Search results for 'anger' (try it on Scholar)

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Profile: Bev Anger (University of Windsor)
Profile: Jason Anger
Category: Anger in Normative Ethics
  1. Suzy Anger (2005). Victorian Interpretation. Cornell University Press.score: 30.0
    Victorian scriptural hermeneutics : history, intention, and evolution -- Intertext 1 : Victorian legal interpretation -- Carlyle : between biblical exegesis and romantic hermeneutics -- Intertext 2 : Victorian science and hermeneutics : the interpretation of nature -- George Eliot's hermeneutics of sympathy -- Intertext 3 : Victorian literary criticism -- Subjectivism, intersubjectivity, and intention : Oscar Wilde and literary hermeneutics.
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  2. Violaine Anger & Jan Willem Noldus (eds.) (2005). Le Sens de la Musique: 1750-1900: Vivaldi, Beethoven, Berlioz, Liszt, Debussy, Stravinski. Rue D'Ulm.score: 30.0
     
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  3. Gottfried Anger, James Paul Wesley & Hans Kaegelmann (eds.) (2005). Was von Moderner Physik Bleibt Und Fällt. Argo.score: 30.0
    1. Bd. Die Relativitätstheorie fällt : physikalische, philosophische, wissenschaftssoziologische und allgemeinverständliche Korrektur : hundert Jahre Kultus des Irrtums sind genug -- 3. Bd. Die Urknalltheorie fällt.
     
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  4. Raffaele Rodogno (2010). Guit, Anger, and Retribution. Legal Theory 16 (1):59-76.score: 18.0
    This article focuses primarily on the emotion of guilt as providing a justification for retributive legal punishment. In particular, I challenge the claim according to which guilt can function as part of our epistemic justification of positive retributivism, that is, the view that wrongdoing is both necessary and sufficient to justify punishment. I show that the argument to this conclusion rests on two premises: (1) to feel guilty typically involves the judgment that one deserves punishment; and (2) those who feel (...)
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  5. Nicolas Bommarito (2011). Bile & Bodhisattvas: Śāntideva on Justified Anger. Journal of Buddhist Ethics 18:357-81.score: 18.0
    In his famous text the Bodhicaryāvatāra, the 8th century Buddhist philosopher Śāntideva argues that anger towards people who harm us is never justified. The usual reading of this argument rests on drawing similarities between harms caused by persons and those caused by non-persons. After laying out my own interpretation of Śāntideva's reasoning, I offer some objections to Śāntideva's claim about the similar-ity between animate and inanimate causes of harm inspired by contemporary philosophical literature in the West. Following this, I (...)
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  6. Eva-Maria Engelen (2009). Anger, Shame and Justice: The Regulative Function of Emotions in the Ancient and Modern World. In Birgitt Röttger-Rössler & Hans Markowitsch (eds.), Emotions as Bio-cultural Processes. Springer.score: 18.0
    Analyzing the ancient Greek point of view concerning anger, shame and justice and a very modern one, one can see, that anger has a regulative function, but shame does as well. Anger puts the other in his place, thereby regulating hierarchies. Shame regulates the social relations of recognition. And both emotions also have an evaluative function, because anger evaluates a situation with regard to a humiliation; shame, with regard to a misdemeanor. In addition, attention has to (...)
     
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  7. Glen Pettigrove (2012). Meekness and 'Moral' Anger. Ethics 122 (2):341-370.score: 15.0
    If asked to generate a list of virtues, most people would not include meekness. So it is surprising that Hume not only deems it a virtue, but one whose 'tendency to the good of society no one can doubt of.' After explaining what Hume and his contemporaries meant by "meekness", the paper proceeds to argue that meekness is a virtue we, too, should endorse.
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  8. Ermin Francis Micka (1943). The Problem of Divine Anger in Arnobius and Lactantius. Washington, D.C.,The Catholic University of America Press.score: 15.0
     
