Results for ' world view'

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  1.  4
    World view: seeking grace and truth in our common life.Marvin N. Olasky - 2017 - Greensboro, NC: New Growth Press.
    "As Editor-in-Chief of World, Marvin Olasky has offered his views on current events and culture for more than twenty-five years. In this collection of columns, he shows readers how Christians can speak biblical truths while also living out the biblical values of grace and mercy in today's world."--From back of book.
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  2.  88
    Two (related) world views.Edward N. Zalta - 1995 - Noûs 29 (2):189-211.
    A. Plantinga develops a challenging critique of Castañeda's guise theory, by identifying fundamental intuitions that guise theory gives up and by developing several objections to the guise-theoretic world view as a whole. In this paper, I examine whether Plantinga's criticisms apply to the theory of abstract objects. The theory of abstract objects and guise theory can be fruitfully compared because they share a common intellectual heritage---both follow Ernst Mally [1912] in postulating a special realm of objects distinguished by (...)
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  3.  40
    World–Views and the Epistemic Foundations of Theism.Joseph Runzo - 1989 - Religious Studies 25 (1):31 - 51.
    Epistemological issues have inevitably been perennial issues for theism. For any claim to have insight into the nature and acts of the divine requires some sort of substantiation. And the appeal to faith typically made to meet this demand is often unconvincing. This raises a fundamental question: what could constitute proper grounds for theistic belief? In attempting to anwser this question, we will need to address the underlying epistemic issue of what justifies commitment to any worldview.
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  4.  39
    World views. Elements of the Apostelian and general approach.Jan T. Broekaer - 1998 - Foundations of Science 3 (2):235-258.
    In the work of the late Belgian philosopher, logician and freethinker Leo Apostel (1924–1995) the concept of ‘world view’ is extensively developed. From the diverse research of Apostel, I gather and examine the constituents of a world view and their relationships. I propose to understand it as a pluralist and open, rationalised ontology of the ‘world whole’, comprising knowledge systems, valuative ethical systems and concomitant action guiding systems, to a large extent reflecting insight in the (...)
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  5.  42
    World-viewing Dialogues on Precarious Life: The Urgency of a New Existential, Spiritual, and Ethical Language in the Search for Meaning in Vulnerable life.Christa Anbeek - 2017 - Essays in the Philosophy of Humanism 25 (2):171-185.
    In the last sixty years the West-European religious landscape has changed radically. People, and also religious and humanist communities, in a post-sec¬ular world are challenged to develop a new existential, ethical and spiritual language that fits to their global and pluralistic surroundings. This new world-viewing language could rise out of the reflection on contrast experiences, positive and negative disruptive experiences that question the everyday inter pretations of life. The connection of these articulated reflections on contrast experiences with former (...)
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  6.  21
    Religious worldview and environment in the Sertão of North‐East Brazil.Scott William Hoefle - 1999 - Philosophy and Geography 2 (1):55 – 79.
    The importance of religious cosmology for environmental ethics is explored in a case-study of enchanted and disenchanted world-views in the Sert o of North-east Brazil. Popular Catholicism is shown to have retained an enchanted world-view of humans interacting with saints, souls and animist spirits. In order to differentiate themselves from Catholics, evangelical Protestants pursue a disenchanted view of the natural environment but hold a highly supernatural view of human society. Afro-Brazilian cult members are Catholics who (...)
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  7.  27
    The World Viewed: Reflections on the Ontology of Film.James Milton Highsmith & Stanley Cavell - 1972 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 31 (1):134.
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  8. Our world views (may be) incommensurable: Now what?Carol Bayley - 1995 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 20 (3):271-284.
    In focusing their view on Kuhn, Robert Veatch and William Stempsey ignore alternative sources of insight from other voices that could help move us beyond incommensurability. Richard Rorty and Helen Longino, for example, offer another view of science and objectivity with constructive insight for the practice of science and medicine. Keywords: positivism, relativism, scientific knowledge, incommensurability, Kuhn, Rorty, Longino CiteULike Connotea Del.icio.us What's this?
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  9.  6
    World Views. Elements of the Apostelian and General Approach.Jan T. Broekaer - 1998 - Foundations of Science 3 (2):235-258.
    In the work of the late Belgian philosopher, logician and freethinker Leo Apostel (1924–1995) the concept of ‘world view’ is extensively developed. From the diverse research of Apostel, I gather and examine the constituents of a world view and their relationships. I propose to understand it as a pluralist and open, rationalised ontology of the ‘world whole’, comprising knowledge systems, valuative ethical systems and concomitant action guiding systems, to a large extent reflecting insight in the (...)
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  10. World Views and Moral Decisions: A Reply to Tom Regan.Don E. Marietta Jr - 1980 - Environmental Ethics 2 (4):369-371.
    Tom Regan criticizes my thesis that obligation toward the environment is grounded in a world view and thereby has a moral overridingness which mere interests and desires do not have. He holds that my approach is too subjectivistic. I counter, first, by explaining that phenomenology, which I use in my analysis of moral obligation, is not subjectivistic in the way emotivism or prescriptivism inethics is subjectivistic. Second, I argue that world views are products of learning and experience (...)
     
