Results for 'Sanford A. Schane'

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  1.  22
    On the psychological reality of a natural rule of syllable structure.Sanford A. Schane, Bernard Tranel & Harlan Lane - 1974 - Cognition 3 (4):351-358.
  2.  57
    Why we need religion to solve the world food crisis.A. Whitney Sanford - 2014 - Zygon 49 (4):977-991.
    Scholars and practitioners addressing the global food crisis have rarely incorporated perspectives from the world's religious traditions. This lacuna appears in multiple dimensions: until recently, environmentalists have tended to ignore food and agriculture; food justice advocates have focused on food quantities, rather than its method of production; and few scholars of religion have considered agriculture. Faith-based perspectives typically emphasize the dignity and sanctity of creation and offer holistic frameworks that integrate equity, economic, and environmental concerns, often called the three legs (...)
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  3.  37
    A Mechanic on the "Mechanism of the Brain".Sanford A. Moss - 1921 - The Monist 31 (1):58-103.
  4.  38
    A Mechanic on the.Sanford A. Moss - 1921 - The Monist 31 (1):58-103.
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  5. A Double Image of the Double Helix: The Recombinant DNA Debate.Sanford A. Lakoff - 1980 - Ethics 91 (1):100-116.
     
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  6.  4
    Commentary.Sanford A. Marcus - 1983 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 2 (2):89-91.
  7.  23
    Scientists and World Order: The Uses of Technical Knowledge in International OrganizationsErnst B. Haas Mary Pat Williams Don Babai.Sanford A. Lakoff - 1979 - Isis 70 (3):445-446.
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  8.  12
    The vicissitudes of American science policy at home and abroad.Sanford A. Lakoff - 1973 - Minerva 11 (2):175-190.
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  9. Mark Sainsbury, ed., Thought and Ontology Reviewed by.Sanford A. Goldberg - 1999 - Philosophy in Review 19 (1):60-62.
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  10.  16
    Criterion effects in simple reaction time: Results with stimulus intensity and duration manipulations.A. J. Sanford - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 95 (2):370.
  11.  14
    Growing Stories From India: Religion and the Fate of Agriculture.A. Whitney Sanford - 2011 - University Press of Kentucky.
    The ecological imagination: from paradigm to practice -- Narratives of agriculture: how did we get here? -- Balaram and the Yamuna River: entitlement and presumptions of control -- Borrowing Balaram: alternative narratives -- The festival of Holi: celebrating agricultural and social health -- The land in between: constructing nature, wilderness, and agriculture -- Restoration, reciprocity, and repair: revising the ecological imagination.
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  12.  57
    The nature and limits of human understanding.A. J. Sanford & P. N. Johnson-Laird (eds.) - 2003 - New York: T & T Clark.
    This book is an exploration of human understanding, from the perspectives of psychology, philosophy, biology and theology. The six contributors are among the most internationally eminent in their fields. Though scholarly, the writing is non-technical. No background in psychology, philosophy or theology is presumed. No other interdisciplinary work has undertaken to explore the nature of human understanding. This book is unique, and highly significant for anyone interested in or concerned about the human condition.
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  13.  42
    Anand Pandian: Crooked Stalks Cultivating Virtue in South India: Duke University Press, Durham, NC, 2009, X 325 pp. [REVIEW]A. Whitney Sanford - 2013 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 26 (3):721-722.
    Anand Pandian: Crooked Stalks Cultivating Virtue in South India Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-2 DOI 10.1007/s10806-011-9308-4 Authors A. Whitney Sanford, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL USA Journal Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics Online ISSN 1573-322X Print ISSN 1187-7863.
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  14.  55
    Almost Heaven, West Virginia: Food, Farming, and Utopian Dreams at New Vrindaban.A. Whitney Sanford - 2015 - Utopian Studies 26 (2):289-308.