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  9. Aaron Ben-Ze'ev (2002). Are Envy, Anger, and Resentment Moral Emotions? Philosophical Explorations 5 (2):148 – 154.score: 12.0
    The moral status of emotions has recently become the focus of various philosophical investigations. Certain emotions that have traditionally been considered as negative, such as envy, jealousy, pleasure-in-others'-misfortune, and pride, have been defended. Some traditionally "negative" emotions have even been declared to be moral emotions. In this brief paper, I suggest two basic criteria according to which an emotion might be considered moral, and I then examine whether envy, anger, and resentment are moral emotions.
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  10. Andrea Westlund (2009). Anger, Faith, and Forgiveness. The Monist 92 (4):507-536.score: 12.0
    Right after our tragedy, my idea of forgiveness was to be free of this thing, – the anger, the pain, the absorption. It was totally personal. It was a survival tactic to leave this experience behind. It had nothing to do with the offender. The second level was realizing how the word forgiveness applies to the relationship between the victim and the offender. How it means accepting and working on that relationship after a murder. The latter is more complicated. (...)
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  11. Rowland Stout (2010). Seeing the Anger in Someone's Face. Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 84 (1):29-43.score: 12.0
    Starting from the assumption that one can literally perceive someone's anger in their face, I argue that this would not be possible if what is perceived is a static facial signature of their anger. There is a product–process distinction in talk of facial expression, and I argue that one can see anger in someone's facial expression only if this is understood to be a process rather than a product.
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  12. Marion K. Underwood (2005). Observing Anger and Aggression Among Preadolescent Girls and Boys: Ethical Dilemmas and Practical Solutions. Ethics and Behavior 15 (3):235 – 245.score: 12.0
    To understand how children manage anger and engage in various forms of aggression, it is important to observe children responding to peer provocation. Observing children's anger and aggression poses serious ethical and practical challenges, especially with samples of older children and adolescents. This article describes 2 laboratory methods for observing children's responses to peer provocation: 1 involves participants playing a game with a provoking child actor, and the other involves a pair of close friends responding to an actor (...)
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  13. Peter Vernezze (2008). Moderation or the Middle Way: Two Approaches to Anger. Philosophy East and West 58 (1):2-16.score: 12.0
    : Most of us tend to be Aristotelians when it comes to anger. While admitting that uncontrolled anger is harmful and ought to be avoided, we reject as undesirable a state of being that would not allow us to express legitimate outrage. Hence, we seem to find a compelling moral attitude in Aristotle’s belief that we should get angry at the right time and for the right reasons and in the right way. Buddhism and Stoicism, however, carve out (...)
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  14. Stephen Leighton (2002). Aristotle's Account of Anger: Narcissism and Illusions of Self-Sufficiency. Ratio 15 (1):23–45.score: 12.0
    This paper considers an allegation by M. Stocker and E. Hegeman that Aristotle’s account of anger yields a narcissistic passion bedevilled by illusions of self-sufficiency. The paper argues on behalf of Aristotle’s valuing of anger within a virtuous and flourishing life, showing that and why Aristotle’s account is neither narcissistic nor involves illusions of self-sufficiency. In so arguing a deeper appreciation of Aristotle’s understanding of a self-sufficient life is reached, as are some interesting contrasts between Aristotle's understanding of (...)
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  15. Michael Potegal (2005). Characteristics of Anger: Notes for a Systems Theory of Emotion. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (2):215-216.score: 12.0
    Although emotion may subserve social function, as with anger-maintaining dominance, emotions are more than variant cognitions. Anger promotes risk-taking, attention-narrowing, and cognitive impairment. The proposition that appraised “blameworthiness” is necessary for anger excludes young children's anger as well as adults' pain-induced anger. To be complete, any systems model of anger must account for its temporal characteristics, including escalation and persistence.
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  16. Roderick T. Long, Thinking Our Anger.score: 12.0
    (to table of contents of archives) This talk was delivered at the Auburn Philosophical Society’s Roundtable on Hate, 5 October 2001, convened in response to the September 11 attacks a month earlier. The events of September 11th have occasioned a wide variety of responses, ranging from calls to turn the other cheek, to calls to nuke half the Middle East—and every imaginable shade of opinion in between. At a time when emotions run high, how should we go about deciding on (...)
     
