodology of the oppressed, the author suggests that this skill can be articulated further into the feminist practice of research agenda choice. Roy illustrates the usefulness of (...)
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  6. John Laird (1947). On Human Freedom. London, Allen and Unwin.score: 60.0
    , LI, . D., F. B. A. Regius Professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of Aberdeen LONDON QEO IGE ALLEN AND IJNWIN LTD PREFACE JOHN LAIRD did not live to ...
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  7. Ralph Abraham & Sisir Roy (2012). The Atomistic Revival. World Futures 68 (1):30 - 39.score: 60.0
    In our recent book (Abraham and Roy 2010) we have repurposed a mathematical model for the quantum vacuum as a model of consciousness. In this model, discrete space and time are derived from a discrete cellular dynamical network. As our model is essentially atomistic, we included in our book a short support chapter on atomism. In this aticle we expand on the few pages of that chapter devoted to the history of atomism, to place the current revival of atomism in (...)
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  8. Subroto Roy (1989/1991). Philosophy of Economics: On the Scope of Reason in Economic Inquiry. Routledge.score: 60.0
    The Philosophy of Economics is the first work to seriously and successfully bridge twentieth-century economics and twentieth-century philosophy. Subroto Roy draws these two disciplines together and examines the basic intellectual roots of economics. This is also the first work by an economist to employ the writings of Wittgenstein and to tackle seriously the import of modern philosophy for economic thought. Unlike others in the field, Roy discusses not only the contributions of Popper, Kuhn, and Lakatos but also those of Frege, (...)
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  9. Devparna Roy (2013). Huey D. Johnson: Green Plans: Blueprint for a Sustainable Earth. [REVIEW] Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 26 (2):513-516.score: 60.0
    Huey D. Johnson: Green Plans: Blueprint for a Sustainable Earth Content Type Journal Article Category Book Review Pages 1-4 DOI 10.1007/s10806-012-9388-9 Authors Devparna Roy, Polson Institute for Global Development, Department of Development Sociology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA Journal Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics Online ISSN 1573-322X Print ISSN 1187-7863.
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  10. James D. Laird (2007). Feelings: The Perception of Self. OUP USA.score: 60.0
    This book aims to pinpoint the connection feelings have with behaviour - a connection that, while clear, has never been fully explained. Following William James, Laird argues that feelings are not the cause of behaviour but rather its consequences; the same goes for behaviour and motives and behaviour and attitudes. He presents research into feelings across the spectrum, from anger to joy to fear to romantic love, that support this against-the-grain view. Laird discusses the problem of common sense, (...)
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  11. Jean-Olivier Roy (2012). Primordialisme et construction nationale chez les nations autochtones contemporaines. Philosophiques 39 (2):367-378.score: 60.0
    Jean-Olivier Roy | : L’étude des nations et du nationalisme autochtones contemporains présente des défis en raison des divergences, chez les penseurs et les acteurs politiques, quant à leur nature et leur interprétation. Nous constatons que le nationalisme autochtone, à la base principalement ethnique ou culturel, accorde de plus en plus d’importance aux revendications politiques, dépassant ainsi les simples protections culturelles. Cet article pose l’hypothèse que les nations et le nationalisme autochtones, malgré les références aux traditions et à leur origine (...)
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  12. Torin Alter & Sven Walter (eds.) (2007/2009). Phenomenal Concepts and Phenomenal Knowledge: New Essays on Consciousness and Physicalism. Oxford University Press.score: 30.0
    What is the nature of consciousness? How is consciousness related to brain processes? This volume collects thirteen new papers on these topics: twelve by leading and respected philosophers and one by a leading color-vision scientist. All focus on consciousness in the "phenomenal" sense: on what it's like to have an experience. Consciousness has long been regarded as the biggest stumbling block for physicalism, the view that the mind is physical. The controversy has gained focus over the last few decades, and (...)
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  13. Henrik Walter (2002). Neurophilosophy of Free Will. In Robert H. Kane (ed.), The Oxford Handbook on Free Will. Oxford University Press.score: 30.0
  14. Sven Walter, Epiphenomenalism. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 30.0
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  15. Sven Walter (2005). Program Explanations and Causal Relevance. Acta Analytica 20 (36):32-47.score: 30.0
    Frank Jackson and Philip Pettit have defended a non-reductive account of causal relevance known as the ‘program explanation account’. Allegedly, irreducible mental properties can be causally relevant in virtue of figuring in non-redundant program explanations which convey information not conveyed by explanations in terms of the physical properties that actually do the ‘causal work’. I argue that none of the possible ways to spell out the intuitively plausible idea of a program explanation serves its purpose, viz., defends non-reductive physicalism against (...)