    According to media specialist and resident of multiple intentional communities Jesse Drew, “Communes and collectives provide the critical mass, the people power, and the collective wisdom to test out ideas in practice, not just in theory.”1 To test the vision of an ideal Vedic society grounded in devotion to the Hindu deity Krishna, in 1968, four followers of A. C. Bhaktivedanta Prabhupada set out for Moundsville, West Virginia, to establish New Vrindaban. These devotees were members of the Hare Krishna Movement, (...)
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  15.  8
    Anand Pandian: Crooked Stalks Cultivating Virtue in South India: Duke University Press, Durham, NC, 2009, X 325 pp. [REVIEW]A. Whitney Sanford - 2013 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 26 (3):721-722.
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  16.  19
    Attention bias and the relation of perception lag to simple reaction time.A. J. Sanford - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (3):443.
  17.  8
    Review: Moral Responsibility and the "Galilean Imperative". [REVIEW]Sanford A. Lakoff - 1980 - Ethics 91 (1):100 - 116.
  18.  6
    Science and ethical responsibility: proceedings of the U.S. Student Pugwash Conference, University of California, San Diego, June 19-26, 1979.Sanford A. Lakoff (ed.) - 1980 - Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley.
  19.  62
    Good-enough representation in plural and singular pronominal reference: Modulating the Conjunction Cost.Sungryong Koh, A. Sanford, Charles Clifton Jr & Eugene J. Dawydiak - 2008 - In Jeanette K. Gundel & Nancy Ann Hedberg (eds.), Reference: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Oxford University Press.
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  20.  55
    Moral Responsibility and the "Galilean Imperative":A Double Image of the Double Helix: The Recombinant DNA Debate. Clifford Grobstein; Regulation of Scientific Inquiry: Social Concerns with Research. Keith M. Wulff; Recombinant DNA: Science, Ethics, and Politics. John Richards; The Recombinant DNA Debate. David A. Jackson, Stephen P. Stich; A Nation of Guinea Pigs: The Unknown Risks of Chemical Technology. Marshall S. Shapo; Limits of Scientific Inquiry. Gerald Holton, Robert S. Morrison. [REVIEW]Sanford A. Lakoff - 1980 - Ethics 91 (1):100-.
  21.  18
    Negotiating for śrīnāthajī, daūjī, and jakhaiyā: Narrative as arbiter of contested sites in vraja. [REVIEW]A. Whitney Sanford - 2002 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 6 (1):19-45.
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  22.  51
    Ethics, Narrative, and Agriculture: Transforming Agricultural Practice through Ecological Imagination. [REVIEW]A. Whitney Sanford - 2011 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 24 (3):283-303.
    The environmental degradation caused by industrial agriculture, as well as the resulting social and health consequences, creates an urgency to rethink food production by expanding the moral imagination to include agricultural practices. Agricultural practices presume human use of the earth and acknowledge human dependence on the biotic community, and these relations mean that agriculture presents a separate set of considerations in the broader field of environmental ethics. Many scholars and activists have argued persuasively that we need new stories to rethink (...)
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  23. Book reviews. [REVIEW]Werner Menski, Carl Olson, William Cenkner, Anne E. Monius, Sarah Hodges, Jeffrey J. Kripal, Carol Salomon, Deepak Sarma, William Cenkner, John E. Cort, Peter A. Huff, Joseph A. Bracken, Larry D. Shinn, Jonathan S. Walters, Ellison Banks Findly, John Grimes, Loriliai Biernacki, David L. Gosling, Thomas Forsthoefel, Michael H. Fisher, Ian Barrow, Srimati Basu, Natalie Gummer, Pradip Bhattacharya, John Grimes, Heather T. Frazer, Elaine Craddock, Andrea Pinkney, Joseph Schaller, Michael W. Myers, Lise F. Vail, Wayne Howard, Bradley B. Burroughs, Shalva Weil, Joseph A. Bracken, Christopher W. Gowans, Dan Cozort, Katherine Janiec Jones, Carl Olson, M. D. McLean, A. Whitney Sanford, Sarah Lamb, Eliza F. Kent, Ashley Dawson, Amir Hussain, John Powers, Jennifer B. Saunders & Ramdas Lamb - 2005 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 9 (1-3):153-228.
