Results for 'Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto'

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  1.  9
    The rationality-of-ends/market-structure grid: positioning and contrasting different approaches to business ethics.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2008 - Business Ethics: A European Review 17 (3):326-346.
    This paper presents the ‘rationality‐of‐ends/market‐structure grid’. With this grid, the article contrasts, in economic terms, different approaches to business ethics and addresses the question how far and what type of business ethics is feasible. Four basic scenarios for business ethics are outlined that imply different conceptualizations of business ethics. The grid interrelates a rationality‐of‐ends dimension with a market‐structure dimension. The rationality‐of‐ends dimension ranges from opportunism and self‐interested egoism to self‐interested altruism and ultimately to authentic altruism. The market‐structure dimension ranges from (...)
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  2.  3
    The rationality‐of‐ends/market‐structure grid: positioning and contrasting different approaches to business ethics.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2008 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 17 (3):326-346.
    This paper presents the ‘rationality‐of‐ends/market‐structure grid’. With this grid, the article contrasts, in economic terms, different approaches to business ethics and addresses the question how far and what type of business ethics is feasible. Four basic scenarios for business ethics are outlined that imply different conceptualizations of business ethics. The grid interrelates a rationality‐of‐ends dimension with a market‐structure dimension. The rationality‐of‐ends dimension ranges from opportunism and self‐interested egoism to self‐interested altruism and ultimately to authentic altruism. The market‐structure dimension ranges from (...)
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  3.  90
    An Economic Approach to Business Ethics: Moral Agency of the Firm and the Enabling and Constraining Effects of Economic Institutions and Interactions in a Market Economy.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 60 (1):75-89.
    The paper maps out an alternative to a behavioural (economic) approach to business ethics. Special attention is paid to the fundamental philosophical principle that any moral ‘ought’ implies a practical ‘can’, which the paper interprets with regard to the economic viability of moral agency of the firm under the conditions of the market economy, in particular competition. The paper details an economic understanding of business ethics with regard to classical and neo-classical views, on the one hand, and institutional, libertarian thought, (...)
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  4.  69
    Moral Agency, Profits and the Firm: Economic Revisions to the Friedman Theorem.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 70 (2):209-220.
    The paper reconstructs in economic terms Friedman's theorem that the only social responsibility of firms is to increase their profits while staying within legal and ethical rules. A model of three levels of moral conduct is attributed to the firm: (1) self-interested engagement in the market process itself, which reflects according to classical and neoclassical economics an ethical ideal; (2) the obeying of the "rules of the game," largely legal ones; and (3) the creation of ethical capital, which allows moral (...)
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  5.  61
    Consumer Ethics in Japan: An Economic Reconstruction of Moral Agency of Japanese Firms – Qualitative Insights from Grocery/Retail Markets.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (1):29-44.
    The article reconstructs, in economic terms, managerial business ethics perceptions in the Japanese consumer market for fast-moving daily consumption products. An economic, three-level model of moral agency was applied that distinguishes unintentional moral agency, passive intentional moral agency and active intentional moral agency. The study took a qualitative approach and utilized as empirical research design an interview procedure. The study found that moral agency of Japanese firms mostly extended up to unintentional and intentional passive moral agency. Certain myopic managerial views (...)
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  6.  51
    Contrasting the Behavioural Business Ethics Approach and the Institutional Economic Approach to Business Ethics: Insights From the Study of Quaker Employers: Philosophical foundations/economics & Business Ethics.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 82 (4):835-850.
    The article suggests that in a modern context, where value pluralism is a prevailing and possibly, even ethically desirable interaction condition, institutional economics provides a more viable business ethics than behavioural business ethics, such as Kantianism or religious ethics. The article explains how the institutional economic approach to business ethics analyses morality with regard to an interaction process, and favours non-behavioural, situational intervention with incentive structures and with capital exchange. The article argues that this approach may have to be prioritised (...)
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  7.  22
    The rationality-of-ends/market-structure grid: Positioning and contrasting different approaches to business ethics.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2008 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 17 (3):326–346.
    This paper presents the 'rationality-of-ends/market-structure grid'. With this grid, the article contrasts, in economic terms, different approaches to business ethics and addresses the question how far and what type of business ethics is feasible. Four basic scenarios for business ethics are outlined that imply different conceptualizations of business ethics. The grid interrelates a rationality-of-ends dimension with a market-structure dimension. The rationality-of-ends dimension ranges from opportunism and self-interested egoism to self-interested altruism and ultimately to authentic altruism. The market-structure dimension ranges from (...)
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  8.  22
    The Adam Smith Problem Revisited: A Methodological Resolution.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2013 - Journal des Economistes Et des Etudes Humaines 19 (1):63-99.
    The Adam Smith problem refers to a claimed inconsistency between the Theory of Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations, regarding the portrayal of human nature in these two books. Previous research predominantly resolved the claimed inconsistency by uncovering virtuous, less selfish character traits in the Wealth of Nations. This article voices caution. I acknowledge – on methodological grounds – fundamental differences regarding the portrayal of human nature in Smith’s behavioral ethics, i.e. the Theory of Moral Sentiments, as compared with (...)
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  9.  13
    For Humanistic Management and Against Economics.Sigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto - 2018 - Business and Society Review 123 (3):459-488.
