Results for 'Joseph Cunningham'

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  1.  64
    Response to Selected Commentaries on the AJOB Target Article “On the Ethics of Facial Transplantation Research”.Joseph C. Banis, John H. Barker, Michael Cunningham, Cedric G. Francois, Allen Furr, Federico Grossi, Moshe Kon, Claudio Maldonado, Serge Martinez, Gustavo Perez-Abadia, Marieke Vossen & Osborne P. Wiggins - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (3):W23-W31.
    Main Response Topics ? Introduction ? Open display and public evaluation ? Publicity versus patient privacy ? Facial tissue donation ? Validity of Louisville Instrument for Risk Acceptance ? Patients' understanding of risk ? Face versus hand transplantation ? Rejection rates/risks ? Patient compliance ? Exit strategy ? Functional recovery ? Societietal implications ? Psychological implications ? Conclusion: Uncertainty likely to persist.
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  2. Knowledgeably Responding to Reasons.Joseph Cunningham - 2020 - Erkenntnis 85 (3):673-692.
    Jennifer Hornsby has defended the Reasons-Knowledge Thesis : the claim that \-ing because p requires knowing that p, where the ‘because’ at issue is a rationalising ‘because’. She defends by appeal to the thought that it provides the best explanation of why the subject in a certain sort of Gettier case fails to be in a position to \ because p. Dustin Locke and, separately, Nick Hughes, present some modified barn-façade cases which seem to constitute counterexamples to and undermine Hornsby’s (...)
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  3.  45
    Comparison Is Not a Zero-Sum Game: Exploring Advanced Measures of Healthcare Ethics Consultation.Kelly W. Harris, Thomas V. Cunningham, D. Micah Hester, Kelly Armstrong, Ahra Kim, Frank E. Harrell & Joseph B. Fanning - 2021 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 12 (2):123-136.
    For over three decades, clinical ethicists in the United States have recorded their consulting activities to supplement documentation in the medical record, often using locally developed instrument...
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  4.  52
    Praxis Exiled: Herbert Marcuse and the One Dimensional University.Joseph Cunningham - 2013 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 47 (4):537-547.
    Leading Frankfurt School theorist, Herbert Marcuse, possessed an intricate relationship with higher education. As a professor, Marcuse participated in the 1960s student movements, believing that college students had potential as revolutionary subjects. Additionally, Marcuse advocated for a college education empowered by a form of praxis that extended education outside the university into realms of critical thought and action. However, the more pessimistic facet of his theory, best represented in the canonical One Dimensional Man, now seems to be the dominant ideology (...)
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  5.  19
    The role of perceptual salience and type of instruction in children’s recall of relevant and incidental dimensional values.Richard D. Odom, Joseph G. Cunningham & Eileen Astor-Stetson - 1977 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 9 (1):77-80.
  6.  13
    Der Geist und das Absolute.G. Watts Cunningham & Joseph Moller - 1952 - Philosophical Review 61 (3):428.
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  7.  43
    John Wesley’s Moral Pneumatology: The Fruits of the Spirit as Theological Virtues.Joseph William Cunningham - 2011 - Studies in Christian Ethics 24 (3):275-293.
    This essay examines the significance of John Wesley’s moral pneumatology in relation to virtue. Although recent scholars have identified this connection, the present work offers a more integrated exploration of righteousness, peace, joy, and love—gifts/virtues inseparable from the Holy Spirit’s work in the economy of salvation according to Wesley’s practical theology. We will see that, for Wesley, believers become participants in God’s nature as the conjoined τέλος of happiness and holiness shapes the soul with respect to outward moral expression. Righteousness, (...)
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  8. The Language of Possibility the Possibility of Language.Joseph Cunningham - 2002 - Dissertation, City University of New York
    The fundamental issues raised by Gertrude Stein in her "radical language experiment" bear a remarkable resemblance to the problems posed by Ludwig Wittgenstein in his later philosophy of language . Wittgenstein's philosophy is an important meta-view infusing our perception of modern and postmodern literature with his contention that philosophy is concerned most centrally with the description of the use of language, his notion of language as practice. Stein was the first writer who fully incorporated the idea of universal indeterminacy into (...)
     