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  16. Sven Walter (2002). Terry, Terry, Quite Contrary. Grazer Philosophische Studien 63 (1):103-22.score: 30.0
    In 'Jackson on physical information and qualia'(1984) Terry Horgan defended physicalism against Frank Jackson's Knowledge Argument by raising what later has been called the 'mode of presentation reply'- arguingthatthe Knowledge Argumentis fallacious because itsubtly equivocates on two different readings of 'physical information'. In 'Mary, Mary, quite contrary' (2000) however, George Graham and Terry Horgan maintain that none of the replies against Jackson has yet been successful, not even Horgan's own 1984 rejoinder.Tosubstantiate their claim, they present an allegedly improved version of (...)
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  17. Sven Walter (2006). Multiple Realizability and Reduction: A Defense of the Disjunctive Move. Metaphysica 7 (1):43-65.score: 30.0
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  18. Sven Walter & Heinz-Dieter Heckmann (eds.) (2003). Physicalism and Mental Causation. Imprint Academic.score: 30.0
  19. Sven Walter (2002). Need Multiple Realizability Deter the Identity-Theorist? Grazer Philosophische Studien 65 (1):51-75.score: 30.0
    I will discuss two possible options how a defender of the type identity-theory with respect to mental properties can avoid the conclusion of Putnam's Multiple Realizability Argument. I begin by offering a rigorous formulation of Putnam's argument, which has been lacking so far in the literature (section 2). This rigorous formulation shows that there are basically two possible options for avoiding the argument's conclusion. Contrary to current mainstream, I reject the first option?Kim's 'local reductionism'?as untenable (section 3). I endorse the (...)
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  20. Henrik Walter (2001). Neurophilosophy of Free Will. MIT Press.score: 30.0
  21. Sven Walter (2007). The Epistemological Approach to Mental Causation. Erkenntnis 67 (2):273 - 285.score: 30.0
    Epistemological approaches to mental causation argue that the notorious problem of mental causation as captured in the question “How can irreducible, physically realized, and potentially relational mental properties be causally efficacious in the production of physical effects?” has a very simple solution: One merely has to abandon any metaphysical considerations in favor of epistemological considerations and accept that our explanatory practice is a much better guide to causal relevance than the metaphysical reasoning carried out from the philosophical armchair. I argue (...)
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  22. Sven Walter (2007). Determinables, Determinates, and Causal Relevance. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (2):217-244.score: 30.0
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  23. John Laird (1923). Mental Process and the Conscious Quality. Mind 32 (127):273-288.score: 30.0
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  24. J. -M. Roy (2003). Phenomenological Claims and the Myth of the Given. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 33 (Supplement):1-32.score: 30.0
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  25. G. C. Field, F. Aveling & John Laird (1922). Is the Conception of the Unconscious of Value in Psychology? Mind 31 (124):413-442.score: 30.0
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  26. John Laird (1917). Introspection and Intuition. Philosophical Review 26 (5):496-513.score: 30.0
  27. John Laird (1919). Introspection. Mind 28 (112):385-406.score: 30.0
  28. John Laird (1917). Recollection, Association and Memory. Mind 26 (104):407-427.score: 30.0
  29. Sven Walter (2005). Program Explanations and the Causal Relevance of Mental Properties. Acta Analytica 20:32-47.score: 30.0
     
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  30. John Laird (1922). Is the Conception of the Unconscious of Value in Psychology? Mind 31 (124):433-442.score: 30.0
  31. Michael Pauen, Alexander Staudacher & Sven Walter (2006). Epiphenomenalism: Dead End or Way Out? Journal of Consciousness Studies 13 (1-2):7-19.score: 30.0
     
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  32. M. N. Roy (1951/1982). Materialism: An Outline of the History of Scientific Thought. Distributors, Ajanta Books International.score: 30.0
     
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  33. Jean-Michel Roy (2004). Peer Commentary on Are There Neural Correlates of Consciousness: Is There a Content Matching Doctrine? Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (1):77-79.score: 30.0
  34. Sven Walter (2006). Causal Exclusion as an Argument Against Non-Reductive Physicalism. Journal of Consciousness Studies 13 (1-2):67-83.score: 30.0
     
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  35. Edward F. Walter & Arthur Minton (1975). Soft Determinism, Freedom, and Rationality. Personalist 56:364-384.score: 30.0
     
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  36. W. G. Walter (1954). Theoretical Properties of Diffuse Projection Systems in Relation to Behaviour and Consciousness. In J. F. Delafresnaye (ed.), Brain Mechanisms and Consciousness. Blackwell.score: 30.0
  37. Abraham Akkerman (2012). Gender Myth and the Mind-City Composite: From Plato’s Atlantis to Walter Benjamin’s Philosophical Urbanism. GeoJournal (in Press; Online Version Published) 78.score: 18.0
    In the early twentieth century Walter Benjamin introduced the idea of epochal and ongoing progression in interaction between mind and the built environment. Since early antiquity, the present study suggests, Benjamin’s notion has been manifest in metaphors of gender in city-form, whereby edifices and urban voids have represented masculinity and femininity, respectively. At the onset of interaction between mind and the built environment are prehistoric myths related to the human body and to the sky. During antiquity gender projection can (...)
