Search results for 'Willard F. Day' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Willard F. Day (1972). The Case for Determinism. Philosophical Studies 21:31-40.score: 290.0
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  2. Willard F. Day (1977). On Skinner's Treatment of the First-Person, Third-Person Psychological Sentence Distinction. Behaviorism 5:33-37.score: 290.0
     
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  3. Rachel L. Day, Kevin N. Laland & F. John Odling-Smee (2003). Rethinking Adaptation: The Niche-Construction Perspective. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 46 (1):80-95.score: 120.0
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  4. Nelson Goodman, J. D. Mabbott, Dorothy Emmet, J. P. Day, A. R. Manser & B. F. McGuinness (1958). New Books. [REVIEW] Mind 67 (265):107-119.score: 120.0
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  5. James F. Day (1983). Some Reflections on Professor Rescher's Paper. Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy 5:16-22.score: 120.0
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  6. M. C. F. (1922). Happy Days and Other Essays. By Marcus Southwell Dimsdale. Edited by Elspeth Dimsdale, with a Memoir by N. Wedd. Pp. Xvi + 94. Cambridge: Heffer and Son, 1921. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 36 (3-4):91-.score: 40.0
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  7. L. S. F. (1959). The Works and Days; Theogony; The Shield of Herakles. The Review of Metaphysics 13 (1):188-189.score: 40.0
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  8. T. Corbishley (1949). Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: The Tractatus de Successivis, Attributed to William of Ockham.Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: The Tractatus de Praedestinatione Et de Praescientia Dei Et de Futuris Contingentibus, Edited by Philotheus Boehner, O.F.M.Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: The Transcendentals and Their Function in the Metaphysics of Duns Scotus, by Allan B. Wolter, O.F.M., Ph.D.Franciscan Institute Publications; Philosophy Series: The Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: Intuitive Cognition, A Key to the Significance of the Later Scholastics, by Sebastian J. Day, O.F.M., Ph.D. [REVIEW] Philosophy 24 (90):274-.score: 36.0
  9. J. N. Kaufmann (1981). Visages de la Rationalité A Propos de Rationality To-Day / La Rationalitè Aujourd'hui, Èditè Par Thèodore F. Geraëts, Ottawa: Editions de l'Universitè d'Ottawa/ The University of Ottawa Press, 1979, 501 P. [REVIEW] Dialogue 20 (01):114-131.score: 36.0
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  10. E. S. Waterhouse (1930). Problems of Providence. By Rev. Charles J. Shebbeare M.A. (London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1929. Pp. Vi + 120. Price 4s. Cloth, 2s. 6d. Paper.)Religion and the Thought of To-Day. By C. C. J. Webb M.A., F.B.A. (London: Oxford University Press: Humphrey Milford. 1929. Pp. 50. Price 2s. 6d.)Do We Need a New Religion? By Paul Arthur Schilpp. (New York: Henry Holt & Co. 1929. Pp. Xvii + 325. Price $2.50.). [REVIEW] Philosophy 5 (17):134-.score: 36.0
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  11. James Wetzel (2005). Thomas Pink and M. W. F. Stone (Eds) the Will and Human Action: From Antiquity to the Present Day. (London and New York: Routledge, 2004). Pp. VIII+219. $104.95, £60.00 (Hbk). ISBN 0 415 32467 X. [REVIEW] Religious Studies 41 (2):242-246.score: 36.0
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  12. No Authorship Indicated (1989). Willard Day Memoriam. Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 9 (1):68-68.score: 36.0
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  13. H. J. Rose (1927). The Week: An Essay on the Development of the Seven-Day Cycle. By F. H. Colson. Pp. Vii+126. Cambridge University Press, 1926. 5s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 41 (01):41-.score: 36.0
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  14. F. H. Bradley (1999). Collected Works of F.H. Bradley. Thoemmes Press.score: 24.0
    F. H. Bradley (1846-1924) was considered in his day to be the greatest British philosopher since Hume. For modern philosophers he continues to be an important and influential figure. However, the opposition to metaphysical thinking throughout most of the twentieth century has somewhat eclipsed his important place in the history of British thought. Consequently, although there is renewed interest in his ideas and role in the development of Western philosophy, his writings are often hard to find. This collection unites all (...)
