Results for 'Austen Yeager'

440 found
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  1.  20
    Ethical issues raised by intergenerational monitoring in clinical trials of germline gene modification.Austen Yeager - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (4):267-270.
    As research involving gene editing continues to advance, we are headed in the direction of being able to modify the human germline. Should we reach a point where an argument can be made that the benefits of preventing unborn children and future generations from inheriting genetic conditions that cause tremendous suffering outweigh the risks associated with altering the human germline, the next step will be to design clinical trials using this technology in humans. These clinical trials will likely require careful (...)
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  2.  20
    Northanger Abbey and Persuasion: Jane Austen ; Edited by R.W. Chapman.Jane Austen - 1933 - Oxford University Press USA.
    This is part of a complete set of Jane Austen's novels collating the editions published during the author's lifetime and previously unpublished manuscripts. The books are illustrated with 19th century plates and incorporate revisions by experts in the light of subsequent research.
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  3.  87
    A Theory of Sentience.Austen Clark (ed.) - 2000 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Drawing on the findings of neuroscience, this text proposes and defends the hypothesis that the various modalities of sensation share a generic form that the author, Austen Clark, calls feature-placing.
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  4.  26
    Sensory Qualities.Austen Clark - 1993 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Many philosophers doubt that one can provide any successful explanation of sensory qualities - of how things look, feel, or seem to a perceiving subject. To provide such an explanation, one would need to explain qualitative facts in non-qualitative terms. Attempts to construct such explanations have seemed, in principle, doomed. Austen Clark examines the strategy used in psychophysics, psychometrics, and sensory neurophysiology to explain qualitative facts. He argues that this strategy could succeed: its structure is sound, and it can (...)
  5.  5
    From Biology to Social Experience to Morality: Reflections on the Naturalization of Morality.D. M. Yeager - 2003 - Tradition and Discovery 30 (3):31-39.
    Placing Goodenough and Deacon’s “From Biology to Consciousness to Morality” against the background of the ethical naturalism of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century British moral theory, Yeager highlights the contribution the authors make to the moral sense tradition as well as indicating the limitations of such accounts of moral agency, judgment, and conduct. Yeager also identifies two strands of the essay that seem to open toward a more comprehensive account than the authors actually give. The first concerns the “interplay between (...)
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  6. A Theory of Sentience.Austen Clark - 2000 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 63 (3):622-623.
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  7.  17
    Minor Works: The Oxford Illustrated Jane Austen.Jane Austen - 1933 - Oxford University Press USA.
    "First edition 1954. Reprinted 1958, with revisions 1963, 1965, with further revisions by B.C. Southam 1969...".
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  8. Sensory Qualities.Austen Clark - 1992 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
    Drawing on work in psychophysics, psychometrics, and sensory neurophysiology, Clark analyzes the character and defends the integrity of psychophysical explanations of qualitative facts, arguing that the structure of such explanations is sound and potentially successful.
  9.  4
    Responsible Religious Belief.Yeager Hudson - 2000 - Social Philosophy Today 16:215-224.
    This paper argues that, despite the widespread assumption that everyone has an absolute right to hold any religious belief whatever, no matter how bizarre or irrational, there are limits to responsible belief. Epistemic responsibility means that we are not entitled to hold beliefs that, by recognized epistemic methods, have been discredited. The paper distinguishes epistemic responsibility from legal and from moral responsibility. Because our beliefs tend to affect our behavior, epistemically irresponsible beliefs become morally irresponsible when they conduce to discrimination (...)
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  10.  2
    The Social Power of Ideas.Yeager Hudson & Creighton Peden - 1995 - Edwin Mellen Press.
    In this study, the contributors maintain that forcefully-expressed ideas have in fact wrought huge changes in the world - sometimes of great good, sometimes of overwhelming evil. The theme of these essays is that the hope of the next century of human history hangs on our ability to recapture our faith in the social power of ideas. This book is a collection of papers presented at the 11th International Social Philosophy Conference, held in Helsinki, in the summer of 1993.
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  11. Promoting examination ethics: the challenge of a collective responsibility: proceedings of national conference organised by Federal Ministry of Education in collaboration with Potomac Consulting Group.Austen Ike Onyechere (ed.) - 1997 - Lagos: Published by Potomac Books for Exam Ethics Project.
     