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  38. Walter Lippmann (1985). Public Philosopher: Selected Letters of Walter Lippmann. Ticknor & Fields.score: 18.0
  39. Kristin Andrews (2003). Neurophilosophy of Free Will: From Libertarian Illusions to a Concept of Natural Autonomy by Henrik Walter. Philo 6 (1):166-175.score: 15.0
  40. Jerry A. Fodor (1979). In Reply to Philip Johnson-Laird's What's Wrong with Grandma's Guide to Procedural Semantics: A Reply to Jerry Fodor. Cognition 7 (March):93-95.score: 15.0
     
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  41. Roy J. Glauber, Fritz Haake, L. M. Narducci & D. F. Walls (eds.) (1986). Coherence, Cooperation and Fluctuations: Proceedings of the Symposium on the Occasion of the Sixtieth Birthday of Professor Roy J. Glauber, Harvard University, October 19, 1985. Cambridge University Press.score: 15.0
    This volume contains invited and contributed papers delivered at a symposium on the occasion of Professor Glauber's 60th birthday. The papers, many of which are authored by world leaders in their fields, contain recent research work in quantum optics, statistical mechanics and high energy physics related to the pioneering work of Professor Roy Glauber; most contain original research material that is previously unpublished. The concepts of coherence, cooperativity and fluctuations in systems with many degrees of freedom are a common base (...)
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  42. Walter Schaeken & Philip N. Johnson-Laird (2000). Strategies in Temporal Reasoning. Thinking and Reasoning 6 (3):193 – 219.score: 14.0
    This paper reports three studies of temporal reasoning. A problem of the following sort, where the letters denote common everyday events: A happens before B. C happens before B. D happens while B. E happens while C. What is the relation between D and EEfficacylls for at least two alternative models to be constructed in order to give the right answer for the right reason (D happens after E). However, the (...)
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  43. Walter Roy Harding (1971). Henry David Thoreau; a Profile. New York,Hill and Wang.score: 14.0
  44. István Aranyosi (2008). Review of Roy Sorensen's Seeing Dark Things. The Philosophy of Shadows. [REVIEW] Australasian Journal of Philosophy 86 (3):513-515.score: 12.0
  45. Rondo Keele (2007). Can God Make a Picasso? William Ockham and Walter Chatton on Divine Power and Real Relations. Journal of the History of Philosophy 45 (3):395-411.score: 12.0
    : This article focuses on one aspect of the late mediaeval debate over divine power, as it was discussed by Oxford philosophers Walter Chatton (d. 1343) and William Ockham (d. 1347). Chatton and Ockham would have agreed, for example, that God is ultimately responsible for the existence of the works of Pablo Picasso, but they would not agree over wheher it violates God's omnipotence to say that he cannot make something that Picasso made, for example, the painting Guernica, without (...)
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  46. Andrew E. Benjamin & Charles Rice (eds.) (2009). Walter Benjamin and the Architecture of Modernity. Re.Press.score: 12.0
    Walter Benjamin's Politics of 'bad tasteMichael Mac Modernity as an unfinished Project: Benjamin and Political RomanticismRobert Sinnerbrink Violence, ...
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  47. Tamar Szabó Gendler (1998). Continence on the Cheap: A Response to Roy Sorensen. Mind 107 (428):821.score: 12.0
    A brief "advertisement" in response to Roy Sorensen's "advertisement" "A Cure for Incontinence".
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  48. Roy Sorensen, This Appears in Pyrrhonian Skepticism Ed. Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Oxford Univerity Press).score: 12.0
    This report is also a consolidated response to three memoranda. The legal division requested an historical review as patent support. Engineering has solicited input on product development. Thirdly, I am responding to a plea from the Personnel Department. Their headhunters have asked for more specific advice on how to recruit skeptics.
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  49. Verena Erlenbusch (2011). Notes on Violence: Walter Benjamin's Relevance for the Study of Terrorism. Journal of Global Ethics 6 (2):167-178.score: 12.0
    This article uses Walter Benjamin's theoretical claims in the 'Critique of violence' to shed light on some current conceptualisations of terrorism. It suggests an understanding of terrorism as an essentially contested concept. If the theorist uncritically adopts the state's account of terrorism, she occludes an important dimension of the phenomenon that allows for a rethinking of the state's claim to a monopoly on legitimate violence. Benjamin's essay conceptualises the state as resulting from a conjunction of violence, law, legitimacy and (...)