    The paper critiques the relationship between personalist ethics and institutional economics, and accepts that institutional economics can be difficult to reconcile with humanistic management that builds on personalist ethics. Even so the paper connects impersonalist ethics with institutional economics. On this ground, the paper demonstrates how theory and practice of personalist humanist management can lean on impersonalist ethics, i.e., institutional economics. Three pathways are laid out for such leanings. It is argued that to understand these alignments is important to improve (...)
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  10. 'Melancholia' a 2011 cinema masterpiece by Lars von Trier seen through the Philosophies of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche.Marcos Wagner Da Cunha - manuscript
    Why did human beings throughout the millennia so often think about a doomsday? Could there be a profit to our inner pleasure and pain equilibrium, when believing that doomsday is nearing, an idea suggested by Sigmund Freud? An analogous instinctive dynamics was thought by Nietzsche who wrote that human beings do prefer to want the nothingness rather than not to want anything at all. In this essay, 'Melancholia', a movie by Lars von Trier, is taken as an exquisite masterpiece, (...)
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  11.  36
    The Schopenhauerian mind.David Bather Woods & Timothy Stoll (eds.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) is now recognised as a figure of canonical importance to the history of philosophy. Schopenhauer founded his system on a highly original interpretation of Kant's philosophy, developing an entirely novel and controversial worldview guided centrally by his striking conception of the human will and of art and beauty. His influence extends to figures as diverse as Fredrich Nietzsche, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Iris Murdoch within philosophy, and Richard Wagner, Thomas Hardy, Sigmund Freud, Thomas Mann, Samuel Beckett (...)
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  12.  56
    The Character Concept in Evolutionary Biology.Günter P. Wagner (ed.) - 2000 - Academic Press.
    " Because characters and the conception of characters are central to all studies of evolution, and because evolution is the central organizing principle of biology, this book will appeal to a wide cross-section of biologists.
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  13. Zetetic Seemings and Their Role in Inquiry.Verena Wagner - 2023 - In Kevin McCain, Scott Stapleford & Matthias Steup (eds.), Seemings: New Arguments, New Angles. New York, NY: Routledge.
    The paper addresses the nature of seemings in light of their role in inquiry. Seemings are mental states or events with propositional content that have a specific phenomenology often referred to as “felt truth”. In epistemology, seemings are mainly discussed as possible (non-inferential) justifications for belief. Yet, epistemology has recently taken a zetetic turn, that is, a turn toward the study of inquiry. I will argue that the role of seemings in epistemology should be re-assessed from the perspective of inquiry (...)
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  14.  9
    Theorising modernity: inescapability and attainability in social theory.Peter Wagner - 2001 - London: SAGE.
    This book argues that sociology has lost its ability to provide critical diagnoses of the present human condition because sociology has stopped considering the philosophical requirements of social enquiry. The book attempts to restore that ability by retrieving some of the key questions that sociologists tend to gloss over, inescapability and attainability. The book identifies five key questions in which issues of inescapability and attainability emerge. These are the questions of the certainty of our knowledge, the viability of our politics, (...)
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  15.  58
    The Future of an Illusion.Sigmund Freud - 1927 - Broadview Press.
    Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, declared that religion is a universal obsessional neurosis in his famous work of 1927, The Future of an Illusion. This work provoked immediate controversy and has continued to be an important reference for anyone interested in the intersection of philosophy, psychology, religion, and culture. Included in this volume is Oskar Pfister's critical engagement with Freud's views on religion. Pfister, a Swiss pastor and lay analyst, defends mature religion from Freud's "scientism." Freud's and Pfister's (...)
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  16.  40
    The analysis of philosophy in Logical syntax : Carnap's critique and his attempt at a reconstruction.Pierre Wagner - 2009 - In Carnap's Logical Syntax of Language. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 184--202.
  17.  7
    The Penultimate Curiosity: How Science Swims in the Slipstream of Ultimate Questions.Roger Wagner & Andrew Briggs - 2016 - Oxford University Press UK.
    When young children first begin to ask 'why?' they embark on a journey with no final destination. The need to make sense of the world as a whole is an ultimate curiosity that lies at the root of all human religions. It has, in many cultures, shaped and motivated a more down to earth scientific interest in the physical world, which could therefore be described as penultimate curiosity. These two manifestations of curiosity have a history of connection that goes back (...)
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  18. Time as Narrative: an Ontological Daydream.Marcos Wagner Da Cunha - manuscript
    A thought experiment on the ultimate non-essence of Time.
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  19. Zum Problem des aristotelischen Metaphysikbegriffs.Hans Wagner - 1959 - Philosophische Rundschau 7 (2):129.
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  20.  81
    The enigmatic reality of time: Aristotle, Plotinus, and today.Michael Wagner - 2008 - Boston: Brill.
    Part I: Dimensions of time's enigma -- Is time real? -- Eleaticism, temporality, and time -- The makings of a temporal universe -- Pastness and futurity -- Synchronicity and synchronicity -- Temporal pace and measurement -- Presentness or the present -- Aristotle's real account of time -- Parmenidean time and the impossible now -- Cosmic motion and the speed of time -- Time as the motion of the cosmos -- Time as the cosmos itself -- Time as motion and all (...)
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  21. Sobre inciensos, trances y (algunas) diosas. Una perspectiva etnobotánica.Carlos G. Wagner - 2010 - 'Ilu. Revista de Ciencias de Las Religiones 15:91-103.
    The incense used in some cults and oracles in antiquity seems to have possessed the power to induce visions and prophecies. a study of its components, from an ethnobotanical perspective, reveals us their psychoactive power.
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  22.  22
    The Play of Irony: Theatricality and Utopian Transformation in Contemporary Women's Speculative Fiction.Jennifer A. Wagner-Lawlor - 2002 - Utopian Studies 13 (1):114 - 134.
  23. Some inevitable reflections.Frank O. Wagner - 2013 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 52 (1-2):159 - 171.
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  24. Supervenience, recognition, and consciousness.Steven J. Wagner - 1994 - In Richard Warner & Tadeusz Szubka (eds.), The Mind-Body Problem: A Guide to the Current Debate. Blackwell.
  25. Sostratos' Teiresias.Richard Wagner - 1892 - Hermes 27 (1):131-143.
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  26. Social theory and political philosophy.Peter Wagner - 2006 - In Gerard Delanty (ed.), The Handbook of Contemporary European Social Theory. Routledge. pp. 25.
     