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  9.  1
    The Word Ongoing: Franz Kafka, Walter Benjamin, and the Spirit of Perpetual Being.Joseph Cunningham - 2012 - Philosophy of Education 68:176-183.
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  10.  23
    Adults thinking the way we think children think, but children don’t always think that way: A study of perceptual salience and problem solving.Richard D. Odom, Joseph G. Cunningham & Eileen C. Astor - 1975 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 6 (5):545-548.
  11. On the ethics of facial transplantation research.Osborne P. Wiggins, John H. Barker, Serge Martinez, Marieke Vossen, Claudio Maldonado, Federico V. Grossi, Cedric G. Francois, Michael Cunningham, Gustavo Perez-Abadia, Moshe Kon & Joseph C. Banis - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (3):1 – 12.
    Transplantation continues to push the frontiers of medicine into domains that summon forth troublesome ethical questions. Looming on the frontier today is human facial transplantation. We develop criteria that, we maintain, must be satisfied in order to ethically undertake this as-yet-untried transplant procedure. We draw on the criteria advanced by Dr. Francis Moore in the late 1980s for introducing innovative procedures in transplant surgery. In addition to these we also insist that human face transplantation must meet all the ethical requirements (...)
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  12.  57
    To the editor or "mind".C. A. Baylis, A. Conelius Benjamin, Edgar S. Brightman, Rudolf Carnap, Alonzo Church, G. Watts Cunningham, C. J. Ducasse, Irwin Edman, Hunter Guthrie, J. S., Julius Kraft, Glenn R. Morrow, Joseph Ratner & And Julius R. Welnberg - 1942 - Mind 51 (203):296-a-296.
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  13.  6
    Joseph A. Schumpeter: Critical Assessments.John Cunningham Wood (ed.) - 1991 - Routledge.
    First published in 1992. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  14. Joseph Bobik , "The Nature of Philosophical Inquiry". [REVIEW]R. L. Cunningham - 1971 - The Thomist 35 (1):186.
     
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  15.  18
    The Catholic Church and the Jewish People: Recent Reflections from Rome – Edited by Philip A. Cunningham, Norbert J. Hofmann SDB and Joseph Sievers.Gavin D'Costa - 2009 - Modern Theology 25 (2):348-352.
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  16.  15
    Psychotherapy & Morality: A Study of Two Concepts.Joseph Margolis - 1966 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 27 (1):141-142.
  17. Vulnerability in Social Epistemic Networks.Emily Sullivan, Max Sondag, Ignaz Rutter, Wouter Meulemans, Scott Cunningham, Bettina Speckmann & Mark Alfano - 2020 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 28 (5):1-23.
    Social epistemologists should be well-equipped to explain and evaluate the growing vulnerabilities associated with filter bubbles, echo chambers, and group polarization in social media. However, almost all social epistemology has been built for social contexts that involve merely a speaker-hearer dyad. Filter bubbles, echo chambers, and group polarization all presuppose much larger and more complex network structures. In this paper, we lay the groundwork for a properly social epistemology that gives the role and structure of networks their due. In particular, (...)
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  18. Church and Culture: German Catholic Theology, 1860–1914 by Thomas Franklin O’Meara, O.P.John T. Ford - 1994 - The Thomist 58 (2):354-357.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:354 BOOK REVIEWS (continuously) revisable character, he falls back on an account of theology as rhetoric so as to make the best of a bad job. For persuasion is what we use when we know demonstration is hopeless. As a result, Professor Cunningham's study, which could most usefully have "placed" a variety of theologies of past, present, and, prospectively, future on the spectrum of (onto-) logic, poetic, and (...)
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  19. Das allgemeinste Entwicklungsgesetz.Joseph Petzoldt & B. Werner - 1924 - Annalen der Philosophie Und Philosophischen Kritik 4 (8):87-88.
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  20.  49
    Science in flux.Joseph Agassi - 1975 - Boston: D. Reidel Pub. Co..
    Joseph Agassi is a critic, a gadfly, a debunker and deflater; he is also a constructor, a speculator and an imaginative scholaro In the history and philosophy of science, he has been Peck's bad boy, delighting in sharp and pungent criticism, relishing directness and simplicity, and enjoying it all enormously. As one of that small group of Popper's students (ineluding Bartley, Feyerabend and Lakatos) who took Popper seriously enough to criticize him, Agassi remained his own man, holding Popper's work (...)
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  21. Agassi's Alleged Arbitrariness.Joseph Agassi - 1971 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 2 (2):157.
  22. Contemporary African Philosophy: The Search for a Method or Rediscovery of its Content?Joseph Asike - 1992 - Indian Philosophical Quarterly 19 (1):24.
     