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  17. Julie A. Hubbard (2005). Eliciting and Measuring Children's Anger in the Context of Their Peer Interactions: Ethical Considerations and Practical Guidelines. Ethics and Behavior 15 (3):247 – 258.score: 12.0
    Ecologically valid procedures for eliciting and measuring children's anger are needed to enhance researchers' theories of children's emotional competence and to guide intervention efforts aimed at reactive aggression. The purpose of this article is to describe a laboratory-based game-playing procedure that has been used successfully to elicit and measure children's anger across observational, physiological, and self-report channels. Steps taken to ensure that participants are treated ethically and fairly are discussed. The article highlights recently published data that emphasize the (...)
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  18. Jen Mcweeny (2010). Liberating Anger, Embodying Knowledge: A Comparative Study of María Lugones and Zen Master Hakuin. Hypatia 25 (2):295-315.score: 12.0
    This paper strengthens the theoretical ground of feminist analyses of anger by explaining how the angers of the oppressed are ways of knowing. Relying on insights created through the juxtaposition of Latina feminism and Zen Buddhism, I argue that these angers are special kinds of embodied perceptions that surface when there is a profound lack of fit between a particular bodily orientation and its framing world of sense. As openings to alternative sensibilities, these angers are transformative, liberatory, and deeply (...)
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  19. Chase E. Thiel, Shane Connelly & Jennifer A. Griffith (2011). The Influence of Anger on Ethical Decision Making: Comparison of a Primary and Secondary Appraisal. Ethics and Behavior 21 (5):380 - 403.score: 12.0
    Higher order cognitive processes, including ethical decision making (EDM), are influenced by the experiencing of discrete emotions. Recent research highlights the negative influence one such emotion, anger, has on EDM and its underlying processes. The mechanism, however, by which anger disrupts the EDM has not been investigated. The current study sought to discover whether cognitive appraisals of an emotion-evoking event are the driving mechanisms behind the influence of anger on EDM. One primary (goal obstacle) and one secondary (...)
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  20. Michael Rota (2007). The Moral Status of Anger: Thomas Aquinas and John Cassian. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 81 (3):395-418.score: 12.0
    Is anger at another person ever a morally excellent thing? Two competing answers to this question can be found in the Christian intellectual tradition. JohnCassian held that anger at another person is never morally virtuous. Aquinas, taking an Aristotelian line, maintained that anger at another person is sometimes morally virtuous. In this paper I explore the positions of Cassian and Aquinas on this issue. The core of my paper consists in a close examination of two arguments given (...)
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  21. Patricia White (2012). Making Political Anger Possible: A Task for Civic Education. Journal of Philosophy of Education 46 (1):1-13.score: 12.0
    The article asks whether political anger has a legitimate place in a democracy, as this is a political system designed to resolve conflicts by peaceful negotiation. It distinguishes personal from social anger and political anger, to focus explicitly on the latter. It argues that both the feeling and expression of political anger are subject to normative constraints, often specific to social status and gender. The article examines arguments, including those of Seneca, in favour of an (...)-free society. It concludes, however, that a democracy cannot dispense with political anger, which has a vital role to play in protecting things of value. This role demands a civic education such that when democratic values are under threat citizens will not feel apathetic or simply fearful, but angry and possessed of a repertoire of ways of expressing democratic anger. (shrink)
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  22. Niranjan S. Karnik (2000). Foster Children and ADHD: Anger, Violence, and Institutional Power. Journal of Medical Humanities 21 (4):199-214.score: 12.0
    This paper explores the ways in which foster children and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) intersect as social and medical categories. Through the method of interpretive biography based on the official case file, this paper shows how the experiences of violence and ADHD become linked in the child's life through the emotion of anger. In this way, it is possible to see how the power dynamics of the medical, educational and welfare systems lock the diagnosis with its embedded meanings (...)
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  23. Gregory Sadler (2008). Forgiveness, Anger, and Virtue in an Aristotelean Perspective. Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 82:229-247.score: 12.0
    Aristotle figures significantly in the recent boom of literature on forgiveness, particularly accounts wishing to construe forgiveness as a virtue. While his definition of anger is often invoked, he is also a foil for accounts valuing forgiveness more than did Aristotle. I argue through interpretive exegesis of Aristotle’s texts that, while there are definite limits on forgiveness in his thought, so that his notion of forgiveness does not extend as far as in Christian ethics, it does play a significant (...)
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  24. Elisa Gambetti & Fiorella Giusberti (2008). Dispositional Anger and Risk Decision-Making. Mind and Society 8 (1):7-20.score: 12.0
    In this study, we assessed the influence of trait anger on decisions in risky situations evaluating how it might interact with some contextual factors. One hundred and fifty-eight participants completed the Trait Anger scale of STAXI-2 (T-Ang) and an inventory consisting of a battery of hypothetical everyday decision-making scenarios, representative of three specific domains: financial, social and health. Participants were also asked to evaluate familiarity and salience for each scenario. This study provides evidence for a relationship between individual (...)
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  25. Daniel John Zizzo (2008). Anger and Economic Rationality. Journal of Economic Methodology 15 (2):147-167.score: 12.0
    This paper evaluates the rationality of anger in the light of a standard notion of economic rationality. Whether anger is rational or otherwise cannot be answered in general, but will depend on the economic setting. As long as anger can be explained as a preference in a parsimonious and stable utility function, it does not make sense to talk of anger as rational or irrational. The production of anger is subtly mediated by many cognitive factors. (...)
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  26. Imke Rajamani (2012). Pictures, Emotions, Conceptual Change: Anger in Popular Hindi Cinema. Contributions to the History of Concepts 7 (2):52-77.score: 12.0
    The article advocates the importance of studying conceptual meaning and change in modern mass media and highlights the significance of conceptual intermediality. The article first analyzes anger in Hindi cinema as an audiovisual key concept within the framework of an Indian national ideology. It explores how anger and the Indian angry young man became popularized, politicized, and stereotyped by popular films and print media in India in the 1970s and 1980s. The article goes on to advocate for extending (...)
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  27. Patrick Coleman (2011). Anger, Gratitude, and the Enlightenment Writer. OUP Oxford.score: 12.0
    Anger, Gratitude, and the Enlightenment Writer examines how writers as diverse as Rousseau, Diderot, Marivaux, and Challe discuss the social appropriateness of anger and gratitude in regulating social life. Emotions are social transactions, with rules identifying when and where it is appropriate to express one's feelings and, especially in the case of anger and gratitude, who is allowed or expected to put them on display. Defining the kinds of slight or favor that demand an angry or a (...)
     