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  12. Pride and Prejudice.Jane Austen - 1813 - Oxford World's Classics.
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  13. A Theory of Sentience.Austen Clark - 2000 - Philosophy 77 (299):135-138.
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  14.  10
    A Physicalist Theory of Qualia.Austen Clark - 1985 - The Monist 68 (4):491-506.
  15. Beliefs and desires incorporated.Austen Clark - 1994 - Journal of Philosophy 91 (8):404-25.
    Suppose we admit for the sake of argument that "folk" explanations of human behavior--explanations in terms of beliefs and desires--sometimes succeed. They sometimes enable us to understand and predict patterns of motion that otherwise would remain unintelligible and unanticipated. Is the only explanation for such success that folk psychology is a viable proto-scientific theory of human psychology? I shall describe an analysis which yields a negative answer to that question. It was suggested by an observation and an analogy, both of (...)
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  16.  18
    Dangerous games and the criminal law.Daniel B. Yeager - 1997 - Criminal Justice Ethics 16 (1):3-12.
  17.  31
    “Art for humanity's sake” the social novel as a mode of moral discourse.D. M. Yeager - 2005 - Journal of Religious Ethics 33 (3):445-485.
    The social novel ought not to be confused with didacticism in literature and ought not to be expected to provide prescriptions for the cure of social ills. Neither should it necessarily be viewed as ephemeral. After examining justifications of the social novel offered by William Dean Howells (in the 1880s) and Jonathan Franzen (in the 1990s), the author explores the way in which social novels alter perceptions and responses at levels of sensibility that are not usually susceptible to rational argument, (...)
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  18. Personhood: Toward a foundation for medical-ethical decision making.Yeager Hudson - 1985 - The Personalist Forum 1 (2):59-75.
     
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  19.  29
    Response to Chrzan’s “Hudson on ‘Too Much’ Evil”.Yeager Hudson - 1987 - International Philosophical Quarterly 27 (2):207-210.
  20.  16
    Hudson on “Too Much” Evil.Yeager Hudson - 1987 - International Philosophical Quarterly 27 (2):203-206.
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  21.  6
    Technology, Morality, and Social Policy.Yeager Hudson (ed.) - 1998 - Edwin Mellen Press.
    Part 1: Technology, Anxiety, and Harm; Part 2: The Impact of Clinical Technology on Women; Part 3: Guilt, Innocence and Responsibility; Part 4: Perspectives on Machiavelli and Contract Theory.
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  22. An Alternative to Traditional Student Teacher Supervision in the Social Studies.E. A. Yeager & E. K. Wilson - 1997 - Journal of Social Studies Research 21:49-54.
     
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  23.  11
    Sense and Sensibility.Jane Austen - 1963 - Oxford University Press USA.
  24. Feature-placing and proto-objects.Austen Clark - 2004 - Philosophical Psychology 17 (4):443-469.
    This paper contrasts three different schemes of reference relevant to understanding systems of perceptual representation: a location-based system dubbed "feature-placing", a system of "visual indices" referring to things called "proto-objects", and the full sortal-based individuation allowed by a natural language. The first three sections summarize some of the key arguments (in Clark, 2000) to the effect that the early, parallel, and pre-attentive registration of sensory features itself constitutes a simple system of nonconceptual mental representation. In particular, feature integration--perceiving something as (...)
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  25.  8
    Spectrum Inversion and the Color Solid.Austen Clark - 2010 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 23 (4):431-443.
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  26. When a Free Act Costs a Motive: Clearing Consequentialism of Conflict.Austen McDougal - 2023 - Utilitas 35 (1):25-39.
    Consequentialist theories that directly assess multiple focal points face an important objection: that one right option may conflict with another. Robert Adams raises an instance of this objection regarding the possibility that the right act conflicts with the right motives. Whereas only partial responses have previously been given, assuming particular views of the relation between motives and acts, an exhaustive treatment is in order. Either motives psychologically determine acts, or they do not – and I defend direct consequentialism on each (...)
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  27.  25
    Psychological Models and Neural Mechanisms: An Examination of Reductionism in Psychology.Austen Clark - 1980 - Oxford University Press.
  28.  32
    OF EAGLES AND CROWS, LIONS AND OXEN: Blake and the Disruption of Ethics.D. M. Yeager - 2009 - Journal of Religious Ethics 37 (1):1-31.
    Why focus on the work of William Blake in a journal dedicated to religious ethics? The question is neither trivial nor rhetorical. Blake's work is certainly not in anyone's canon of significant texts for the study of Christian or, more broadly, religious ethics. Yet Blake, however subversive his views, sought to lay out a Christian vision of the good, alternated between prophetic denunciations of the world's folly and harrowing laments over the wreck of the world's promise, and wrote poetry as (...)
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  29. Mansfield Park.Jane Austen - 1963 - Oxford University Press USA.
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  30.  98
    Sensing, objects, and awareness: Reply to commentators.Austen Clark - 2004 - Philosophical Psychology 17 (4):553-79.
    I am very grateful to my commentators for their interest and their careful attention to A Theory of Sentience. It is particularly gratifying to find other philosophers attracted to the murky domain of pre-attentive sensory processing, an obscure place where exciting stuff happens. I can by no means answer all of their objections or counter-arguments, and some of the problems noted derive from failures in my original exposition. But a theory is a success if it helps spur the creation of (...)
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  31.  47
    Is Homophobia Simply a Form of Xenophobia?Yeager Hudson - 1996 - Social Philosophy Today 12:145-162.
  32.  7
    An Economist Responds.Leland B. Yeager - 2005 - Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 6 (2).
  33.  12
    Gower and Chaucer on Pain and Suffering: Jephte's Daughter in the Bible, the 'Physician's Tale'and the Confessio Amantis.R. F. Yeager - 2012 - In Esther Cohen (ed.), Knowledge and pain. New York, NY: Rodopi. pp. 84--43.
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  34.  16
    Nietzsche, Plato, Heraclitus and the pursuit of illuminate dwelling.K. Yeager - 1998 - History of Political Thought 19 (4):621-640.
    This essay delineates points of agreement and disagreement between Plato and Nietzsche with respect to the original Heraclitean argument that the underlying dynamic connective structure of the whole is ‘strife’. Also discussed is the issue of how each philosopher understands life itself, as a general process, to be related to the wider processive whole. The paper analyses how the Heraclitean understanding of the natural whole influences each philosopher's interpretation of the political structures of man. The analysis attempts to demonstrate why (...)
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  35. True theories, false colors.Austen Clark - 1996 - Philosophy of Science (Supplement) 63 (3):143-50.
    University of Connecticut Storrs, CT 06279-2054. Recent versions of objectivism can reply to the argument from metamers. The deeper rift between subjectivists and objectivists lies in the question of how to explain the structure of qualitative similarities among the colors. Subjectivism grounded in this fashion can answer the circularity objection raised by Dedrick. It endorses skepticism about the claim that there is some one property of objects that it is the function of color vision to detect. Color vision may enable (...)
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  36.  26
    Helping, doing, and the grammar of complicity.Daniel Yeager - 1996 - Criminal Justice Ethics 15 (1):25-35.
  37.  15
    The Member of Parliament, the executive and scientific policy.Austen Albu - 1963 - Minerva 2 (1):1-20.
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  38. Emma.Jane Austen - 1963 - Oxford University Press USA.
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  39. Painfulness is not a quale.Austen Clark - 2005 - In Murat Aydede (ed.), Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study. MIT Press.
    When you suffer a pain are you suffering a sensation? An emotion? An aversion? Pain typically has all three components, and others too. There is indeed a distinct sensory system devoted to pain, with its own nociceptors and pathways. As a species of somesthesis, pain has a distinctive sensory organization and its own special sensory qualities. I think it is fair to call it a distinct sensory modality, devoted to nociceptive somesthetic discrimination. But the typical pain kicks off other processes (...)
     