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  27.  5
    Schopenhauer und das Geld.Manfred Wagner - 2016 - Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
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  28.  41
    S(zp, zp): post-structural readings of Gödel's proof.Roy Wagner - 2009 - Milano: Polimetrica.
    S(zp,zp) performs an innovative analysis of one of modern logic's most celebrated cornerstones: the proof of Gödel's first incompleteness theorem. The book applies the semiotic theories of French post- structuralists such as Julia Kristeva, Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuze to shed new light on a fundamental question: how do mathematical signs produce meaning and make sense? S(zp,zp) analyses the text of the proof of Gödel's result, and shows that mathematical language, like other forms of language, enjoys the full complexity of (...)
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  29.  15
    Towards a world sociology of modernity.Peter Wagner - 2010 - In Hans Joas (ed.), The benefit of broad horizons: intellectual and institutional preconditions for a global social science: festschrift for Bjorn Wittrock on the occasion of his 65th birthday. Leiden [etc.]: Brill. pp. 24--227.
  30. The better way.Charles Wagner - 1903 - New York,: McClure, Phillips. Edited by Mary Louise Hendee.
    Souvenirs.--In troublous hours.--The gates of death.--With the young.--Gird up thy loins!--Forerunners.--By Faith.
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  31. Too Close for Comfort: The Problem with Stationary SEC Officers.Robert E. Wagner - 2009 - Nexus - Chapman's Journal of Law & Policy 15:91.
     
