Works by Anderson, Doug (exact spelling)

8 found
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  1.  40
    Peirce and the Art of Reasoning.Doug Anderson - 2005 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 24 (3):277-289.
    Drawing on Charles Peirce’s descriptions of his correspondence course on the “Art of Reasoning,” I argue that Peirce believed that the study of logic stands at the center of a liberal arts education. However, Peirce’s notion of logic included much more than the traditional accounts of deduction and syllogistic reasoning. He believed that the art of reasoning required a study of both abductive and inductive inference as well the practice of observation and imagination. Employing these other features of logic, his (...)
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  2.  42
    Recovering Humanity: Movement, Sport, and Nature.Doug Anderson - 2001 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 28 (2):140-150.
  3.  7
    From the Guest Editor.Doug Anderson - 2018 - Environmental Ethics 40 (1):3-4.
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  4.  17
    III jsp.Doug Anderson, James Campbell, Ellen Kappy Suckiel & Eugene Taylor - 2003 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (4).
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  5.  40
    Santayana and Spinoza On Philosophic Liberty.Doug Anderson - 2009 - Overheard in Seville 27 (27):9-17.
  6.  60
    A Response to Daniel Holbrook's 'Descartes on Persons' and Doug Anderson's 'The Legacy oE Bowne's Empiricism'.Doug Anderson - 1992 - The Personalist Forum 8 (Supplement):15-20.
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  7.  44
    The Varieties of Pragmatism. [REVIEW]Doug Anderson - 2009 - Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 37 (108):53-55.
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  8.  98
    The Grace and the Severity of the Ideal: John Dewey and the Transcendent (review). [REVIEW]Doug Anderson - 2005 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 19 (3):280-283.
    In The Grace and the Severity of the Ideal, Victor Kestenbaum swims against the current of Dewey scholarship. He declares for and gives close articulation to the importance of transcendence in the philosophy of John Dewey. The guiding thread of the book is "the proposal that Dewey never outgrew his idealistic period. His philosophical achievement is not to be located in his naturalism but in the frontiers along which the natural and the transcendental touch" (137). Kestenbaum does not argue that (...)
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