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  28. William E. S. McNeill (2012). On Seeing That Someone is Angry. European Journal of Philosophy 20 (4):575-597.score: 9.0
    Abstract: Some propose that the question of how you know that James is angry can be adequately answered with the claim that you see that James is angry. Call this the Perceptual Hypothesis. Here, I examine that hypothesis. I argue that there are two different ways in which the Perceptual Hypothesis could be made true. You might see that James is angry by seeing his bodily features. Alternatively, you might see that James is angry by seeing his anger. If (...)
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  29. Anne Campbell & Steven Muncer (1987). Models of Anger and Aggression in the Social Talk of Women and Men. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 17 (4):489–511.score: 9.0
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  30. Amélie Oksenberg Rorty (1998). The Political Sources of Emotions: Greed and Anger. Philosophical Studies 89 (2-3):21-33.score: 9.0
  31. Chris Weigel (2011). Distance, Anger, Freedom: An Account of the Role of Abstraction in Compatibilist and Incompatibilist Intuitions. Philosophical Psychology 24 (6):803 - 823.score: 9.0
    Experimental philosophers have disagreed about whether "the folk" are intuitively incompatibilists or compatibilists, and they have disagreed about the role of abstraction in generating such intuitions. New experimental evidence using Construal Level Theory is presented. The experiments support the views that the folk are intuitively both incompatibilists and compatibilists, and that abstract mental representations do shift intuitions, but not in a univocal way.
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  32. Paul M. Hughes (1995). Moral Anger, Forgiving, and Condoning. Journal of Social Philosophy 26 (1):103-118.score: 9.0
  33. Graham Haydon (1999). 7. Is There Virtue in Anger? Journal of Philosophy of Education 33 (1):59–66.score: 9.0
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  34. Aaron Ben-Ze'ev (1992). Anger and Hate. Journal of Social Philosophy 23 (2):85-110.score: 9.0
  35. Amélie Oksenberg Rorty (2000). Spinoza's Ironic Therapy: From Anger to the Intellectual Love of God. History of Philosophy Quarterly 17 (3):261 - 276.score: 9.0
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  36. Trevor J. Saunders (1973). Plato on Killing in Anger: A Reply to Professor Woozley. Philosophical Quarterly 23 (93):350-356.score: 9.0
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  37. A. D. Woozley (1972). Plato on Killing in Anger. Philosophical Quarterly 22 (89):303-317.score: 9.0
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  38. Nicholas J. H. Dent (2000). 'Anger is a Short Madness': Dealing with Anger in Émile's Education. Journal of Philosophy of Education 34 (2):313–325.score: 9.0
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  39. Christopher W. Gowans (2010). Medical Analogies in Buddhist and Hellenistic Thought: Tranquillity and Anger. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 85 (66):11-.score: 9.0
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  40. Derk Pereboom (2009). Free Will, Love and Anger. Ideas y Valores 141:5-25.score: 9.0
  41. Kirk R. Sanders (2009). On a Causal Notion in Philodemus' on Anger. The Classical Quarterly 59 (02):642-.score: 9.0
  42. Kristjan Kristjansson (2005). Can We Teach Justified Anger? Journal of Philosophy of Education 39 (4):671–689.score: 9.0
  43. Kristin Borgwald (2012). Women's Anger, Epistemic Personhood, and Self-Respect: An Application of Lehrer's Work on Self-Trust. Philosophical Studies 161 (1):69-76.score: 9.0
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  44. Daniel H. Frank (1990). Anger as a Vice: A Maimonidean Critique of Aristotle's Ethics. History of Philosophy Quarterly 7 (3):269 - 281.score: 9.0
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  45. Leonidas Donskis (2007). David Ost, the Defeat of Solidarity: Anger and Politics in pOstcommunist Europe. Studies in East European Thought 59 (3).score: 9.0
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  46. Jeremy Horder (1996). Reasons for Anger: A Response to Narayan and von Hirsch's Provocation Theory. Criminal Justice Ethics 15 (2):63-69.score: 9.0
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  47. Stephen Leighton (2003). Aristotle’s Exclusion of Anger From the Experience of Tragedy. Ancient Philosophy 23 (2):361-381.score: 9.0
  48. Lucas A. Swaine (1996). Blameless, Constructive, and Political Anger. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 26 (3):257–274.score: 9.0
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  49. Joy Connolly (2003). ANGER IN ANTIQUITY W. V. Harris: Restraining Rage: The Ideology of Anger Control in Classical Antiquity . Pp. Xii + 468. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001. Cased, $49.95. ISBN: 0-674-00618-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 53 (01):117-.score: 9.0