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  50. Stephan Hartmann & Wouter Meijs (2012). Walter the Banker: The Conjunction Fallacy Reconsidered. Synthese 184 (1):73-87.score: 12.0
    In a famous experiment by Tversky and Kahneman (Psychol Rev 90:293–315, 1983), featuring Linda the bank teller, the participants assign a higher probability to a conjunction of propositions than to one of the conjuncts, thereby seemingly committing a probabilistic fallacy. In this paper, we discuss a slightly different example featuring someone named Walter, who also happens to work at a bank, and argue that, in this example, it is rational to assign a higher probability to the conjunction of suitably (...)
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  51. Andrew Benjamin (2012). Morality, Law and the Place of Critique: Walter Benjamin's The Meaning of Time in the Moral World. Critical Horizons 12 (3):281 - 301.score: 12.0
    Critique as a philosophical concept needs to be recast once it is linked to the possibility of a productive opening. In such a context critique has an important affinity to destruction and forms of inauguration. Working through writings of Marx and Walter Benjamin, specifically Benjamin's 'The Meaning of Time in the Moral World', destruction and inauguration are repositioned in terns of othering and the caesura of allowing.
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  52. Marc de Wilde (2011). Meeting Opposites: The Political Theologies of Walter Benjamin and Carl Schmitt. Philosophy and Rhetoric 44 (4):363-381.score: 12.0
    On 9 December 1930, Walter Benjamin sent a copy of his book The Origin of German Tragic Drama to Carl Schmitt, accompanied by a letter in which he expressed his indebtedness to Schmitt: "You will very quickly recognize how much my book is indebted to you for its presentation of the doctrine of sovereignty in the seventeenth century. Perhaps I may say, in addition, that I have also derived from your later works, especially Die Diktatur, a confirmation of my (...)
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  53. Stefan Gandler (2010). The Concept of History in Walter Benjamin's Critical Theory. Radical Philosophy Review 13 (1):19-42.score: 12.0
    The point of departure of this study is Walter Benjamin’s last text, “Theses on the Philosophy of History.” Benjamin appeals to the significance of theology for historical materialism in order to overcome one of the decisive reasons why Marx’s unique theoretical project, in its positivistic interpretations, was not understood with the necessary radicality and had been in danger of losing its explanatory power and revolutionary impulse. The necessity of looking back to the past constitutes the basic theme of the (...)
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  54. Tyrus Miller (1996). From City-Dreams to the Dreaming Collective: Walter Benjamin's Political Dream Interpretation. Philosophy and Social Criticism 22 (6):87-111.score: 12.0
    This essay discusses Walter Benjamin's development of 'dream' as a model for understanding 19th- and 20th-century urban culture. Following Bergson and surrealist poetics, Benjamin used 'dream' in the 1920s as an heuristic analogy for investigating child hood memories, kitsch art and literature; during the early 1930s, he also developed it into an historiographic concept for studying 19th- century Parisian culture. Benjamin's interpretative use of the dream cuts across Ricoeur's distinction between the hermeneutics of 'recol lection' and the hermeneutics of (...)
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  55. Atsuko Tsuji (2010). Experience in the Very Moment of Writing: Reconsidering Walter Benjamin's Theory of Mimesis. Journal of Philosophy of Education 44 (1):125-136.score: 12.0
    The purpose of this paper is to examine the ateleological moment of learning through imitation. In general, we can learn something new through imitating models we are given, which embody the values of our own society, culture and institutions. This means that imitation is understood in terms of the representation or reproduction of original models. In this understanding of imitation, however, the creative aspect of imitation is missed. In relation to this I shall, first, consider learning through imitation in terms (...)
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  56. William Dembski, Can Functional Logic Take the Place of Intelligent Design? A Response to Walter Thorson.score: 12.0
    Walter Thorson's two articles on the legitimacy and scope of naturalism within science attempt to identify a mediating position between the reductive naturalism of thinkers like Richard Dawkins and the complete rejection of naturalism by thinkers like Phillip Johnson. Thorson rightly notes that the purely mechanistic approach to science characteristic of reductive naturalism is inadequate. Nonetheless, he argues that science still needs naturalism as a methodological or regulative principle. Thorson's methodological naturalism leaves room for teleology in nature, though (...)
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  57. Wesley Phillips (2010). History or Counter-Tradition? The System of Freedom After Walter Benjamin. Critical Horizons 11 (1):99-118.score: 12.0
    I seek to interpret the work of Walter Benjamin in light of the "system programme" of German Idealism, in order to confront an antinomy of contemporary radical thought. Benjamin has been regarded as an anti-Hegelian thinker of the exception. Reading him against the grain, I draw out a concept of counter-tradition that eschews the opposition of intra-historical progress and extra-historical exception. The philological inspiration is a book by Franz Joseph Molitor, student of Schelling and "teacher" of Benjamin: The Philosophy (...)