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  40.  14
    >Editor's Note: Transitions.Diane M. Yeager - 2001 - Journal of Religious Ethics 29 (2).
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  41.  13
    Editor's Note: Valedictory.Diane Yeager - 2001 - Journal of Religious Ethics 29 (3):ix-xi.
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  42. Fictions in the Justification of Political Power.Yeager Hudson - 1992 - Social Philosophy Today 7:209-217.
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  43.  6
    F. E. Abbot’s Ethics.Yeager Hudson & Creighton Peden - 1991 - Social Philosophy Today 6:75-86.
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  44. Philosophical Essays on the Ideas of a Good Society.Yeager Hudson & Creighton Peden - 1990 - Utopian Studies 1 (2):156-157.
  45.  2
    The Obsolescence of the Nation.Yeager Hudson - 1998 - Social Philosophy Today 14:81-98.
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  46.  22
    Alice Miel and Democratic Schooling: An Early Curriculum Leader's Ideas on Social Learning and Social Studies.Elizabeth Anne Yeager - 1996 - Education and Culture 13 (1):3.
  47. Three varieties of visual field.Austen Clark - 1996 - Philosophical Psychology 9 (4):477-95.
    The goal of this paper is to challenge the rather insouciant attitude that many investigators seem to adopt when they go about describing the items and events in their " visual fields". There are at least three distinct categories of interpretation of what these reports might mean, and only under one of those categories do those reports have anything resembling an observational character. The others demand substantive revisions in one's beliefs about what one sees. The ur-concept of a " visual (...)
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  48.  7
    Perception: Color.Austen Clark - 1998 - In George Graham & William Bechtel (eds.), A Companion to Cognitive Science. Blackwell. pp. 282–288.
    A neighbor who strikes it rich evokes both admiration and envy, and a similar mix of emotions must be aroused in many neighborhoods of cognitive science when the residents look at the results of research on color perception. It provides what is probably the most widely acknowledged success story of any domain of scientific psychology: the success, against all expectation, of the opponent process theory of color perception. Initially proposed by a Ewald Hering, a nineteenth‐century physiologist, it drew its inspiration (...)
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  49.  23
    Thomas Paine.Yeager Hudson - 1990 - Social Philosophy Today 3:157-169.
  50.  74
    Roots of the Big Society.Austen Ivereigh - 2011 - The Chesterton Review 37 (1/2):226-229.
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