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  50. W. V. Harris (1997). Saving the Φαινόμενα: A Note on Aristotle's Definition of Anger. The Classical Quarterly 47 (02):452-.score: 9.0
  51. Heather J. Gert (1998). Anger and Chess. Midwest Studies in Philosophy 22 (1):249-265.score: 9.0
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  52. Kristin L. Kirschner (2001). Rethinking Anger and Advocacy in Bioethics. American Journal of Bioethics 1 (3):60-62.score: 9.0
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  53. N. Yamagata (1997). L. Muellner: The Anger of Achilles: Mênis in Greek Epic (Myth and Poetics). Pp. Xii + 219. Ithaca, New York and London: Cornell University Press, 1996. £31.50. ISBN: 0-8014-3230-8. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 47 (02):411-.score: 9.0
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  54. Kenneth S. Zagacki & Patrick A. Boleyn-Fitzgerald (2006). Rhetoric and Anger. Philosophy and Rhetoric 39 (4):290-309.score: 9.0
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  55. George Teschner (1992). Anxiety, Anger and the Concept of Agency and Action in the Bhagavad Git. Asian Philosophy 2 (1):61 – 77.score: 9.0
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  56. Christopher Coope (1993). Sisterly Assistance and the Feminism of Anger. Cogito 7 (1):58-62.score: 9.0
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  57. Rebecca DeYoung (2011). Four Faces of Anger. Augustinian Studies 42 (1):102-105.score: 9.0
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  58. Bryan N. Massingale (2003). Anger and Human Transcendance. Philosophy and Theology 15 (1):217-228.score: 9.0
    In the aftermath of the racial disturbances that rocked the United States during the summer of 1967, the official government commission formed to investigate its causes noted: “…certain fundamental matters are clear. Of these, the most fundamental is the racial attitude and behavior of white Americans toward black Americans. Race prejudice has shaped our history decisively; it now threatens to affect our future” (U.S. Riot Commission, 1968, 203; emphasis added). Given the indisputable influence of racism and the ideology of white (...)
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  59. S. H. Braund (1982). Anger and Indifference in Juvenal Franco Bellandi: Etica Diatribica E Protesta Sociale Nelle Satire di Giovenale. (Opuscula Philologa, 2.) Pp. Vi + 115. Bologna: Pàtron, 1980. Paper, L. 5,000. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 32 (02):169-170.score: 9.0
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  60. Michael Coffey (1965). The Indignant Satirist William S. Anderson: Anger in Juvenal and Seneca. (University of California Publications in Classical Philology, Vol. 19, No. 3.) Pp. 70. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1964. Paper, $2.00. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 15 (03):299-301.score: 9.0
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  61. Elizabeth Cripps (2012). Look Back in Anger. The Philosophers' Magazine (56):108-109.score: 9.0
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  62. A. B. D. (1965). Love, Hate, Fear, Anger and the Other Lively Emotions. The Review of Metaphysics 18 (3):582-582.score: 9.0
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  63. Marco Fantuzzi (2004). Apollonian Anger P. Dräger: Die Argonautika Des Apollonios Rhodios. Das Zweite Zorn-Epos der Griechischen Literatur . Pp. VIII + 174. Munich and Leipzig: K. G. Saur, 2001. Cased, €80. Isbn: 3-598-77707-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 54 (01):44-.score: 9.0
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  64. Robert J. Rabel (2004). Restraining Rage: The Ideology of Anger Control in Classical Antiquity. Ancient Philosophy 24 (1):238-244.score: 9.0
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  65. Niall Rudd (1989). Juvenal's Third Book S. H. Braund: Beyond Anger: A Study of Juvenal's Third Book of Satires. (Cambridge Classical Studies.) Pp. Viii + 302. Cambridge University Press, 1988. £25.00. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (02):218-219.score: 9.0
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  66. Robert Zaborowski (2005). Platonic Anger J. Frère: Ardeur Et Colère. Le Thumos Platonicien . Pp. 213. Paris: Kimé, 2004. Paper, €21. ISBN: 2-84174-342-X. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 55 (02):439-.score: 9.0
  67. Rudolf Allers (1944). The Problem of Divine Anger in Arnobius and Lactantius. The New Scholasticism 18 (3):296-297.score: 9.0
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  68. Judith Barad (2000). Aquinas and the Role of Anger in Social Reform. Logos 3 (1).score: 9.0
     