     
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  15. G. Thines & R. Zayan (1975). F. J. J. Buytendijk's Contribution to Animal Behaviour: Animal Psychology or Ethology? Acta Biotheoretica 24 (3-4).score: 21.0
    F. J. J.Buytendijk died on October 21st 1974 at the age of 87. His important contribution to the study of animal behaviour is analyzed here in relation to the historical development of animal psychology and ethology. The detailed study of his scientific production suggests, according to the authors, that some important findings, although largely not paid attention to in present-day literature, are akin to the conceptual and methodological evolution of comparative ethology.
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  16. M. W. F. Stone & Jonathan Wolff (eds.) (2000). The Proper Ambition of Science. Routledge.score: 15.0
    What is the proper relation between the scientific worldview and other parts or aspects of human knowledge and experience? Can any science aim at "complete coverage" of the world, and if it does, will it undermine--in principle or by tendency--other attempts to describe or understand the world? Should morality, theology and other areas resist or be protected from scientific treatment? Questions of this sort have been of pressing philosophical concern since antiquity. The Proper Ambition of Science presents ten particular case (...)
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  17. William C. Wimsatt, The Ontology of Complex Systems: Levels of Organization, Perspectives, and Causal Thickets.score: 12.0
    Willard van Orman Quine once said that he had a preference for a desert ontology. This was in an earlier day when concerns with logical structure and ontological simplicity reigned supreme. Ontological genocide was practiced upon whole classes of upper-level or "derivative" entities in the name of elegance, and we were secure in the belief that one strayed irremediably into the realm of conceptual confusion and possible error the further one got from ontic fundamentalism. In those days, one paid (...)
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  18. Thomas Pink & M. W. F. Stone (eds.) (2003). The Will and Human Action: From Antiquity to the Present Day. Routledge.score: 12.0
    What is the will? And what is its relation to human action? Throughout history, philosophers have been fascinated by the idea of "the will": the source of the drive that motivates human beings to act. However, there has never been a clear consensus as to what the will is and how it relates to human action. Some philosophers have taken the will to be based firmly in reason and rational choice, and some have seen it as purely self-determined. Others have (...)
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  19. Peter Singer, D E B at E.score: 12.0
    An d rew Ku per begins his cri ti que of my vi ews on poverty by accepti n g the crux of my moral argument: The interests of all persons ought to count equally, and geographic location and citizenship m a ke no intrinsic differen ce to the ri gh t s and obl i ga ti ons of i n d ivi du a l s . Ku per also sets out some key facts about global poverty, for (...)
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  20. Stephen Backhouse (2011). Kierkegaard's Critique of Christian Nationalism. OUP Oxford.score: 12.0
    'Christian nationalism' refers to the set of ideas in which belief in the development and superiority of one's national group is combined with, or underwritten by, Christian theology and practice. A critique of Christian nationalism is implicit throughout the thought of Søren Kierkegaard, an analysis inseparable from his wider aim of reintroducing Christianity into Christendom. -/- Stephen Backhouse examines the nationalist theologies of Kierkegaard's contemporaries H.L. Martensen and N.F.S. Grundtvig, to show how Kierkegaard's thought developed in response to the writings (...)
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  21. J. Howard Sobel (1977). The Resurrection of the Dead. Teaching Philosophy 2 (3/4):115-116.score: 12.0
    The material in this note was developed for a first course in logie to illustrate a standard use of logie in analysis. The object was to present a not entirely trivial or artificial confusion that was amenable to resolution using only the tools of quite elementary logic-no modalities, no restrietions to extensional contexts. Copies o f The Problem were distributed. Then, on another day, A Solution.