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  58. Colby Dickinson (2011). Beyond Violence, Beyond the Text: The Role of Gesture in Walter Benjamin and Giorgio Agamben, and its Affinity with the Work of René Girard. Heythrop Journal 52 (6):952-961.score: 12.0
    Though the work of René Girard has highlighted the interrelations between sacrifice and sacrality in the contemporary world, it has yet to engage the work of Walter Benjamin and his heir, Giorgio Agamben, whose project concerning the Homo Sacer has aroused interest in contemporary political thought. By focusing on Benjamin's early description of mimesis and its relation to language, a position can be elaborated that steers mimesis clear of its indebtedness to language and towards a ‘purer’ realm of gesture. (...)
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  59. Christian Miller (2009). Review of Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Ed.), Moral Psychology, Volume 2: The Cognitive Science of Morality: Intuition and Diversity. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (7).score: 12.0
    This is the second of three volumes on moral psychology edited by Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and published by MIT Press in 2008.
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  60. S. Brent Plate (2005). Walter Benjamin, Religion, and Aesthetics: Rethinking Religion Through the Arts. Routledge.score: 12.0
    Walter Benjamin, Religion, and Aesthetics is an innovative attempt to reconceive the key concepts of religious studies through a reading with, and against, Walter Benjamin. Brent Plate deftly sifts through Benjamin's voluminous writings showing how his concepts of art, allegory, and experience undo traditional religious concepts such as myth, symbol, memory, narrative, creation, and redemption. Recasting religion as religious practice, as process and movement, Plate locates a Benjaminian materialist aesthetics, what the author calls an "allegorical aesthetics," in order (...)
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  61. Hans Ibold (2011). Walter Williams, Country Editor and Global Journalist: Pastoral Exceptionalism and Global Journalism Ethics at the Turn of the 20th Century. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 25 (3):207-225.score: 12.0
    This article identifies principles for global journalism ethics in speeches and essays by the early 20th century journalist and founder of the first American journalism school, Walter Williams. Williams is not known as a media ethicist, nor is he a prominent figure in ongoing scholarly work on global journalism ethics. However, his nascent ethical principles offer an important foreshadowing of current discussions on how journalism ethics might work in a global context. The global perspective he brought to journalism was (...)
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  62. B. Loveluck (2011). The Redemption of Experience: On Walter Benjamin's 'Hermeneutical Materialism'. Philosophy and Social Criticism 37 (2):167-188.score: 12.0
    The aim of this article is to show how philosopher and critic Walter Benjamin related to the hermeneutical tradition — and tried to move beyond it by ‘redeeming’ human experience, while avoiding the pitfalls of the philosophy of ‘authenticity’. Though convinced that questions relating to historicity were central to any understanding of modern human experience, Benjamin explicitly rejected the Heideggerian alternative, and chose a path closer to Hans-Georg Gadamer’s. He attempted to combine theological interpretation with dialectical materialism, always grounding (...)
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  63. Henry Walter Brann (1965). A Reply to Walter Kaufmann. Journal of the History of Philosophy 3 (2):246-250.score: 12.0
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  64. Joseph D. Lewandowski (2005). Street Culture: The Dialectic of Urbanism in Walter Benjamin’s Passagen-Werk. Philosophy and Social Criticism 31 (3):293-308.score: 12.0
    This article develops a sociological reading of Walter Benjamin’s ‘Arcades Project’, or Passagen-werk . Specifically, the essay seeks to make explicit Benjamin’s non-dualistic account of structure and agency in the urban milieu. I characterize this account as the ‘dialectic of urbanism’, and argue that one of the central insights of Benjamin’s Passagen-werk is that it locates an emergent and innovative cultural form - a distinctive ‘street culture’ or jointly shared way of modern urban life - within haussmannizing techniques of (...)
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  65. Walter Headlam (1934). Prometheus and the Garden of Eden: Notes for a Lecture by the Late Walter Headlam. The Classical Quarterly 28 (02):63-.score: 12.0
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  66. Walter Watson (1951). Book Review:Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist. Walter A. Kaufmann. [REVIEW] Ethics 61 (3):231-.score: 12.0
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  67. Christian Miller (2009). Review of Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Ed.), Moral Psychology, Volume 3: The Neuroscience of Morality: Emotion, Brain Disorders, and Development. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (7).score: 12.0
    This is the third of three volumes on moral psychology edited by Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and published by MIT Press in 2008.