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  69. Jeffrey Fish (2004). Anger, Philodemus' Good King, and the Helen Episode of Aeneid 2.567-589 : A New Proof of Authenticity From Herculaneum. In David Armstrong (ed.), Vergil, Philodemus, and the Augustans. University of Texas Press.score: 9.0
     
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  70. Simon Goldhill (2005). Anger S. Braund, G. Most (Eds.): Ancient Anger. Perspectives From Homer to Galen . (Yale Classical Studies 32.) Pp. X + 325. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Cased, £45, US$65. ISBN: 0-521-82625-X. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 55 (01):178-.score: 9.0
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  71. Giovanni Indelli (2004). The Vocabulary of Anger in Philodemus' de Ira and Vergil's Aeneid. In David Armstrong (ed.), Vergil, Philodemus, and the Augustans. University of Texas Press.score: 9.0
     
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  72. James Ker (2009). Seneca on Self-Examination : Rereading On Anger 3.36. In Shadi Bartsch & David Wray (eds.), Seneca and the Self. Cambridge University Press.score: 9.0
     
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  73. H. Lloyd-Jones (2002). Curses and Divine Anger in Early Greek Epic: The Pisander Scholion. The Classical Quarterly 52 (1):1-14.score: 9.0
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  74. Robert J. Rabel (2004). Restraining Rage: The Ideology of Anger Control in Classical Antiquity, by William V. Harris. Ancient Philosophy 24 (1):238-244.score: 9.0
     
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  75. Nancy Sherman (2007). Virtue and a Warrior's Anger. In Rebecca L. Walker & P. J. Ivanhoe (eds.), Working Virtue: Virtue Ethics and Contemporary Moral Problems. Oxford University Press.score: 9.0
     