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  22. John F. Stins (2009). Establishing Consciousness in Non-Communicative Patients: A Modern-Day Version of the Turing Test. Consciousness and Cognition 18 (1):187-192.score: 12.0
  23. T. C. Meyering (1996). Philosophical Psychology in Historical Perspective: Review Essay of J.-C. Smith (Ed.), Historical Foundations of Cognitive Science. [REVIEW] Philosophical Psychology 9 (3):381 – 390.score: 12.0
    Historiography of science faces a preliminary question of strategy. A continuist conception of the history of science poses research problems different from those of a dynamic conception, which acknowledges that not only our theoretical knowledge but also the explananda themselves may change under the influence of new scientific insights. Whereas continuist historiography may advance our understanding of (the historical background of) current theoretical problems, dynamic historiography may also make a creative contribution to the progress of present-day research. This f act (...)
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  24. Mark Thornton, On the Nature of Money.score: 12.0
    into complex society and experienced tremendous economic development and high cultural achievement through the use of money. It has foundered or even been destroyed when money has been undermined. Ignorance of the nature of money should therefore be the central economic issue for society. Frédéric Bastiat was a French businessman who lived during the first half of the nineteenth century (1801–1850). In the last few years of his life he was elected to the national assembly and began a prolific career (...)
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  25. R. Brownhill & L. Merricks (2002). Ethics and Science: Educating the Public. Science and Engineering Ethics 8 (1).score: 12.0
    This article looks at the public debate which took place in the first half of the twentieth century and has repercussions to the present day. It was about the ethical stance of scientists, and how science should be organized. In particular, it examines the positions taken by Professor F. Soddy, F.R.S. and Nobel Laureate, who stressed the responsibility of scientists for the uses made of their research, Professor Michael Polanyi, F.R.S., who emphasised the obligation of scientists to the truth and (...)
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  26. Carl G. Hedman (1974). An Anarchist Reply to Skinner on 'Weak' Methods of Control. Inquiry 17 (1-4):105 – 111.score: 12.0
    B. F. Skinner has argued that those who are serious about ending war, pollution, etc., must face the fact that the received methods of changing behavior have proved ineffective. According to Skinner, we must replace 'weak' methods of control such as control via praise and blame and control via Rousseau's 'natural contingencies of things' with Skinner's 'strong' methods of control. It is argued that Skinner's case for the continued ineffectiveness of such methods of control rests on the unargued assumption that (...)
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  27. F. Djindjian (2012). The Role of the Archaeologist in Present-Day Society. Diogenes 58 (1-2):53-63.score: 12.0
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  28. F. Melian Stawell (1896). Book Review:Socrates and Athenian Society in His Day. A. D. Godley. [REVIEW] Ethics 7 (1):131-.score: 12.0
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  29. H. Furneaux (1892). Farrar's Darkness and Dawn Darkness and Dawn, or Scenes in the Days of Nero, an Historic Tale, by F. W. Farrar. Longmans. 1891. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 6 (03):118-119.score: 12.0
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  30. S. Gaselee (1930). Recent Compositions and Translations Carmina Hoeufftiana. Edidit Academia Regia Disciplinarum Nederlandica, Amstelodami, 1927, 1928, 1929. Gennaro Aspreno Rocco: Carmi Latini Editi Ed Inediti, Scelti E Pubblicati Con Un Saggio Introduttivo Su l'Autore a Cura di Nunzio Coppola E Con Prefazione Del Prof. Nicolà Festa. Milan, Etc.: Società Editrice Dante Alighieri, 1929. Paper, L. 25. A New Presentation of Greek Art and Thought: The Handwork of a Hellenist. By F. P. B. Osmaston, with … an Introduction by H. W. Nevinson. London: Simpkin Marshall, N.D. 10s. 6d. Net. The Gaisford Greek Prize Composition for 1929. By N. K. Hutton. Glasgow: Jackson, Wylie and Co., 1929. 2s. 6d. Net. The Funeral Oration of Pericles Translated Out of Thucydides. By Thomas Hobbes. London: Milford (Oxford University Press), 1929. Boards, 3s. 6d. Net. The Collects Proper to the Sundays and Holy Days of the Christian Year … Rendered Into Latin Verse by Reginald Walter Macan. Oxford: Blackwell, 1928. Boards, 21s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 44 (04):144-145.score: 12.0