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  68. Mark Schlatter & Ken Aizawa (2008). Walter Pitts and “a Logical Calculus”. Synthese 162 (2):235 - 250.score: 12.0
    Many years after the publication of “A Logical Calculus of the Ideas Immanent in Nervous Activity,” Warren McCulloch gave Walter Pitts credit for contributing his knowledge of modular mathematics to their joint project. In 1941 I presented my notions on the flow of information through ranks of neurons to Rashevsky’s seminar in the Committee on Mathematical Biology of the University of Chicago and met Walter Pitts, who then was about seventeen years old. He was working on (...)
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  69. Paul Vincent Spade, Boehner’s Text of Walter Burley’s de Puritate Artis Logicae: Some Corrections and Queries.score: 12.0
    I am preparing an English translation of both the Tractatus longior and the Tractatus brevior of Walter Burley’s De puritate artis logicae for the “Yale Library of Medieval Philosophy.” My translation is based of course on the 1955 critical edition by Philotheus Boehner, the only reasonably reliable text available. Nevertheless, in preparing my translation, I have had several occasions to question or correct readings in Boehner’s edition. In some instances the corrections are merely obvious typographical errors, but in others (...)
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  70. Mick Smith (2001). Environmental Anamnesis: Walter Benjamin and the Ethics of Extinction. Environmental Ethics 23 (4):359-376.score: 12.0
    Environmentalists often recount tales of recent extinctions in the form of an allegory of human moral failings. But such allegories install an instrumental relation to the past’s inhabitants, using them to carry moralistic messages. Taking the passenger pigeon as a case in point, I argue for a different, ethical relation to the past’s inhabitants that conserves something of the wonder and “strangeness of the Other.” What Walter Benjamin refers to as the “redemptive moment” sparks a recognition of the Other (...)
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  71. Ignaas Devisch (2011). The Progress of Society: An Inquiry Into an 'Old-Fashioned' Thesis of Walter Bagehot. British Journal for the History of Philosophy 19 (3):519 - 541.score: 12.0
    The nineteenth century saw the rise of Darwinism as a new paradigm for the study of nature and man mans an integral part thereof. Many scholars were intent on removing the abstract principles and universal truths of early modern philosophy in favour of understanding man's nature through more scientifically-based methods. Walter Bagehot (1826?1877) was one of the leading exponents of this view. Our focus is on one of Bagehot's famous books, Physics and Politics, or thoughts on the application of (...)
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  72. John D. Norton (2012). The Scaling of Speeds and Distances in Galileo's Two New Sciences: A Reply to Palmerino and Laird. Centaurus 54 (2):182-191.score: 12.0
    In this reply, we respond to the comments of Palmerino and Laird on our article, "Galileo's Refutation of the Speed Distance Law of Fall Rehabilitated," published in the same issue of Centaurus.
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  73. Paul Vincent Spade & Eleonore Stump (1983). Walter Burley and Theobligationesattributed to William of Sherwood. History and Philosophy of Logic 4 (1-2):9-26.score: 12.0
    The history of the mediaeval obligationes-literature has only recently begun to be studied. Two important treatises in this literature, one by Walter Burley and the other attributed to William of Sherwood, have been edited by Romuald Green in a forthcoming book. But there is considerable doubt concerning the authenticity of the text attributed to Sherwood. The correct attribution and dating of this treatise is crucial for our understanding of the history of this literature. In this paper, we argue that (...)
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  74. Ari Hirvonen (2012). Marx and God with Anarchism: On Walter Benjamin's Concepts of History and Violence. Continental Philosophy Review 45 (4):519-543.score: 12.0
    The article analyses relationships between profane and religious illumination, materialism and theology, politics and religion, Marxism and Messianism. For Walter Benjamin, every second is “the small gateway in time through which the Messiah might enter”. This is the starting point in the reading of Benjamin’s works, where we confront various liaisons and couplings of radical politics and messianic events. Through the reading of Benjamin and through the analysis of his conceptions of history and time, the article addresses the question (...)
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  75. Douglas Kellner, Review of Walter L. Adamson. Marx and the Disillusionment of Marxism. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985. X + 258 Pp. ISBN 0-520-05286-. [REVIEW]score: 12.0
    Walter Adamson begins his study of Marx and contemporary neo-Marxism with a rehearsal Marxism's oft-cited problems: oppressive regimes which rule in the name of Marxism, the lack of a fully-developed Marxist morality, inaccurate descriptions of contemporary capitalism, and problems in the relation between the Marxian theories of history and society and visions of socialism. Fortunately, Adamson does not simply engage in another tedious demolition job or ideological denunciation of the god that failed in the manner of the French 'new (...)
