Results for 'Colin Stirling'

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  1.  23
    Gordon Plotkin and Colin Stirling. A framework for intuitionistic modal logics. Theoretical aspects of reasoning about knowledge, Proceedings of the 1986 conference, edited by Joseph Y. Halpern, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Los Altos1986, pp. 399–406. [REVIEW]William J. Rapaport - 1988 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 53 (2):669.
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  2.  14
    Review: Gordon Plotkin, Colin Stirling, A Framework for Intuitionistic Modal Logics. [REVIEW]William J. Rapaport - 1988 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 53 (2):669-669.
  3. What the body commands: the imperative theory of pain.Colin Klein - 2015 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
    In What the Body Commands, Colin Klein proposes and defends a novel theory of pain. Klein argues that pains are imperative; they are sensations with a content, and that content is a command to protect the injured part of the body. He terms this view "imperativism about pain," and argues that imperativism can account for two puzzling features of pain: its strong motivating power and its uninformative nature. Klein argues that the biological purpose of pain is homeostatic; like hunger (...)
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  4. How We Became Our Data: A Genealogy of the Informational Person.Colin Koopman - 2019 - Chicago, IL, USA: University of Chicago Press.
    We are now acutely aware, as if all of the sudden, that data matters enormously to how we live. How did information come to be so integral to what we can do? How did we become people who effortlessly present our lives in social media profiles and who are meticulously recorded in state surveillance dossiers and online marketing databases? What is the story behind data coming to matter so much to who we are? -/- In How We Became Our Data, (...)
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  5.  16
    Nature’s Purposes: Analyses of Function and Design in Biology.Colin Allen, Marc Bekoff & George V. Lauder (eds.) - 1997 - Cambridge: The MIT Press.
    This volume provides a guide to the discussion among biologists and philosophersabout the role of concepts such as function and design in an evolutionary understanding oflife.
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  6. Knowledge: By Examples.Colin Radford - 1966 - Analysis 27 (1):1.
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  7. On (not) defining cognition.Colin Allen - 2017 - Synthese 194 (11):4233-4249.
    Should cognitive scientists be any more embarrassed about their lack of a discipline-fixing definition of cognition than biologists are about their inability to define “life”? My answer is “no”. Philosophers seeking a unique “mark of the cognitive” or less onerous but nevertheless categorical characterizations of cognition are working at a level of analysis upon which hangs nothing that either cognitive scientists or philosophers of cognitive science should care about. In contrast, I advocate a pluralistic stance towards uses of the term (...)
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  8.  34
    Transformative agroecology learning in Europe: building consciousness, skills and collective capacity for food sovereignty.Colin R. Anderson, Chris Maughan & Michel P. Pimbert - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (3):531-547.
    Agroecology has been proposed as a key building block for food sovereignty. This article examines the meaning, practices and potentials of ‘transformative agroecology learning’ as a collective strategy for food system transformation. Our study is based on our qualitative and action research with the European Coordination of Via Campesina to develop the European Agroecology Knowledge Exchange Network. This network is linked to the global network of La Via Campesina and builds on the strong experiences and traditions of popular education in (...)
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  9.  39
    Pragmatism as Transition: Historicity and Hope in James, Dewey, and Rorty.Colin Koopman - 2009 - New York, NY, USA: Columbia University Press.
    Pragmatism is America's best-known native philosophy. It espouses a practical set of beliefs and principles that focus on the improvement of our lives. Yet the split between classical and contemporary pragmatists has divided the tradition against itself. Classical pragmatists, such as John Dewey and William James, believed we should heed the lessons of experience. Neopragmatists, including Richard Rorty, Hilary Putnam, and Jürgen Habermas, argue instead from the perspective of a linguistic turn, which makes little use of the idea of experience. (...)
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  10. Biological function, adaptation, and natural design.Colin Allen & Marc Bekoff - 1995 - Philosophy of Science 62 (4):609-622.
    Recently something close to a consensus about the best way to naturalize the notion of biological function appears to be emerging. Nonetheless, teleological notions in biology remain controversial. In this paper we provide a naturalistic analysis for the notion of natural design. Many authors assume that natural design should be assimilated directly to function. Others find the notion problematic because it suggests that evolution is a directed process. We argue that both of these views are mistaken. Our naturalistic account does (...)
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  11. Deciphering animal pain.Colin Allen - 2005 - In Murat Aydede (ed.), Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study. MIT Press.