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  31. M. F. A. Dillon (2012). World Youth Day in Madrid, 2011. The Chesterton Review 38 (1-2):277-277.score: 12.0
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  32. F. J. M. Feldbrugge (1996). The Impact of Ethical Considerations on Oresent-Day Russian Law. Studies in East European Thought 48 (2-4):159 - 170.score: 12.0
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  33. Hans-Georg Gadamer & Théodore F. Geraets (eds.) (1979). Rationality to-Day =. University of Ottawa Press.score: 12.0
  34. Jean-Pierre Gourret (1995). Modelling the Mitotic Apparatus. Acta Biotheoretica 43 (1-2).score: 12.0
    This bibliographical review of the modelling of the mitotic apparatus covers a period of one hundred and twenty years, from the discovery of the bipolar mitotic spindle up to the present day. Without attempting to be fully comprehensive, it will describe the evolution of the main ideas that have left their mark on a century of experimental and theoretical research. Fol and Bütschli's first writings date back to 1873, at a time when Schleiden and Schwann's cell theory was rapidly gaining (...)
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  35. Frederick C. Gruber (1959). Aspects of Value. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press.score: 12.0
    Some present-day disagreements in moral philosophy, by E. F. Flower.--Values in the history of ideas, by P. P. Wiener.--Social interests and value, by T. A. Cowan.--Value conflicts and the education of our young, by J. L. Childs.
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  36. Nicholas Hammond (1994). Playing with Truth: Language and the Human Condition in Pascal's Pensées. Oxford University Press.score: 12.0
    Playing with Truth is the first comprehensive work on Pascal to be devoted to his use in the Pens'ees of key terms depicting its central subject--the human condition. Generally acknowledged as one of the greatest masterpieces of seventeenth-century France, the Pens'ees is an unfinished work which has both inspired and perplexed readers in succeeding centuries. In this study Nicholas Hammond explores such fundamental notions as language and order, proceeding with a detailed analysis of the words inconstance, ennui, inqui'etude, bonheur, f'elicit'e, (...)
     
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  37. R. F. A. Hoernlé (1923). Present-Day Tendencies in the Philosophy of Religion. International Journal of Ethics 33 (2):135-157.score: 12.0
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  38. M. F. Ovsiannikov (1982). Review of A. A. Bazhenova, Russian Esthetic Thought and the Present Day. [REVIEW] Russian Studies in Philosophy 21 (1):80-84.score: 12.0
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  39. R. F. Alfred Hoernlé (1935). Freedom in the Present-Day World. Philosophy 10 (40):394-.score: 12.0
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  40. R. F. A. Hoernle (1923). Present-Day Tendencies in the Philosophy of Religion. Ethics 33 (2):135-.score: 12.0
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  41. William F. Ryan (1936). Russia, Youth and the Present-Day World. Thought 11 (3):522-525.score: 12.0
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  42. F. H. Sandbach (1939). Archibald A. Day, M.A., Ph.D.: The Origins of Latin Love-Elegy. Pp. 148. Oxford: Blackwell, 1938. Cloth, 7s. 6d. The Classical Review 53 (5-6):220-.score: 12.0
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  43. Miguel Sánchez-Mazas (1987). Un Lenguaje Aritmético Como Instrumento de Análisis Y de Decisión En Lógica Y En Derecho. Theoria 2 (2):503-566.score: 12.0
    An arithmetical language, whose words are natural numbers written in hexadecimal numeration system, is defined and its applications for the representation, analysis and decision of formulae of some logical and normative systems are described and illustrated.The formulae, operations and relations of the represented system are associated as follows respectively to the numbers and the arithmetical operations and relations of the proposed language:1. Each well-formed-formula of the system is associated to a number of a set of natural numbers between zero (associated (...)