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  76. Emily L. Stevick (1971). An Empirical Investigation of The Experience of Anger. Duquesne Studies in Phenomenological Psychology 1:132-148.score: 9.0
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  77. U. Dimberg, M. Thunberg & K. Elmehed (2000). Unconscious Facial Reactions to Emotional Facial Expressions. Psychological Science 11 (1):86-89.score: 6.0
  78. John Cogan (2003). Emotion and the Growth of Consciousness: Gaining Insight Through a Phenomenology of Rage. Consciousness and Emotion 4 (2):207-241.score: 6.0
    Some attempts to understand emotion have failed to account for important features of our emotional experience ? notably, the experience of gaining insight when we express our emotions. In this essay I will hold that if we properly understand emotions, then we see that the expression of emotion contributes to the growth of consciousness by providing a process wherein consciousness can recognize and reclaim its inherent wholeness, and thereby overcome fragmentation. Hence, in this essay I will strive to: (1) demonstrate (...)
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  79. P. Ziff (1958). About Behaviourism. Analysis 18 (June):132-6.score: 6.0
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  80. Charles A. Heywood & Robert W. Kentridge (2000). Affective Blindsight? Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4 (4):125-126.score: 6.0
  81. Beatrice de Gelder, Jean Vroomen, Gilles Pourtois & Lawrence Weiskrantz (2000). Affective Blindsight: Are We Blindly Led by Emotions? Response to Heywood and Kentridge (2000). Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4 (4):126-127.score: 6.0
  82. Stephen R. Leighton (1988). On Feeling Angry and Elated. Journal of Philosophy 85 (May):253-264.score: 6.0
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  83. Glen Pettigrove & Nigel Parsons (2012). Shame: A Case Study of Collective Emotion. Social Theory and Practice 38 (3):504-530.score: 6.0
    This paper outlines what we call a network model of collective emotions. Drawing upon this model, we explore the significance of collective emotions in the Palestine-Israel conflict. We highlight some of the ways in which collective shame, in particular, has contributed to the evolution of this conflict. And we consider some of the obstacles that shame and the pride-restoring narratives to which it gave birth pose to the conflict’s resolution.
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  84. Anna Stone & Tim Valentine (2007). Angry and Happy Faces Perceived Without Awareness: A Comparison with the Affective Impact of Masked Famous Faces. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 19 (2):161-186.score: 6.0
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  85. William H. Hyde (1981). On Meaning the Micro-State. Philosophical Investigations 4 (1):25-34.score: 6.0
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  86. Moreland Perkins (1966). Emotion and the Concept of Behavior. American Philosophical Quarterly 3 (October):291-298.score: 6.0
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  87. François De Smet (2008). Colères Identitaires: Essai Sur le Vivre-Ensemble. E.M.E..score: 6.0
     
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  88. Naḥman & Nathan Sternharz (eds.) (1986). A Soft Answer. Mesivta Heichal Hakodesh Chassidei Breslov.score: 6.0
     
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  89. Magali Paillier (2007). La Colère Selon Platon. Harmattan.score: 6.0
     