    In this paper we1 assess the potential for research on nonhuman animals to address questions about the phenomenology of painful experiences. Nociception, the basic capacity for sensing noxious stimuli, is widespread in the animal kingdom. Even rel- atively primitive animals such as leeches and sea slugs possess nociceptors, neurons that are functionally specialized for sensing noxious stimuli (Walters 1996). Vertebrate spinal cords play a sophisticated role in processing and modulating nociceptive signals, providing direct control of some motor responses to noxious (...)
     
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  12. Teleological Notions in Biology.Colin Allen & Jacob P. Neal - 2020 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    The manifest appearance of function and purpose in living systems is responsible for the prevalence of apparently teleological explanations of organismic structure and behavior in biology. Although the attribution of function and purpose to living systems is an ancient practice, teleological notions are largely considered ineliminable from modern biological sciences, such as evolutionary biology, genetics, medicine, ethology, and psychiatry, because they play an important explanatory role. Historical and recent examples of teleological claims include the following: The chief function of the (...)
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  13.  86
    Behavioural studies of strategic thinking in games.Colin F. Camerer - 2003 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 (5):225-231.
  14.  3
    Children's understanding of the abstract logic of counting.Colin Jacobs, Madison Flowers & Julian Jara-Ettinger - 2021 - Cognition 214 (C):104790.
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  15.  87
    Animal Minds, Cognitive Ethology, and Ethics.Colin Allen & Marc Bekoff - 2007 - The Journal of Ethics 11 (3):299-317.
    Our goal in this paper is to provide enough of an account of the origins of cognitive ethology and the controversy surrounding it to help ethicists to gauge for themselves how to balance skepticism and credulity about animal minds when communicating with scientists. We believe that ethicists’ arguments would benefit from better understanding of the historical roots of ongoing controversies. It is not appropriate to treat some widely reported results in animal cognition as if their interpretations are a matter of (...)
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  16.  55
    Virtue jurisprudence.Colin Patrick Farrelly & Lawrence Solum (eds.) - 2008 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
  17.  47
    Animal Consciousness.Colin Allen & Michael Trestman - 2007 - In Max Velmans & Susan Schneider (eds.), The Blackwell Companion to Consciousness. New York: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 63–76.
    This article surveys philosophical and scientific issues arising from questions about animal consciousness. These questions include: which animals have consciousness and what (if anything) that consciousness might be like. Just what sort(s) of science can bear on these questions is a live issue, but investigations of the behavior and neurophysiology of a wide taxonomic range of animals, as well as the phylogenetic relationships among taxa are relevant. Such questions are also deeply philosophical, with epistemological, metaphysical, and phenomenological dimensions. Progress will (...)
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  18.  26
    Managers' perceptions of ethical codes: Dialectics and dynamics.Colin Fisher - 2001 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 10 (2):145–156.
    Codes of ethics and conduct have become common in UK organisations. This paper explores how such codes are understood and responded to by those whom the codes seek to influence. The study is an interpretative one, based on interview material, in which a dialectical pattern is seen in employees’ reactions to codes. Initial contradictions are found in codes of ethics and in codes of conduct . These tensions create perceptions of a two‐tier system in organisations in which core employees are (...)
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  19.  11
    Managers' perceptions of ethical codes: dialectics and dynamics.Colin Fisher - 2001 - Business Ethics: A European Review 10 (2):145-156.
    Codes of ethics and conduct have become common in UK organisations. This paper explores how such codes are understood and responded to by those whom the codes seek to influence. The study is an interpretative one, based on interview material, in which a dialectical pattern is seen in employees’ reactions to codes. Initial contradictions are found in codes of ethics (which claim to give employees space in which to exercise their integrity, but simultaneously are seen as impugning employees’ moral status) (...)
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  20.  18
    Imagination and idealism in the medical sciences of an ageing world.Colin Farrelly - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (4):271-274.
    Imagination and idealism are particularly important creative epistemic virtues for the medical sciences if we hope to improve the health of the world’s ageing population. To date, imagination and idealism within the medical sciences have been dominated by a paradigm of disease control, a paradigm which has realised significant, but also limited, success. Disease control proved particularly successful in mitigating the early-life mortality risks from infectious diseases, but it has proved less successful when applied to the chronic diseases of late (...)