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  44. C. F. A. W. (1907). Tucker's Life in Ancient Athens Life in Ancient Athens. The Social and Public Life of a Classical Athenian From Day to Day. By T. G. Tucker, Litt.D., Etc. 8vo. Pp. Xiii + 212. With 2 Maps and 85 Illustrations in Text. London: Macmillan & Co. 1907. 5s. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 21 (04):116-117.score: 12.0
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  45. Valerie Gray Hardcastle (1994). Indicator Semantics and Dretske's Function. Philosophical Psychology 7 (3):367-82.score: 9.0
    In his Explaining Behavior, Fred Dretske uses a reliabilist theory of representation to try to vindicate the use of intentional explanation for behaviour against latter-day elitninativism. Although Dretske's indicator semantics turns on the notion of function, he himself never explicitly defines what function means. Dretske's reticence in discussing function may ultimately be an error, for, as I argue, his implicit understanding of what a function amounts to does not fit with data from op rant conditioning. Still, this need not be (...)
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  46. Paul Peterson, N Ews F Ocus.score: 7.0
    STILLWATER, MINNESOTA—Two men sit at a long table, oblivious to the breakfast-time commotion. One moves a coffee cup from one side of a water glass to the other. “If I look here and don’t see the cup,” he says to the other, “then I know it must be there.” It sounds like a “deep” exchange between swotty young philosophy majors. But the fellow moving the cup has gray hair— and a Nobel Prize in physics. Sliding the porcelain, Anthony Leggett of (...)
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  47. F. A. Muller (2004). Can a Constructive Empiricist Adopt the Concept of Observability? Philosophy of Science 71 (1):80-97.score: 6.0
    Alan Musgrave, Michael Friedman, Jeffrey Foss, and Richard Creath raised different objections against the Distinction between observables and unobservables when drawn within the confines of Bas C. van Fraassen's Constructive Empiricism (CE), to the effect that the Distinction cannot be drawn there coherently. Van Fraassen has only responded to Musgrave but Musgrave claimed not to understand van Fraassen's succinct response. I argue that van Fraassen's response is not enough. What remains in the end is an unsolved problem which CE cannot (...)
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  48. A. F. Mackay (2005). Aristotle's Dilemma. Journal of Ethics 9 (3-4):533 - 549.score: 6.0
    In the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle appears to use an elegant short argument to attack Plato’s doctrine of the good, which argument equally appears to attack Aristotle’s own doctrine of the good. I consider these two questions: First: Why does Aristotle reverse the judgment of Socrates/Plato on the issue: Which is better – things that are (only) good in themselves, or things that are both good in themselves and good for their consequences? Second: Why does Aristotle attack Plato’s doctrine that the (...)
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  49. F. C. T. Moore (1996). Bergson: Thinking Backwards. Cambridge University Press.score: 6.0
    This is a book about the philosophy of Henri Bergson (1859-1941) which shows how relevant Bergson is to much contemporary philosophy. The book takes as its point of departure Bergson's insistence on precision in philosophy. It then discusses a variety of topics including laughter, the nature of time as experienced, how intelligence and language should be construed as a pragmatic product of evolution, and the antinomies of reason represented by magic and religion. This is not just another exposition of Bergson's (...)
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  50. Anthony F. Beavers, Alan Turing: Mathematical Mechanist.score: 6.0
    I live just off of Bell Road outside of Newburgh, Indiana, a small town of 3,000 people. A mile down the street Bell Road intersects with Telephone Road not as a modern reminder of a technology belonging to bygone days, but as testimony that this technology, now more than a century and a quarter old, is still with us. In an age that prides itself on its digital devices and in which the computer now equals the telephone as a medium (...)