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  11. The world viewed: reflections on the ontology of film.Stanley Cavell - 1971 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    What is film? Why are movies important? Why do we care about them in the way we do? How do we think of the connections between the projected image and what it is actually an image of? Most movie-goers assume that they are entitled to make jugments and come to conclusions about the movies they see--to evaluate how "good" they are, or what they "mean." But what do they base, or what should they base, their judgments on? In this thought-provoking (...)
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  12.  10
    Religious World-view and Environment in the Sertão of North-east Brazil.Scott William Hoefle - 1999 - Ethics, Place and Environment 2 (1):55-79.
    The importance of religious cosmology for environmental ethics is explored in a case-study of enchanted and disenchanted world-views in the Sertão of North-east Brazil. Popular Catholicism is shown to have retained an enchanted world-view of humans interacting with saints, souls and animist spirits. In order to differentiate themselves from Catholics, evangelical Protestants pursue a disenchanted view of the natural environment but hold a highly supernatural view of human society. Afro-Brazilian cult members are Catholics who graft (...)
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  13.  76
    Whorf and Wittgenstein. Language, world view and argumentation.M. Kienpointner - 1996 - Argumentation 10 (4):475-494.
    Whorf and Wittgenstein are perhaps the most famous names in linguistics and philosophy associated with the assumption that language plays a decisive role in shaping our view of reality. After a critical discussion of Whorf's linguistic relativity principle I conclude that it is not language as a system, but the use of language according to the rules of language games which connects language thought and world view, especially if some particular usage becomes the commonly accepted norm. This (...)
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  14.  23
    Science, Ideology, and World View: Essays in the History of Evolutionary Ideas.John C. Greene - 1981 - University of California Press.
    Preface.--Science, ideology, and world view.--Objectives and methods in intellectual history.--The Kuhnian paradigm and the Darwinian revolution in natural history.--Biology and social theory in the nineteenth century.--Darwin as a social evolutionist.--Darwinism as a world view.--From Huxley to Huxley.--Postscript.
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  15. The world view of physics.Carl Friedrich Weizsäcker - 1952 - London,: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
  16.  28
    Desktop View.Desktop View - unknown
    Zuckerberg almost always tells users that change is hard, often referring back to the early days of Facebook when it had barely any of the features people know and love today. He says sharing and a more open and connected world are had barely any of the features people know and love today. He says sharing and a more open and connected world are good, and often he says he appreciates all the feedback.
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  17.  12
    The world viewed.Stanley Cavell - 1971 - New York,: Viking Press.
    A philosophical study of popular movies uses the viewer as a point of reference.
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  18.  22
    Who Needs a World View?Raymond Geuss - 2020 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
    Philosophers-professionals and the armchair variety-are given to defending comprehensive world views. Raymond Geuss, one of the most celebrated thinkers of our time, dispenses with this ambition for intellectual unity. Ranging across the history of art and ideas, Geuss argues for flexibility, doubt, and the accommodation of unresolved complexity.
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  19. Expanding knowledge through sequential world views – a critical realist approach.Alan Labas - forthcoming - Journal of Critical Realism:1-16.
    This paper addresses concerns that critical realism is a philosophy in search of a method, and that little guidance exists for the application of the philosophy to social research. It advances the idea that the absence of a philosophically embedded method gives critical realists the freedom to choose methods best suited to answering research questions under investigation. The paper utilizes a study into business advisor knowledge transmission, explicating how a sequential world views approach can be used to progressively expand (...)
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  20.  5
    World views and perceiving God.Joseph Runzo - 1977 - New York, NY: St. Martin's Press.
  21.  71
    Search for a naturalistic world view.Abner Shimony - 1993 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    Abner Shimony is one of the most eminent of present-day philosophers of science, whose work has exerted a profound influence in both the philosophy and physics communities. This two-volume 1993 collection of his essays written over a period of forty years explores the interrelations between science and philosophy. Shimony regards the knowing subject as an entity in nature whose faculties must be studied from the points of view of evolutionary biology and empirical psychology. He maintains that the twentieth century (...)
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  22.  20
    The World View of Contemporary Physics: Does It Need a New Metaphysics?Richard F. Kitchener (ed.) - 1988 - State University of New York Press.
    Papers from a conference held at Colorado State Univ., Sept. 1986. Addresses such related topics as the nature of the mind, our place in society, and the nature of ethics. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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  23.  42
    The World Viewed: Reflections on the Ontology of Film.George M. Wilson - 1974 - Philosophical Review 83 (2):240.
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  24. The Economic World View: Studies in the Ontology of Economics.Uskali Mäki (ed.) - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The beliefs of economists are not solely determined by empirical evidence in direct relation to the theories and models they hold. Economists hold 'ontological presuppositions', fundamental ideas about the nature of being which direct their thinking about economic behaviour. In this volume, leading philosophers and economists examine these hidden presuppositions, searching for a 'world view' of economics. What properties are attributed to human individuals in economic theories, and which are excluded? Does economic man exist? Do markets have an (...)
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  25. World-views in collision.A. P. Bos - 1984 - In David T. Runia (ed.), Plotinus amid Gnostics and Christians: papers presented at the Plotinus Symposium held at the Free University, Amsterdam, on 25 January 1984. Amsterdam: VU Uitgeverij/Free University Press.
     