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  24.  22
    A mössbauer effect study of diffusion of Fe in β-Fe-Ti alloys.Sanford J. Lewis & Paul A. Flinn - 1972 - Philosophical Magazine 26 (4):977-993.
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  25.  21
    Illocutionary Force, Speech Act Norms, and the Coordination and Mutuality of Conversational Expectations.Sanford C. Goldberg - 2023 - In Laura Caponetto & Paolo Labinaz (eds.), Sbisà on Speech as Action. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 2147483647-2147483647.
    Marina Sbisà has long advocated that we think of the illocutionary force of a speech act in terms of the act’s (predictable) systematic effects on the normative relationship between a speaker and her audience. Building on this idea, I argue that the hypothesis of distinctive speech act norms can be used to explain how participants in a conversation coordinate the normative expectations they have of one another in conversation. Such an explanation earns its keep by explaining how speakers render themselves (...)
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  26.  6
    The Philosophical Legacy of Jorge J. E. Gracia.Robert A. Delfino, William Irwin & Jonathan J. Sanford (eds.) - 2022 - Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Over the past 50 years, Jorge J.E. Gracia has been a seminal figure in Latin American philosophy, philosophy of race and ethnicity, metaphysics and ontology, medieval philosophy, and the theory of interpretation. This book commemorates Gracia’s legacy with a critical investigation of his deep and wide-ranging impact.
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  27.  16
    Evil: the shadow side of reality.John A. Sanford - 1981 - New York: Crossroad.
    This book is about the insights of psychology, mythology, literature, philosophy and Christianity.
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  28. Mystical Christianity: A Psychological Commentary on the Gospel.John A. Sanford - 1993
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  29.  7
    The Mediterranean World in Ancient Times.Richard M. Haywood, Eva Matthews Sanford, Charles Edward Smith, Paul Grady Moorhead & Albert A. Trever - 1941 - American Journal of Philology 62 (1):125.
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  30.  49
    We Meant No Harm, Yet We Made a Mistake; Why Not Apologize for it? A Student’s View.Dominic E. Sanford & David A. Fleming - 2010 - HEC Forum 22 (2):159-169.
    This essay explores the unique perspective of medical students regarding the ethical challenges of providing full disclosure to patients and their families when medical mistakes are made, especially when such mistakes lead to tragic outcomes. This narrative underscores core precepts of the healing profession, challenging the health care team to be open and truthful, even when doing so is uncomfortable. This account also reminds us that nonabandonment is an obligation that assumes accountability for one’s actions in the healing relationship and (...)
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  31.  13
    Poems of Love and War, from the Eight Anthologies and Ten Long Poems of Classical Tamil.Sanford B. Steever & A. K. Ramanujan - 1987 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 107 (4):786.
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  32.  64
    Comments on Miranda Fricker's Epistemic Injustice.Sanford Goldberg - 2010 - Episteme 7 (2):138-150.
    Miranda Fricker's Epistemic Injustice is a wide-ranging and important book on a much-neglected topic: the injustice involved in cases in which distrust arises out of prejudice. Fricker has some important things to say about this sort of injustice: its nature, how it arises, what sustains it, and the unhappy outcomes associated with it for the victim and the society in which it takes place. In the course of developing this account, Fricker also develops an account of the epistemology of testimony. (...)
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  33.  37
    Experimental Psychology, a Manual of Laboratory Practice. [REVIEW]Edmund C. Sanford - 1906 - Philosophical Review 15 (4):424-426.
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  34. Against epistemic partiality in friendship: value-reflecting reasons.Sanford C. Goldberg - 2019 - Philosophical Studies 176 (8):2221-2242.