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  51. John F. Ashton (2006). The Big Argument: Does God Exist? Master Books.score: 6.0
    John Ashton, the editor who brought us In Six Days and On the Seventh Day, has done it again with this compelling new book that is a must-read for all ...
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  52. Allan F. Randall, A Critique of the Kantian View of Geometry.score: 6.0
    A survey of Kant's views on space, time, geometry and the synthetic nature of mathematics. I concentrate mostly on geometry, but comment briefly on the syntheticity of logic and arithmetic as well. I believe the view of many that Kant's system denied the possibility of non-Euclidean geometries is clearly mistaken, as Kant himself used a non-Euclidean geometry (spherical geometry, used in his day for navigational purposes) in order to explain his idea, which amounts to an anticipation of the later discovery (...)
     
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  53. F. A. Muller (2004). The Implicit Definition of the Set-Concept. Synthese 138 (3):417 - 451.score: 6.0
    Once Hilbert asserted that the axioms of a theory `define` theprimitive concepts of its language `implicitly''. Thus whensomeone inquires about the meaning of the set-concept, thestandard response reads that axiomatic set-theory defines itimplicitly and that is the end of it. But can we explainthis assertion in a manner that meets minimum standards ofphilosophical scrutiny? Is Jané (2001) wrong when hesays that implicit definability is ``an obscure notion''''? Doesan explanation of it presuppose any particular view on meaning?Is it not a scandal (...)
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  54. M. Deblonde, R. de Graaff & F. Brom (2007). An Ethical Toolkit for Food Companies: Reflections on its Use. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 20 (1).score: 6.0
    Nowadays many debates are going on that relate to the agricultural and food sector. It looks as if present technological and organizational developments within the agricultural and food sector are badly geared to societal needs and expectations. In this article we briefly present a toolkit for moral communication within the food chain. This toolkit is developed as part of a European research project. Next, we discuss what such a toolkit can bring about, given the characteristics of the present day agricultural (...)
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  55. Alan P. F. Sell (2010). Four Philosophical Anglicans: W.G. De Burgh, W.R. Matthews, O.C. Quick, H.A. Hodges. Ashgate Pub..score: 6.0
    He discusses the challenges these four philosophical Anglicans issued to certain important trends in the philosophy and theology of their day, and argues that ...
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  56. Donald F. Smith (2010). Cognitive Brain Mapping for Better or Worse. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 53 (3):321-329.score: 6.0
    The scientific method is a potentiation of common sense, exercised with a specially firm determination not to persist in error if any exertion of hand or mind can deliver us from it. We are all affected by our past. I grew up in the “Land of Lincoln,” so stories about the 16th U.S. President, “Honest Abe” as we called him, were unavoidable in my youth. In particular, we learned that Abraham Lincoln never told a lie. Well, one day when I (...)
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  57. Vykinta Kligyte, Richard T. Marcy, Ethan P. Waples, Sydney T. Sevier, Elaine S. Godfrey, Michael D. Mumford & Dean F. Hougen (2008). Application of a Sensemaking Approach to Ethics Training in the Physical Sciences and Engineering. Science and Engineering Ethics 14 (2).score: 6.0
    Integrity is a critical determinant of the effectiveness of research organizations in terms of producing high quality research and educating the new generation of scientists. A number of responsible conduct of research (RCR) training programs have been developed to address this growing organizational concern. However, in spite of a significant body of research in ethics training, it is still unknown which approach has the highest potential to enhance researchers’ integrity. One of the approaches showing some promise in improving researchers’ integrity (...)
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  58. Thomas F. McKenna (1997). Vincent de Paul: A Saint Who Got His Worlds Together. Journal of Business Ethics 16 (3):299-307.score: 6.0
    From the point of view of a saint's life, the article addresses the question of integrating holiness and business dealings. By analyzing the heavy involvement of Vincent de Paul, a seventeenth century French saint, in the world of finance and politics as he ministered to the poor of his day, the study attempts to show that it is both possible and beneficial to join together the world of business with that of a religiously inspired ethic. The spiritually grounded manner (...)