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  32. The conditions of surrender : reconstituting the limits at conflict's end.Robin Wagner-Pacifici - 2005 - In Lawrence Douglas, Austin Sarat & Martha Merrill Umphrey (eds.), The Limits of Law. Stanford University Press.
     
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  33.  7
    The Contribution of Plotinian Metaphysics to the Unification of Culture.Michael F. Wagner - 1988 - Philosophie Et Culture: Actes du XVIIe Congrès Mondial de Philosophie 5:192-195.
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  34. The Cultural Sovietization of East Germany.Helmut R. Wagner - forthcoming - Social Research: An International Quarterly.
     
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  35.  13
    The decline in the birth-rate: A study of the biological effects of emancipation of the peasants.Willy Wagner-Manslau - 1934 - The Eugenics Review 26 (3):193.
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  36.  22
    Two Dogmas of Probabilism.Carl G. Wagner - 2003 - In Olsson Erik (ed.), The Epistemology of Keith Lehrer. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 143--152.
  37. The diagnostic of plurality in English medical law and its implications.A. Wagner - 2004 - Semiotica 151 (1-4):183-200.
     
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  38.  9
    The Early and the Late Carnap.Pierre Wagner - unknown
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  39.  55
    The Ethics of Neuroenhancement: Smart Drugs, Competition and Society.Nils-Frederic Wagner, Jeffrey Robinson & Christine Wiebking - 2015 - International Journal of Technoethics 6 (1):1-20.
    According to several recent studies, a big chunk of college students in North America and Europe uses so called ‘smart drugs' to enhance their cognitive capacities aiming at improving their academic performance. With these practices, there comes a certain moral unease. This unease is shared by many, yet it is difficult to pinpoint and in need of justification. Other than simply pointing to the medical risks coming along with using non-prescribed medication, the salient moral question is whether these practices are (...)
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  40. The Effectiveness of Various Arguments of the Humanity of the Unborn.John V. Wagner - 1982 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 56:146.
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  41. The French Revolution and the Birth of Modernity'.Peter Wagner - forthcoming - Social Research: An International Quarterly.
  42. The Globalization Syndrome: Transformation and Resistance. By James H. Mittelman.F. P. Wagner - 2004 - The European Legacy 9:424-425.
     
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  43.  8
    The inheritance of human fertility: A demonstration of its genetic basis.Willy Wagner-Manslau - 1932 - The Eugenics Review 24 (3):195.
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  44. The influence of linguistic temporal organization on children's understanding of temporal terms and concepts.Laura Wagner - 2018 - In Kristen Surett & Sudha Arunachalam (eds.), Semantics in language acquisition. Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
     
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  45.  13
    Theoretical Knowledge and Practical Decision in Carnap's Philosophy.Pierre Wagner - unknown
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  46.  17
    The Linguistic Turn and Other Misconceptions About Analytic Philosophy.Pierre Wagner - unknown
    Some common notions about analytic philosophy - that it is uniformly anti-metaphysical or indifferent to the history of philosophy - are clearly misconceived. However the impression that analytic philosophers are essentially linguistic philosophers is not entirely false and hence less easy to refute.
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  47. Truth, Physicalism, and Ultimate Theory.Steven J. Wagner - 1993 - In Howard Robinson (ed.), Objections to Physicalism. New York: Oxford University Press.
  48.  41
    The Problem of Values and the Problem of Truth.Gerhard Wagner & Heinz Zipprian - 1988 - Sociological Theory 6 (2):262-263.
  49. The Place of Alfred Schütz in Phenomenology and His Contribution to the Phenomenological Movement in North America.Helmut R. Wagner - 1989 - Analecta Husserliana 26:59.
     
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  50.  9
    The range of science: studies on the interdisciplinary legacy of Johannes von Kries.Gerhard Wagner (ed.) - 2019 - Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.
    Johannes von Kries (1853-1928) left a fascinating work: As a physiologist, he had a lasting influence on research into colour perception. As a philosopher, he formulated a theory of probability which was received not only in philosophy (Hans Reichenbach, Ludwig Wittgenstein), but also in physics (Ludwig Boltzmann, Max Planck), jurisprudence (Gustav Radbruch), sociology (Alfred Schütz, Max Weber), economics (John Maynard Keynes), and belles-lettres (Robert Musil). This anthology reconstructs some central lines of reception. It contexts Kries' work in the history of (...)
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