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  76. Roy Brand & Morgan Meis (2002). On Walter Benjarnin's Arcades Project: Two Views. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 23 (2):213-231.score: 12.0
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  77. Walter C. Summers (1906). Ryan's Petronius Petronius: Cena Trimalchionis. Translated and Edited, with Introduction, Notes, Etc. By Michael J. Byan. London and Felling-on-Tyne: Walter Scott Publishing Co., Ltd. Pp. Xlii + 284. 1905. 3s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 20 (05):273-274.score: 12.0
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  78. Walter Biemel & Constantin Aslam (2003). Walter Biemel: un neamţ pentru România. Studia Phaenomenologica 3:363-387.score: 12.0
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  79. Walter I. Giles (1945). The Contribution of Walter Lippmann to American Political Thought. M.A. Thesis, Georgetown Univ..score: 12.0
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  80. Guy Politzer (2009). Could It Be the Case That If I Am Right My Opponents Will Be Pleased? A Rejoinder to Johnson-Laird, Byrne and Girotto. Topoi 28 (1):81-85.score: 12.0
    I take up the four issues considered by Johnson-Laird, Byrne and Girotto in their reply to Politzer ( 2007 ). Based on the conceptual clarification which they adduce, it seems that the disagreement can be settled about the first one (truth functionality) and can be attenuated about the second one (the paradoxes of material implication). However, I maintain and refine my criticisms on the last two (negation and the probability of conditionals), backed up by considerations borrowed from the (...)
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  81. K. M. Panfilio (2013). Awakening From the Nightmarish Slumber of Phantasmagoria: Meditations on Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project. Philosophy and Social Criticism 39 (3):243-261.score: 12.0
    Walter Benjamin is discussed in this article to speak to the character of our experiences in the world as we try to animate our freedom in the midst of phantasmagoria. While we may indeed be trapped in the slumber of phantasmagoria and its many nightmares of despair, it is still possible to blast away the sands of sleep and awaken to a morally redeemed world fashioned through our engagement with various dreams of freedom. First, this article will explore the (...)
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  82. Andrew Benjamin (2010). Porosity at the Edge : Working Through Walter Benjamin's "Naples". In Walter Benjamin & Gevork Hartoonian (eds.), Walter Benjamin and Architecture. Routledge.score: 12.0
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  83. Walter Benjamin & Gevork Hartoonian (eds.) (2010). Walter Benjamin and Architecture. Routledge.score: 12.0
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  84. Andrew E. Benjamin & Peter Osborne (eds.) (2000). Walter Benjamin's Philosophy: Destruction and Experience. Clinamen Press.score: 12.0
    Why read Walter Benjamin today? There as many answers to this question as there are "Walter Benjamins"--Benjamin as critic, Benjamin as modernist, Benjamin as marxist, Benjamin as Jew. . . . Yet it is Benjamin as philosopher that in one way or another stands behind all these. This collection explores, in Adorno's description, Benjamin's "philosophy directed against philosophy." The essays cover all aspects of Benjamin's writings, from his early work in the philosophy of art and language, through his (...)
     
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  85. Walter Biemel & I. Oprişan (2003). Cu Walter Biemel despre trecutul, prezentul şi viitorul filozofiei. Studia Phaenomenologica 3:331-362.score: 12.0
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  86. Fred Dallmayr (2003). But on a Quiet Day … A Tribute to Arundhati Roy. Radical Philosophy Review 6 (2):145-162.score: 12.0
    In this essay, Fred Dallmayr considers the writings and activism of Arundhati Roy, author of The God of Small Things and Power Politics. First, Dallmayr examines the proper role of the writer-activist, comparing Roy to Edward Said. For each, writing and politicsare neither separate nor are they independent of the writer’s distinctive being-in-the-world. He then examines her critique of corporate business and the war machine, especially in relation to the construction of destructive “mega-dams” in India. The privatization of public services (...)
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  87. Laura Davidson, 3. “Countering Walter Block's “Heroic” Private Counterfeiter.”.score: 12.0
    In his book, Defending the Undefendable, Walter Block (1976) makes the case that an individual counterfeiter of fiat notes does not commit a natural law crime, because m..
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  88. Sandra S. F. Erickson (2010). The Salt Companion to Harold Bloom, de Roy Sellars E Graham Allen. Princípios 14 (21):294-302.score: 12.0
    Resenha do livro de Sellars, Roy, e Allen, Graham (Orgs.). The Salt Companion to Harold Bloom . Cambridge: Salt, 2007. 505 páginas.