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  26. Tradition, historical conscience, world-view.J. Zouhar - 1987 - Filosoficky Casopis 35 (1):60-70.
     
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  27.  27
    World View and Belief, and Rites of Healing in a Spiritual Church in Los Angeles.Jo Anne Combs - 1990 - Anthropology of Consciousness 1 (1-2):6-9.
  28. The World View of Primitive Religions of Chinese Minority Nationalities.Dong Defit - 1998 - In Melville Y. Stewart & Chih-kʻang Chang (eds.), The Symposium of Chinese-American Philosophy and Religious Studies. San Francisco: International Scholars Publications. pp. 1--217.
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  29. World view and the core.Mary Douglas - 1979 - In Stuart C. Brown (ed.), Philosophical disputes in the social sciences. Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press. pp. 177--87.
     
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  30.  5
    Muslim world view and muslim science.G. E. von Grunebaum - 1963 - Dialectica 17 (4):353-367.
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  31. World view analysis of knowledge in a rural village: Implications for science education.June George - 1999 - Science Education 83 (1):77-95.
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  32. Culture, world view and religion.B. J. Van der Walt - 2001 - Philosophia Reformata 66 (1):23-38.
    Why is a Reformational philosophy needed in Africa? It is necessary, because something is missing in African Christianity. Most Western missionaries taught Africans a “broken” or dualistic worldview. This caused a divorce between traditional culture and their new Christian religion. The Christian faith was perceived as something remote, only concerned with a distant past and a far-away future . It could not become a reality in their everyday lives. It could not develop into an all-encompassing worldview and lifestyle. Because Reformational (...)
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  33.  27
    World-View and Personality.Nils G. Holm, Kaj Bjcsrkqvist & Barbara Bergbom - 1994 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 21 (1):185-207.
  34.  19
    Science, World views, and the Cosmo-Ontological Difference.Peter Kakol - 2001 - International Philosophical Quarterly 41 (1):63-75.
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  35.  36
    World-Views in the History of Ideas.Chad Hansen - 2011 - Semiotics:23-29.
  36. World Views and Mathematics. A Discussion between INQ, an Inquirer| LOG, a Logician| and EPI, an Epistemologist.Michael Macnamara, Wietske Kistner & Jeanette Boers - 1986 - South African Journal of Philosophy 5 (3).
  37.  1
    World Views Without Ending.T. J. Sprod - 1997 - Metascience 6 (1):176-178.
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  38.  47
    Resistance to a dynamic world view.Singa Sandelin Benko - 1991 - World Futures 30 (4):211-219.
    The fact that people think is taken for granted. How we go about the thinking process is seldom reflected upon by the individual. In order to be able to grasp complex phenomena, and changing and interdependent relationships students participating in a systems course are required to become aware of their way of performing the thinking process. In discussions with them and based on ?soft analysis? it seems that there is resistance to a dynamic, multilevelled thinking process due to habits acquired (...)