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  23. Theology and First Philosophy in Aristotle's "Metaphysics".Joseph G. Defilippo - 1989 - Dissertation, Princeton University
    In the Metaphysics Aristotle explicitly identifies first philosophy, the science of "being qua being," with theology . But the treatise never explains how theology could also be a universal science of being. This dissertation will attempt to provide such an explanation. Its procedure will differ from past approaches by attempting to understand the programmatic remarks of VI.1 in the light of Aristotle's actual conception of god, his theology proper. ;Chapter two examines Aristotle's notion of god as a self-thinker. It argues (...)
     
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  24. Die wissenschaftstheoretische Position einer evolutiven Welterklärung.Joseph Meurers - 1964 - Philosophia Naturalis 8 (1/2):9-21.
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  25.  12
    An Afro-Asiatic Pattern of Gender and Number Agreement.Joseph H. Greenberg - 1960 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 (4):317-321.
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  26.  2
    The Imperfect in South-East Semitic: A Reply.Joseph Greenberg - 1953 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 73 (3):167-168.
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  27.  13
    Tu Fu's Art Criticism and Han Kan's Horse Painting.Joseph J. Lee - 1970 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 90 (3):449-461.
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  28. God, animals and zombies.Joseph Lynch - 2011 - Agora 30 (2):13-25.
  29. Philosophie und Naturwissenschaft.Joseph Meurers - 1950 - Philosophia Naturalis 1:337.
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  30. A Defense of Propositions.Joseph Gwyer Moore - 1994 - Dissertation, Cornell University
    The dissertation is a defense of realism about propositions . According to the propositionlist, there is a realm of entities that simultaneously serve as inter-subjectively shareable "objects" or "contents" of assertion and belief, as units of information more generally, as fundamental bearers of truth-values, and as entities capable of having certain modal, logical and epistemological properties. ;In chapter one, I flesh out a traditional concept of proposition, and I sketch a general argument in favor of propositionalism. ;In chapter two, I (...)
     
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  31. Heidegger et la philosophie des valeurs.Joseph Moreau - 1968 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 23 (2):213.
     
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  32. Tecnologia e ideologia.Joseph Pitt - 1984 - Nuova Civiltà Delle Macchine 2 (2):15-18.
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  33. Why a socialist economy is “impossible”.Joseph Salerno - 2011 - Nuova Civiltà Delle Macchine 29 (1/2):239-254.
     
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  34.  9
    The Contributions of Alfred Korzybski.Joseph C. Trainor & Alice Ambrose - 1937 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 2 (4):171-171.
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  35. The Joy of Torture: Hellenistic and Indian Philosophy on the Doctrine That the Sage is Always Happy Even If Tortured.Joseph Waligore - 1995 - Dissertation, Syracuse University
    Prominent in Hellenistic philosophy is the debate over whether the sage is really always happy even if tortured. This doctrine that the tortured sage is happy is important because the Hellenistic philosophers used this case to debate the power of moral virtue in a person's life. Modern pain research shows that it is indeed possible to be happy while being tortured because pain is not purely a sensory phenomenon. Based on this modern research, I investigate the positions of Epicurus, the (...)
     
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  36.  30
    Why Bioethics Needs a Disability Moral Psychology.Joseph A. Stramondo - 2016 - Hastings Center Report 46 (3):22-30.
    The deeply entrenched, sometimes heated conflict between the disability movement and the profession of bioethics is well known and well documented. Critiques of prenatal diagnosis and selective abortion are probably the most salient and most sophisticated of disability studies scholars’ engagements with bioethics, but there are many other topics over which disability activists and scholars have encountered the field of bioethics in an adversarial way, including health care rationing, growth-attenuation interventions, assisted reproduction technology, and physician-assisted suicide. -/- The tension between (...)
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  37. Causing Disability, Causing Non-Disability: What's the Moral Difference?Joseph A. Stramondo & Stephen M. Campbell - 2020 - In Adam Cureton & David Wasserman (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Disability. Oxford University Press. pp. 138-57.
    It may seem obvious that causing disability in another person is morally problematic in a way that removing or preventing a disability is not. This suggests that there is a moral asymmetry between causing disability and causing non-disability. This chapter investigates whether there are any differences between these two types of actions that might explain the existence of a general moral asymmetry. After setting aside the possibility that having a disability is almost always bad or harmful for a person (a (...)
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  38.  27
    Stimulus spacing and the judgment of loudness.Joseph C. Stevens - 1958 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 56 (3):246.
  39.  78
    Aquinas on the Relationship between the Vision and Delight in Perfect Happiness.Joseph Stenberg - 2016 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 90 (4):665-680.
    One vexed philosophical question that once enjoyed great esteem is this: in the Beatific Vision that the saints enjoy in heaven, does happiness (beatitudo) consist in the vision of God, in delight in God, or in a combination of the vision and the delight? The answer that one gives to this question apparently commits one to a view about what happiness is ultimately about. It has long been thought that Aquinas holds that happiness consists in the vision of God alone. (...)
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  40.  6
    The psychology of rigorous humanism.Joseph Frank Rychlak - 1987 - New York: New York University Press.
    In this second edition, Joseph Rychlak has retained his analysis of the philosophical antecedents of psychology and, at the same time, has considerably revised more complicated material illustration rigorous humanism to make the book more accessible for students. Rychlak here offers an analysis of the philosophical traditions underlying the social sciences and shows how functionalism came to dominate the modern science of psychology in America.
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  41. Proteins, Enzymes, Genes: The Interplay of Chemistry and Biology.Joseph S. Fruton - 2001 - Journal of the History of Biology 34 (2):413-415.
     