    It has been alleged that the demands of friendship conflict with the norms of epistemology—in particular, that there are cases in which the moral demands of friendship would require one to give a friend the benefit of the doubt, and thereby come to believe something in violation of ordinary epistemic standards on justified or responsible belief :329–351, 2004; Stroud in Ethics 116:498–524, 2006; Hazlett in A luxury of the understanding: on the value of true belief, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2013). (...)
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  35.  73
    Decision of the advisory board of Stanford University in the matter of Professor H. Bruce Franklin, 5 January, 1972.Donald Kennedy, David A. Hamburg, G. L. Bach, Robert McAfee Brown, Sanford M. Dornbusch, David M. Mason & Wolfgang K. H. Panofsky - 1972 - Minerva 10 (3):452-483.
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  36.  46
    Kant and Milton.Sanford Budick - 2010 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    Kant and Milton: fundamentals and foundations -- Kant's journey in the constellation of German Miltonism: toward the procedure of succession -- Kant's Miltonic transfer to exemplarity: the succession to Milton's "On his blindness" in the groundwork of the Metaphysics of morals -- Kantian tragic form and Kantian "storytelling" -- The Critique of practical reason and Samson agonistes -- Kant's Miltonic procedure of succession in a key moment of the Critique of judgment.
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  37. Testimonial knowledge in early childhood, revisited.Sanford C. Goldberg - 2008 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (1):1–36.
    Many epistemologists agree that even very young children sometimes acquire knowledge through testimony. In this paper I address two challenges facing this view. The first (building on a point made in Lackey (2005)) is the defeater challenge, which is to square the hypothesis that very young children acquire testimonial knowledge with the fact that children (whose cognitive immaturity prevents them from having or appreciating reasons) cannot be said to satisfy the No-Defeaters condition on knowledge. The second is the extension challenge, (...)
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  38.  8
    Dynamics of the Mixed Economy: Toward a Theory of Interventionism.Sanford Ikeda - 1996 - Routledge.
    _Dynamics of the Mixed Economy_ applies the insights of modern Austrian political economy to examine economic policy in mixed economies. It compares and contrasts standard approaches to the growth of the state with that of modern Austrian political economy; examines in detail the nature and operation of the interventionist process in the context of nationalization, regulation and the welfare state; analyzes conditions that produce instability under laissez-faire capitalism; argues that the interventionist process is a 'spontaneous order'; and offers several 'pattern (...)
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  39.  36
    Testimonial Knowledge in Early Childhood, Revisited1.Sanford C. Goldberg - 2008 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (1):1-36.
    Many epistemologists agree that even very young children sometimes acquire knowledge through testimony. In this paper I address two challenges facing this view. The first (building on a point made in Lackey (2005)) is the defeater challenge, which is to square the hypothesis that very young children acquire testimonial knowledge with the fact that children (whose cognitive immaturity prevents them from having or appreciating reasons) cannot be said to satisfy the No‐Defeaters condition on knowledge. The second is the extension challenge, (...)
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  40.  48
    Assertion: On the Philosophical Significance of Assertoric Speech.Sanford Goldberg - 2015 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Sanford C. Goldberg presents a novel account of the speech act of assertion. He argues that this type of speech act is answerable to an epistemic, context-sensitive norm. On this basis he shows the philosophical importance of assertion for key debates in philosophy of language and mind, epistemology, and ethics.
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  41.  38
    Anti-Individualism: Mind and Language, Knowledge and Justification * By SANFORD C. GOLDBERG. [REVIEW]Sanford Goldberg - 2009 - Analysis 69 (3):582-585.
    Reflection on testimony provides novel arguments for anti-individualism. What is anti-individualism? Sanford Goldberg's book defends three main claims under this heading: first, facts about the contents of beliefs do not supervene on individualistic facts about the believers ; second, an individual's epistemic entitlement to accept a piece of testimony depends on facts about her peers ; third, processes by which some humans acquire knowledge from testimony includes activities performed for them by others. Each of these three claims is argued (...)