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  59. F. P. Lock (1999). Edmund Burke: Volume I, 1730-1784. Clarendon Press.score: 6.0
    Edmund Burke (1730-1797) was one of the most profound, versatile, and accomplished thinkers of the eighteenth century. Born and educated in Dublin, he moved to London to study law, but remained to make a career in English politics, completing A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757) before entering the political arena. A Member of Parliament for nearly thirty years, his speeches are still read and studied as classics of political thought, and through (...)
     
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  60. F. P. Lock (2009). Edmund Burke, Volume II: 1784-1797. OUP Oxford.score: 6.0
    This is the second and concluding volume of a biography of Edmund Burke (1730-97), a key figure in eighteenth-century British and Irish politics and intellectual life. Covering the most interesting years of his life (1784-97), its leading themes are India and the French Revolution. Burke was largely responsible for the impeachment of Warren Hastings, former Governor-General of Bengal. The lengthy (145-day) trial of Hastings (which lasted from 1788 to 1795) is recognized as a landmark episode in the history of Britain's (...)
     
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  61. Alan P. F. Sell (ed.) (1997). Mill and Religion: Contemporary Responses to Three Essays on Religion. Thoemmes Press.score: 6.0
    The publication of John Stuart Mill's Three Essays on Religion in 1873 prompted a remarkable diversity of responses. Anonymous authors in the prominent literary and theological reviews of the day joined philosophers, from empiricists to idealists, and theologians, from Anglicans to Unitarians, in commenting on the Essays . The judgements passed upon Mill himself ranged from 'honest' to 'impudent'. Dr Sell here gathers and introduces a representative selection of the reviews, essays and extracts that met this important work. The writers, (...)
     
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  62. Richard Vykinta Kligyte, Ethan T. Marcy, Sydney P. Waples, Elaine T. Sevier, Michael S. Godfrey, Dean D. Mumford & F. Hougen (2008). Application of a Sensemaking Approach to Ethics Training in the Physical Sciences and Engineering. Science and Engineering Ethics 14 (2).score: 6.0
    Integrity is a critical determinant of the effectiveness of research organizations in terms of producing high quality research and educating the new generation of scientists. A number of responsible conduct of research (RCR) training programs have been developed to address this growing organizational concern. However, in spite of a significant body of research in ethics training, it is still unknown which approach has the highest potential to enhance researchers’ integrity. One of the approaches showing some promise in improving researchers’ integrity (...)
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  63. Karen Bennett, Why I Am Not a Dualist.score: 4.0
    Dualists think that not all the facts are physical facts. They think that there are facts about phenomenal consciousness that cannot be explained in purely physical terms—facts about what it’s like to see red, what it’s like to feel sandpaper, what it’s like to run 10 miles when it’s 15° F out, and so on. These phenomenal facts are genuine ‘extras’, not fixed by the physical facts and the physical laws. To use the standard metaphor: even after God settled the (...)
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  64. Bryan Frances (2002). A Test for Theories of Belief Ascription. Analysis 62 (2):116–125.score: 4.0
    These days the two most popular approaches to belief ascription are Millianism and Contextualism. The former approach is inconsistent with the existence of ordinary Frege cases, such as Lois believing that Superman flies while failing to believe that Clark Kent flies. The Millian holds that the only truth-conditionally relevant aspect of a proper name is its referent or extension. Contextualism, as I will define it for the purposes of this essay, includes all theories according to which ascriptions of the form (...)
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  65. Peter Unger, Chapter 1 of Beyond Inanity.score: 4.0
    During the middle of the twentieth century, maybe until about 1960 or 1970, it was generally agreed, by analytic philosophers, that pretty much all intellectually responsible philosophy was, quite as it should be, a discipline whose practitioners offered no substantial claims about the general nature of concrete reality or, at the least, none distinctively arrived at through their involvement with philosophy. This was in marked contrast with the natural sciences (and, presumably most markedly, with the more general of the natural (...)