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  42.  66
    Rancièrean Atomism: Clarifying the Debate between Jacques Rancière and Alain Badiou.Joseph M. Spencer - 2015 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 23 (2):98-121.
    In the late 1970s and the 1980s, a number of radical left political theorists focused their philosophical attention on the relevance of ancient atomism, revitalizing a tradition that went back to Karl Marx's work on his dissertation. This essay looks at the uses of atomism by two thinkers in particular, Jacques Rancière and Alain Badiou, in order to see how their discussions of and references to ancient materialism help to shed light on their fundamental disagreements about the nature of community (...)
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  43.  19
    Analyzing Knowledge Retrieval Impairments Associated with Alzheimer’s Disease Using Network Analyses.Jeffrey C. Zemla & Joseph L. Austerweil - 2019 - Complexity 2019:1-12.
    A defining characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease is difficulty in retrieving semantic memories, or memories encoding facts and knowledge. While it has been suggested that this impairment is caused by a degradation of the semantic store, the precise ways in which the semantic store is degraded are not well understood. Using a longitudinal corpus of semantic fluency data, we derive semantic network representations of patients with Alzheimer’s disease and of healthy controls. We contrast our network-based approach with analyzing fluency data with (...)
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  44.  18
    Laying the Foundation for Foundational Technologies.Joseph Spino - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics 18 (12):67-68.
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  45.  10
    Philosophy and the Darwinian legacy.Suzanne Cunningham - 1996 - Rochester: University of Rochester Press.
    Has exclusion of Darwin's views on evolution distorted 20c philosophy? Cunningham suggests a reappraisal.
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  46.  20
    Eudaimonic Ethics: The Philosophy and Psychology of Living Well, written by L. Besser-Jones.Joseph Spino - 2017 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 14 (4):471-474.
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  47.  44
    The Heart of What Matters: The Role for Literature in Moral Philosophy.Anthony Cunningham - 2001 - University of California Press.
    The Heart of What Matters shows that literature has a powerful and unique role to play in understanding life's deepest ethical problems. Anthony Cunningham provides a rigorous critique of Kantian ethics, which has enjoyed a preeminent place in moral philosophy in the United States, arguing that it does not do justice to the reality of our lives. He demonstrates how fine literature can play an important role in honing our capacity to see clearly and choose wisely as he develops (...)
  48.  85
    Genealogy of nihilism: philosophies of nothing and the difference of theology.Conor Cunningham - 2002 - New York: Routledge.
    Nihilism is the logic of nothing as something, which claims that Nothing Is. Its unmaking of things, and its forming of formless things, strain the fundamental terms of existence: what it is to be, to know, to be known. But nihilism, the antithesis of God, is also like theology. Where nihilism creates nothingness, condenses it to substance, God also makes nothingness creative. Negotiating the borders of spirit and substance, theology can ask the questions of nihilism that other disciplines do not (...)
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  49.  23
    Probleme und Resultate der Wissenschaftstheorie und Analytischen Philosophie, Band I: Wissenschaftliche Erklärung und Begründung.Joseph J. Kockelmans - 1970 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 1 (1):142-150.
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  50.  15
    Etude sur le terme dynamis dans Les dialogues de Platon.Joseph Souilhé - 1919 - New York: Garland Publishing.
    This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections (...)
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