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  42.  53
    To the Best of Our Knowledge: Social Expectations and Epistemic Normativity.Sanford Goldberg (ed.) - 2018 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    Sandford C. Goldberg puts forward a theory of epistemic normativity that is grounded in the things we properly expect of one another as epistemic subjects. This theory has far-reaching implications not only for the theory of epistemic normativity, but also for the nature of epistemic assessment itself.
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  43. The Psychology and Epistemology of Self-Knowledge.Sanford C. Goldberg - 1999 - Synthese 118 (2):165 - 199.
    In this paper I argue, first, that the most influential (and perhaps only acceptable) account of the epistemology of self-knowledge, developed and defended at great length in Wright (1989b) and (1989c) (among other places), leaves unanswered a question about the psychology of self-knowledge; second, that without an answer to this question about the psychology of self-knowledge, the epistemic account cannot be considered acceptable; and third, that neither Wright's own answer, nor an interpretation-based answer (based on a proposal from Jacobsen (1997)), (...)
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  44. On our alleged A Priori knowledge that water exists.Sanford C. Goldberg - 2003 - Analysis 63 (1):38-41.
  45.  40
    Character in a Coherent Fiction: On Putting King Lear Back Together Again.Sanford Freedman - 1983 - Philosophy and Literature 7 (2):196-212.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Sanford Freedman CHARACTER IN A COHERENT FICTION: ON PUTTING KING LEAR BACK TOGETHER AGAIN Criticism has never been able to talk about fictionality very long without talking about an "inside" and an "outside," a fictional world's relation to a non-fictional world. And always there lies an immediate tension in this relation posed by the concept of coherence. That is, does a fictional world cohere because it corresponds to (...)
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  46.  24
    A New History of French Literature.Sanford S. Ames & Denis Hollier - 1991 - Substance 20 (3):137.
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  47. Divine Hiddenness and Other Evidence.Charity Anderson & Jeffrey Sanford Russell - 2013 - In L. Kvanvig Jonathan (ed.), Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion. Oxford University Press.
    Many people do not know or believe there is a God, and many experience a sense of divine absence. Are these (and other) “divine hiddenness” facts evidence against the existence of God? Using Bayesian tools, we investigate *evidential arguments from divine hiddenness*, and respond to two objections to such arguments. The first objection says that the problem of hiddenness is just a special case of the problem of evil, and so if one has responded to the problem of evil then (...)
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  48.  68
    The Function of Kant's Miltonic Citations on a Page of the Opus postumum.Sanford Budick - 2016 - Philosophy and Literature 40 (1):76-97.
    On one manuscript page of the Opus postumum Kant twice recurs to a passage from Paradise Lost that, seven years earlier, he had cited to exemplify aesthetic ideas and the concept of succession.1 Now he calls on these same verses to perform an additional function, namely, to represent the a priori idea of a community of reciprocity. For Kant, the “insertion” of this idea serves as an “actus of cognition” that can enable experience of the “subjectively actual”.2In the cited passage (...)
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  49.  5
    The Western Theory of Tradition: Terms and Paradigms of the Cultural Sublime.Sanford Budick - 2000 - Yale University Press.
    A study of cultural tradition. Sanford Budick reveals an operative concept of Western cultures: according to this concept, the art of freely receiving and handing on cultural tradition and the act of achieving moral and aesthetic freedom in sublime representation are the same phenomenon.
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  50. Should have known.Sanford C. Goldberg - 2017 - Synthese 194 (8):2863-2894.
    In this paper I will be arguing that there are cases in which a subject, S, should have known that p, even though, given her state of evidence at the time, she was in no position to know it. My argument for this result will involve making two claims. The uncontroversial claim is this: S should have known that p when another person has, or would have, legitimate expectations regarding S’s epistemic condition, the satisfaction of these expectations would require that (...)
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