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  21.  51
    Knowing and telling.Colin Radford - 1969 - Philosophical Review 78 (3):326-336.
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  22. Philosophers and their monstrous thoughts.Colin Radford - 1982 - British Journal of Aesthetics 22 (3):261-263.
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  23.  54
    Genes and equality.Colin Farrelly - 2004 - Journal of Medical Ethics 30 (6):587-592.
    What we think about equality as a value will influence how we think genetic interventions should be regulated. In this paper I utilise the taxonomy of equality put forth by Derek Parfit and apply this to the issue of genetic interventions. I argue that Telic Egalitarianism is untenable and that Deontic Egalitarianism collapses into the Priority View. The Priority View maintains that it is morally more important to benefit those who are worse off. Once this precision has been given to (...)
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  24.  9
    Communication and Cognition: Is Information the Connection?Colin Allen & Marc Hauser - 1992 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1992:81-91.
    Donald Griffin has suggested that cognitive ethologists can use communication between non-human animals as a "window" into animal minds. Underlying this metaphor seems to be a conception of cognition as information processing and communication as information transfer from signaller to receiver. We examine various analyses of information and discuss how these analyses affect an ongoing debate among ethologists about whether the communicative signals of some animals should be interpreted as referential signals or whether emotional accounts of such signals are adequate. (...)
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  25. Mental content and evolutionary explanation.Colin Allen - 1992 - Biology and Philosophy 7 (1):1-12.
    Cognitive ethology is the comparative study of animal cognition from an evolutionary perspective. As a sub-discipline of biology it shares interest in questions concerning the immediate causes and development of behavior. As a part of ethology it is also concerned with questions about the function and evolution of behavior. I examine some recent work in cognitive ethology, and I argue that the notions of mental content and representation are important to enable researchers to answer questions and state generalizations about the (...)
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  26.  36
    Experimental, cultural, and neural evidence of deliberate prosociality.Colin F. Camerer - 2013 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 17 (3):106-108.
  27. Stanley Rosen, Metaphysics in Ordinary Language Reviewed by.Colin A. Anderson - 2000 - Philosophy in Review 20 (3):212-214.
  28. Belief, acceptance, and knowledge.Colin Radford - 1990 - Mind 99 (396):609-617.
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  29. The Umpire's Dilemma.Colin Radford - 1985 - Analysis 45 (2):109 - 111.
  30.  80
    Hypnosis and the control of attention: Where to from here?Colin M. MacLeod - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (2):321-324.
    Can suggestion, particularly hypnotic suggestion, influence cognition? Addressing this intriguing question experimentally is on the rise in cognitive research, nowhere more prevalently than in the domain of cognitive control and attention. This may well rest on the intuitive connection between hypnotic suggestion and attention, where the hypnotist controls the subject’s attention. Particularly impressive has been the work of Raz and his colleagues demonstrating the modulation and even the complete elimination of classic Stroop color–word interference when subjects are given a posthypnotic (...)
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  31. Forms, Dialectics and the Healthy Community: The British Idealists’ Receptions of Plato.Colin Tylercorresponding Author Centre For Idealism & School of Law the New Liberalism - 2018 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 100 (1).
     
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  32.  2
    A Note on Pliny' Iresia.Colin Imber - 1979 - Classical Quarterly 29 (1):222-222.
    In his account of the Northern Sporades, Pliny names the islands of Iresia, Solymnia, Eudemia, and Nea as lying off the Gulf of Salonica, but gives no clue as to the individual identity of each island.
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  33.  15
    Frontiers of the Ottoman Imagination: Studies in Honour of Rhoads Murphey Edited by MariosHadjianastasis.Colin Imber - 2017 - Journal of Islamic Studies 28 (3):407-409.
    © The Author. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected] emphasis of the twelve essays in this well-deserved Festschrift in honour of Rhoads Murphey is on the history of Ottoman Greece and Cyprus between the fourteenth and nineteenth centuries. This is not only appropriate—Rhoads was a member of the Centre for Byzantine, Modern Greek and Ottoman Studies in the University of Birmingham from 1992 until his (...)
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  34.  13
    The environment in the history of Ottoman Egypt: Alan Mikhail: Under Osman’s tree: The Ottoman Empire, Egypt, and environmental history, Chicago and London: Chicago University Press, 2017, 336pp, $45.00 E-book & Cloth.Colin Imber - 2017 - Metascience 27 (1):151-153.