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  89. Walter Kasper, George Augustin & Klaus Krämer (eds.) (2008). Gott Denken Und Bezeugen: Festschrift für Kardinal Walter Kasper Zum 75. Geburtstag. Herder.score: 12.0
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  90. Walter George Muelder (2007). Communitarian Ethics: Later Writings of Walter G. Muelder. Preachers Aid Society of New England / Bw Press.score: 12.0
     
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  91. Carlos Muñoz Gutiérrez (ed.) (2011). El Pensador Vagabundo: Estudios Sobre Walter Benjamin. Eutelequia.score: 12.0
    "El pensador vagabundo. Estudios sobre Walter Benjamin", de varios autores, más que un libro es un homenaje a la obra de este gran pensador nominado como uno de los más valiosos e influyentes escritores de la humanidad. Walter Benjamin dejó por escrito miles de páginas que trataban de todo lo posible, hablando desde su infancia hasta el cambio que produjo la fotografía en el mundo artístico. Estos textos tienen el propósito de acercar al lector a este magnífico mundo (...)
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  92. Anca Pusca (ed.) (2010). Walter Benjamin and the Aesthetics of Change. Palgrave Macmillan.score: 12.0
    Following the spirit of Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project, this volume acts as a kaleidoscope of change in the 21st century, tracing its different reflections in the international contemporary while seeking to understand both individual and collective reactions and adjustments to change through a series of questions: Is there something significantly different about the way in which ‘change’ occurs in the 21st century?; Is change mainly reflected in the material and visual environment surrounding us or someplace else?; What are the (...)
     
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  93. Youli Rapti (2008). La Politique de la Culture de Masse selon Theodor Adorno et Walter Benjamin. Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 1:289-295.score: 12.0
    L’industrie de la culture qui est apparue en parallèle avec l’affaiblissement du dipôle travail social – art contemporain, a en même temps affaibli la possibilité des avant‐gardes de constituer une activité purement intellectuelle et artistique. C’est clair que l’apparition de cette culture de masse vient se lier avec l’évincement de l’art moderne authentique et la disparition quasi-totale de la culture populaire. Je pense que c’est indispensable de mentionner les points de vue des philosophes allemands, Theodor Adorno et Walter Benjamin (...)
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  94. Rainer Rochlitz (1996). The Disenchantment of Art: The Philosophy of Walter Benjamin. Guilford Press.score: 12.0
    Fifty years after his death, Walter Benjamin remains one of the great cultural critics of this century. Despite his renown, however, Benjamin's philosophical ideas remain elusive/m-/often considered a disaggregated set of thoughts not meant to cohere. This book provides a more systematic perspective on Benjamin, laying claim to his status as a philosopher and situating his work in the context of its time. Exploring Benjamin's theory of language, spoken and nonspoken, Rainer Rochlitz shows how Benjamin reconceptualized traditional ideas of (...)
     
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  95. Walter Rothholz, Petra Huse & Ingmar Dette (eds.) (2008). Abenteuer des Geistes-Dimensionen des Politischen: Festschrift für Walter Rothholz. Nomos.score: 12.0
     
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  96. William Sayers (2009). Animal Vocalization and Human Polyglossia in Walter of Bibbesworth's Thirteenth-Century Domestic Treatise in Anglo-Norman French and Middle English. Sign Systems Studies 37 (3-4):525-541.score: 12.0
    Walter of Bibbesworth’s late thirteenth-century versified treatise on French vocabulary relevant to the management of estates in Britain has the first extensive list of animal vocalizations in a European vernacular. Many of the Anglo-Norman French names for animals and their sounds are glossed in Middle English, inviting both diachronic and synchronic views of the capacity of these languages for onomatopoetic formation and reflection on the interest of these social and linguistic communities in zoosemiotics.
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  97. Renée Tobe (2010). Portbou and Two Grains of Wheat : In Remembrance of Walter Benjamin. In Walter Benjamin & Gevork Hartoonian (eds.), Walter Benjamin and Architecture. Routledge.score: 12.0
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  98. Roy Trevivian (1969). What They Believe: Malcolm Muggeridge, Kenneth Kaunda, Spike Milligan, Quintin Hogg, Ted Dexter, John Braine in Conversation with Roy Trevivian. London, Hodder and Stoughton.score: 12.0
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  99. Katalin Balog (2008). Review of Torin Alter, Sven Walter (Eds.), Phenomenal Concepts and Phenomenal Knowledge: New Essays on Consciousness and Physicalism. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (5).score: 9.0
    The book under review is a collection of thirteen essays on the nature phenomenal concepts and the ways in which phenomenal concepts figure in debates over physicalism. Phenomenal concepts are of special interest in a number of ways. First, they refer to phenomenal experiences, and the qualitative character of those experiences (aka “qualia”) whose metaphysical status is hotly debated. There are recent arguments, originating in Descartes’ famous conceivability argument, that purport to show that phenomenal experience is irreducibly non-physical. Second, phenomenal (...)
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  100. Mark Cauchi (2003). Infinite Spaces Walter Benjamin and the Spurious Creations of Capitalism. Angelaki 8 (3):23 – 39.score: 9.0
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