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  39. World view projected by science teachers: A study of classroom dialogue.Herman Proper, Marvin F. Wideen & George Ivany - 1988 - Science Education 72 (5):547-560.
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  40.  5
    Implied World Views in Pictures: Reflections from a Cognitive Psychological an Anthropological Point of View.Michael Ranta - 2007 - Contemporary Aesthetics 5.
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  41. World-view and his place in the structure of social conscience.H. Mechurova - 1987 - Filosoficky Casopis 35 (1):80-90.
     
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  42. The world view of'genpei josuiki'+ a variant of the'heike monogatari'.S. Minobe - 1982 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 9 (2-3):213-233.
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  43. Scientific world-view in the system of spiritual life.J. Netopilik - 1979 - Filosoficky Casopis 27 (3):285-303.
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  44. The world-view and ideological unity of marxism-leninism.Pd Nikolic - 1984 - Filosoficky Casopis 32 (2):223-244.
     
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  45.  44
    Subjectivity and World Views in Max Weber.Dimitri D'Andrea - 2012 - Iride: Filosofia e Discussione Pubblica 25 (1):5-26.
  46.  18
    Demystifying the African world view – mainstream science to the rescue.Maxwell Omaboe - forthcoming - South African Journal of Philosophy.
    A popular tradition holds that the theoretical entities that feature in explanations relative to the African world view are typical of spiritual forces. Following this point of view, a concession among some scholars suggests that the traditional African world view is inconsistent with mainstream scientific theorising and therefore the acceptance of one implies the rejection of the other. My contention is essentially to challenge this tradition, a position I consider unfounded and an instigation of unsolicited (...)
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  47.  37
    On World Views, Commitment and Critical Thinking.Kerry S. Walters - 1989 - Informal Logic 11 (2).
  48.  15
    The Struggle Between Two World Views on the Understanding of the Human Body.Chin Wei - 1976 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 8 (1):36-56.
    With the appearance of mankind, the history of mankind's understanding of the human body itself also began. This long process of development rang with the struggle of two world views. The history of the development of man's understanding of the structure and functions of the human body is the history of the unbroken triumph of materialism over idealism, of the dialectical over the metaphysical. This essay simply takes a preliminary look back at this struggle from several aspects in the (...)
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  49.  1
    The Conflict between Atomic World-View and Ki氣 World-View in Japan during the Edo Period: The introduction of the Concepts 'particula' and 'spatium inane' into Japan by Shizuki Tadao. 김성근 - 2011 - 동서철학연구(Dong Seo Cheol Hak Yeon Gu; Studies in Philosophy East-West) 61:441-465.
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  50.  15
    The World Viewed: Reflections on the Ontology of Film.Timothy Corrigan - 1980 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 39 (1):104-105.
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