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  66. Dimitris Repantis, Peter Schlattmann, Oona Laisney & Isabella Heuser (2008). Antidepressants for Neuroenhancement in Healthy Individuals: A Systematic Review. Poiesis and Praxis 6 (3-4):139-174.score: 4.0
    Neuroenhancement offers the prospect of improving the cognitive, emotional and motivational functions of healthy individuals. Of all the conceivable interventions, psychopharmacology provides the most readily available ones, such as antidepressants which are thought to make people better than well . However, up until now, whether they possess such an enhancing ability remains controversial and therefore in this systematic review we will evaluate the effect and safety of modern antidepressants in healthy individuals. A search of MEDLINE and EMBASE databases and cross-references (...)
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  67. Alfred J. Freddoso, Review of John F. Kavanaugh, S.J., Who Count As Persons?: Human Identity and the Ethics of Killing. [REVIEW]score: 4.0
    These are bleak days for moral theory in mainstream professional philosophy. At the heart of the matter lies our inability, within contemporary liberal democracies, to come to a consensus on the deep issue of what we are as human beings and where our true good lies. Because of this, any moral theory built on a rich view of human nature and of the good for human beings is automatically viewed with suspicion. And, in fact, there are few such theories around. (...)
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  68. David F. Lindenfeld (1999). Causality, Chaos Theory, and the End of the Weimar Republic: A Commentary on Henry Turner's Hitler's Thirty Days to Power. History and Theory 38 (3):281–299.score: 4.0
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  69. A. S. F. Gow (1917). Hesiod, Works And Days: An Addendum. The Classical Quarterly 11 (04):211-.score: 4.0
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  70. E. F. Beall (2004). The Plow That Broke the Plain Epic Tradition: HesiodWorks and Days, Vv. 414–503. Classical Antiquity 23 (1):1-31.score: 4.0
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  71. Bernhard Lauth (1993). Physical Constants and Reference Dynamics. Journal for General Philosophy of Science 24 (1):63 - 86.score: 4.0
    The following investigation illustrates, by concrete historical examples, some of the basic results, outlined in earlier papers on theory evolution and reference dynamics in science (cf. Balzer, W. et al.: 1989, 'A Static Theory of Reference in Science', Synthese 79, 319-360; Lauth, B.: 1989, 'Reference Problems in Stoichiometry', Erkenntnis 30, 339-362; Lauth, B.: 1990, 'Theory Evolution and Reference Kinematics', Synthese 88, 279-307). All theories considered in this paper are represented within a metatheoretical frame that has become known as the structuralist (...)
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  72. W. F. Albright (1942). I Have Considered the Days. Thought 17 (1):174-175.score: 4.0
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  73. Edward F. Garesché (1942). And Down the Days. Thought 17 (3):560-561.score: 4.0
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  74. A. S. F. Gow (1917). Miscellaneous Notes on the Works and Days. The Classical Quarterly 11 (03):113-.score: 4.0
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  75. J. L. Hevesi (1947/1967). Essays on Language and Literature. Port Washington, N.Y.,Kennikat Press.score: 4.0
    Introduction, by J. L. Hevesi.--Days of reading, by M. Proust.--Poetry and abstract thought, by P. Valèry.--Jacob Cow the pirate; or, Whether words are signs, by J. Paulhan.--Concerning the pebble, by F. Ponge.--The journey and the return, by J. P. Sartre.--The power of words, by B. Parain.
     
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  76. F. Bailey Norwood & Jayson L. Lusk (2011). Compassion, by the Pound: The Economics of Farm Animal Welfare. OUP Oxford.score: 2.0
    For much of human history, most of the population lived and worked on farms but today, information about livestock is more likely to come from children's books than hands-on experience. When romanticized notions of an agrarian lifestyle meet with the realities of the modern industrial farm, the result is often a plea for a return to antiquated production methods. The result is a brewing controversy between animal activist groups, farmers, and consumers that is currently being played out in ballot boxes, (...)
     
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