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  90. Jenny Wikström, Lars-Gunnar Lundh & Joakim Westerlund (2003). Stroop Effects for Masked Threat Words: Pre-Attentive Bias or Selective Awareness? Cognition and Emotion 17 (6):827-842.score: 6.0
  91. Jesse Prinz (forthcoming). Is Empathy Necessary for Morality? In Amy Coplan & Peter Goldie (eds.), Empathy: Philosophical and Psychological Perspectives. Oxford University Press.score: 3.0
    It is widely believed that empathy is a good thing, from a moral point of view. It is something we should cultivate because it makes us better people. Perhaps that’s true. But it is also sometimes suggested that empathy is somehow necessary for morality. That is the hypothesis I want to interrogate and challenge. Not only is there little evidence for the claim that empathy is necessary, there is also reason to think empathy can interfere with the ends of morality. (...)
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  92. Robert C. Solomon (2007). True To Our Feelings: What Our Emotions Are Really Telling Us. Oxford University Press.score: 3.0
    We live our lives through our emotions, writes Robert Solomon, and it is our emotions that give our lives meaning. What interests or fascinates us, who we love, what angers us, what moves us, what bores us--all of this defines us, gives us character, constitutes who we are. In True to Our Feelings, Solomon illuminates the rich life of the emotions--why we don't really understand them, what they really are, and how they make us human and give meaning to life. (...)
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  93. Markku Roinila (2011). Uneasiness and Passions in Leibniz's Nouveaux Essais II, Xx. In Breger Herbert, Herbst Jürgen & Erdner Sven (eds.), Natur und Subjekt. IX. Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress Vorträge 3. Teil. Leibniz Geschellschaft.score: 3.0
    Chapter 20 of book II of John Locke’s An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, titled ‘Of Modes of Pleasure and Pain’ is the most extensive discussion of emotions available in Locke’s corpus. Likewise, Nouveaux essais sur l’entedement humain, II, xx, together with the following chapter xxi remains the chief source of Leibniz’s views of emotions. They offer a very interesting and captivating discussion of moral philosophy and good life. The chapter provides also a great platform to study Leibniz’s argumentative techniques and (...)
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  94. Robert Brown (1987). Analyzing Love. Cambridge University Press.score: 3.0
    Analyzing Love is concerned with four basic and neglected problems concerning love. The first is identifying its relevant features: distinguishing it from liking and benevolence and from sexual desire; describing the objects that can be loved and the judgments and aims required by love. The second question is how we recognize the presence of love and what grounds we may have for thinking it present in any particular case. The third is that of relating it to other emotions such as (...)
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  95. William Fish (2005). Emotions, Moods, and Intentionality. In Intentionality: Past and Future (Value Inquiry Book Series, Volume 173). Rodopi NY.score: 3.0
    Under the general heading of what we might loosely call emotional states, a familiar distinction can be drawn between emotions (strictly so-called) and moods. In order to judge under which of these headings a subject’s emotional episode falls, we advance a question of the form: What is the subject’s emotion of or about? In some cases (for example fear, sadness, and anger) the provision of an answer is straightforward: the subject is afraid of the loose tiger, or sad about (...)
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  96. Patricia Greenspan (1988). Emotions and Reasons: An Inquiry Into Emotional Justification. Routledge, Chapman and Hall.score: 3.0
    Philosophers have traditionally tried to understand the emotions and their bearing on rationality and moral motivation by assimilating emotion to other categories such as sensation, judgment, and desire. In recent years, moving away from the Cartesian identification of emotions with particular sensations, many philosophers have embraced "judgmentalism," the view that emotions are essentially evaluative judgments or beliefs, with only an accidental connection to the feelings and impulses we intuitively take as "emotional." Anger, for instance, either is or entails the (...)
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  97. James Blair, A. A. Marsh, E. Finger, K. S. Blair & J. Luo (2006). Neuro-Cognitive Systems Involved in Morality. Philosophical Explorations 9 (1):13 – 27.score: 3.0
    In this paper, we will consider the neuro-cognitive systems involved in mediating morality. Five main claims will be made. First, that there are multiple, partially separable neuro-cognitive architectures that mediate specific aspects of morality: social convention, care-based morality, disgust-based morality and fairness/justice. Second, that all aspects of morality, including social convention, involve affect. Third, that the neural system particularly important for social convention, given its role in mediating anger and responding to angry expressions, is ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. Fourth, that (...)
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  98. Patricia S. Greenspan (2004). Practical Reasoning and Emotion. In The Oxford Handbook of Rationality. Oxford: Oxford University Press.score: 3.0
    The category of emotions covers a disputed territory, but clear examples include fear, anger, joy, pride, sadness, disgust, shame, contempt and the like. Such states are commonly thought of as antithetical to reason, disorienting and distorting practical thought. However, there is also a sense in which emotions are factors in practical reasoning, understood broadly as reasoning that issues in action. At the very least emotions can function as "enabling" causes of rational decision-making (despite the many cases in which they (...)
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  99. Bill Brewer (2002). Emotion and Other Minds. In Understanding Emotions: Mind and Morals. Brookfield: Ashgate.score: 3.0
    What is the relation between emotional experience and its behavioural expression? As very preliminary clarification, I mean by ‘emotional experience’ such things as the subjective feeling of being afraid of something, or of being angry at someone. On the side of behavioural expression, I focus on such things as cowering in fear, or shaking a fist or thumping the table in anger. Very crudely, this is behaviour intermediate between the bodily changes which just happen in emotional arousal, such as (...)
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  100. Jesse Prinz (2011). Against Empathy. Southern Journal of Philosophy 49 (s1):214-233.score: 3.0
    Empathy can be characterized as a vicarious emotion that one person experiences when reflecting on the emotion of another. So characterized, empathy is sometimes regarded as a precondition on moral judgment. This seems to have been Hume's view. I review various ways in which empathy might be regarded as a precondition and argue against each of them: empathy is not a component, a necessary cause, a reliable epistemic guide, a foundation for justification, or the motivating force behind our moral judgments. (...)
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