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  35.  28
    A Land-Based Approach to Postcolonial, Post-Modern Novels.Colin Irvine - 2010 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 5 (12):23-27.
    With an eye on how post-colonial novels by authors Chinua Achebe and Ngugi Wa Thiong’o address aesthetic and environmental problems that preceded the Modern period, the intent of this essay is to emphasize how their fiction connects readers with a pre-industrial, premodern, and, strangely enough, radically new ways of thinking about books and the living world beyond them. To this end, the essay looks at this non-western literature through the lens of ecologist Aldo Leopold’s land-based ideas regarding epistemology, ethics, and (...)
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  36.  8
    Not just what you did, but how: Children see distributors that count as more fair than distributors who don't.Colin Jacobs, Madison Flowers, Rosie Aboody, Maria Maier & Julian Jara-Ettinger - 2022 - Cognition 225 (C):105128.
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  37.  22
    A Poetics of Dissent; or, Pantisocracy in America.Colin Jager - 2007 - Theory and Event 10 (1).
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  38. Language within Language: Reform and Literature in A Secular Age.Colin Jager - 2016 - In Guido Vanheeswijck, Colin Jager & Florian Zemmin (eds.), Working with a Secular Age: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Charles Taylor's Master Narrative. De Gruyter. pp. 207-228.
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  39.  5
    Some Progress on the Unique Ergodicity Problem.Colin Jahel - 2021 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 27 (4):527-528.
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  40. Anti-fascism : late-stage capitalism and the pedagogical resurgence of anti-fascism.Colin Jenkins - 2019 - In Derek Ford (ed.), Keywords in Radical Philosophy and Education: Common Concepts for Contemporary Movements. Boston: Brill.
     
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  41.  29
    On Consciousness.Colin McGinn - 2007 - Philosophical Review 116 (3):474-477.
  42.  92
    It isn't what you think: A new idea about intentional causation.Colin Allen - 1995 - Noûs 29 (1):115-126.
  43.  45
    The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: A Developed Dynamic Reference Work.Colin Allen, Uri Nodelman & Edward N. Zalta - 2003 - Metaphilosophy 33 (1‐2):210-228.
    The present information explosion on the World Wide Web poses a problem for the general public and the members of an academic discipline alike, of how to find the most authoritative, comprehensive, and up-to-date information about an important topic. At the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP), we have since 1995 been developing and implementing the concept of a dynamic reference work (DRW) to provide a solution to these problems, while maintaining free access for readers. A DRW is much more than (...)
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  44.  10
    The Ethics of Inactivity.Colin M. Fisher - 2000 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 19 (3-4):55-72.
  45.  72
    Conditioned anti-anthropomorphism.Colin Allen & Grant Goodrich - 2007 - Comparative Cognition and Behavior Reviews 2:147-150.
    How should scientists react to anthropomorphism (defined for the purposes of this paper as the attribution of mental states or properties to nonhuman animals)? Many thoughtful scientists have attempted to accommodate some measure of anthropomorphism in their approaches to animal behavior. But Wynne will have none of it. We reject his argument against anthropomorphism and argue that he does not pay sufficient attention to the historical facts or to the details of alternative approaches.
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  46.  66
    Altruism: A Social Science Chameleon.Colin Grant - 1997 - Zygon 32 (3):321-340.
    The self‐interest paradigm that has dominated and defined social science is being questioned today in all the social sciences. Frontline research is represented by C. Daniel Batson's experiments, which claim to present empirical evidence of altruism. Impressive though this is against the background of the self‐interest paradigm, its ultimate significance might be to illustrate the inadequacy of social science to deal with a transcendent reality like altruism.
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  47.  44
    Gene patents and justice.Colin Farrelly - 2007 - Journal of Value Inquiry 41 (2-4):147-163.
  48. On Sticking to What I Don't Believe to Be the Case.Colin Radford - 1972 - Analysis 32 (5):170 - 173.
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  49.  30
    Report on Analysis 'Problem' no. 19.Colin Radford - 1983 - Analysis 43 (3):113 - 115.
    If I am looking at myself in a mirror I am directly facing, do I see myself looking at myself? If so, do I also see myself looking at myself looking at myself – and so on?
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  50.  19
    Stuffed Tigers: A Reply to H. O. Mounce.Colin Radford - 1982 - Philosophy 57 (222):529-532.
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