Results for 'Geoffrey F. Scarre'

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  1.  81
    Privacy and the Dead.Geoffrey F. Scarre - 2012 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 19 (1):1-16.
    The privacy of the dead might be thought to be violated by, for instance, the disinterment for research purposes of human physical remains or the posthumous revelation of embarrassing facts about people's private lives. But are there any moral rights to privacy which extend beyond the grave? Although this notion can be challenged on the ground that death marks the end of the personal subject, with the consequent extinction of her interests, I argue that a right to privacy belongs to (...)
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  2.  20
    Lest We Forget: How and Why We Should Remember the Great War.Geoffrey F. Scarre - 2014 - Ethical Perspectives 21 (3):321-344.
    Because commemorations of historic events say as much about the present as the past, it is important to think carefully about how and why we should remember the Great War in the centenary year of its outbreak. Commemoration must not be allowed to degenerate into mere mass entertainment, thoughtless celebration of martial valour, an occasion for chauvinism, or an advertisement for the merits of war as a means of settling international disputes. More respectable reasons for commemorating the Great War are (...)
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  3.  76
    Mate choice turns cognitive.Geoffrey F. Miller & Peter M. Todd - 1998 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 2 (5):190-198.
  4.  78
    Dissociations among attention, perception, and awareness during object-substitution masking.Geoffrey F. Woodman & Steven J. Luck - 2003 - Psychological Science 14 (6):605-611.
  5.  40
    Attention is not unitary.Geoffrey F. Woodman, Edward K. Vogel & Steven J. Luck - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (1):153-154.
    A primary proposal of the Cowan target article is that capacity limits arise in working memory because only 4 chunks of information can be attended at one time. This implies a single, unitary attentional focus or resource; we instead propose that relatively independent attentional mech- anisms operate within different cognitive subsystems depending on the demands of the current stimuli and tasks.
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  6. The Holy Spirit in Puritan Faith and Experience.Geoffrey F. Nuttall - 1947
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  7.  37
    Beyond shared fate: Group-selected mechanisms for cooperation and competition in fuzzy, fluid vehicles.Geoffrey F. Miller - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4):630-631.
  8.  67
    Gentle quantum events as the source of explicate order.Geoffrey F. Chew - 1985 - Zygon 20 (2):159-164.
  9.  56
    Optimal drug use and rational drug policy.Geoffrey F. Miller - 2011 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 34 (6):318-319.
    The Müller & Schumann (M&S) view of drug use is courageous and compelling, with radical implications for drug policy and research. It implies that most nations prohibit most drugs that could promote happiness, social capital, and economic growth; that most individuals underuse rather than overuse drugs; and that behavioral scientists could use drugs more effectively in generating hypotheses and collaborating empathically.
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  10.  5
    Benefits of hereditarian insights for mate choice and parenting.Geoffrey F. Miller - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e196.
    Madole & Harden develop some good ideas about how to understand genetic causality more clearly, but they frame the benefits of behavior genetics research at a largely collective level, focused on the pros and cons of different ways to engineer the gene pool or social behavior. This neglects the individual benefits of hereditarian insights for mate choice and parenting.
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  11.  37
    Two dynamic criteria for validating claims of optimality.Geoffrey F. Miller - 1991 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (2):228-229.
  12.  14
    Cassandra and the language of prophecy.Geoffrey F. Nuttall - 1995 - Heythrop Journal 36 (4):512–520.
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  13. Studies in Christian Enthusiasm, Illustrated from Early Quakerism.Geoffrey F. Nuttall - 1948
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  14.  49
    Bootstrapping the photon.Geoffrey F. Chew - 1983 - Foundations of Physics 13 (2):217-246.
    A nontechnical review is given of a topological bootstrap theory, with emphasis on theraison d'être for an electromagnetism whose fine-structure constant is of order10 −2.
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  15. Creating a 'Universe of threeness'.Geoffrey F. Chew - 2016 - In Ignazio Licata (ed.), Beyond peaceful coexistence: the emergence of space, time and quantum. London: Imperial College Press.
     
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  16.  64
    Reviews : Warren Denning, Caucus Crisis: The Rise and Fall of the Scullin Government (Hale & Iremonger, Sydney 1982), pp. 1-181. [REVIEW]Geoffrey F. R. Spenceley - 1983 - Thesis Eleven 7 (1):175-177.
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  17.  22
    Let evolution take care of its own.Geoffrey F. Miller & Peter M. Todd - 1991 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (1):101-102.
  18.  14
    "Mythologizing Cable.Geoffrey F. Rubinstein - 1993 - Semiotics:99-108.
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  19.  17
    War as Symbolic Structure in Japan-US Relations.Geoffrey F. Rubinstein - 1993 - Semiotics:204-220.
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  20.  3
    Reviews : Warren Denning, Caucus Crisis: The Rise and Fall of the Scullin Government (Hale & Iremonger, Sydney 1982), pp. 1-181. [REVIEW]Geoffrey F. R. Spenceley - 1983 - Thesis Eleven 7 (1):175-177.
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  21.  94
    The Evolutionary Psychology of Extraterrestrial Intelligence: Are There Universal Adaptations in Search, Aversion, and Signaling?Peter M. Todd & Geoffrey F. Miller - 2018 - Biological Theory 13 (2):131-141.
    To understand the possible forms of extraterrestrial intelligence, we need not only astrobiology theories about how life evolves given habitable planets, but also evolutionary psychology theories about how intelligence emerges given life. Wherever intelligent organisms evolve, they are likely to face similar behavioral challenges in their physical and social worlds. The cognitive mechanisms that arise to meet these challenges may then be copied, repurposed, and shaped by further evolutionary selection to deal with more abstract, higher-level cognitive tasks such as conceptual (...)
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  22.  72
    Testing the Controversy.Joshua M. Tybur, Geoffrey F. Miller & Steven W. Gangestad - 2007 - Human Nature 18 (4):313-328.
    Critics of evolutionary psychology and sociobiology have advanced an adaptationists-as-right-wing-conspirators (ARC) hypothesis, suggesting that adaptationists use their research to support a right-wing political agenda. We report the first quantitative test of the ARC hypothesis based on an online survey of political and scientific attitudes among 168 US psychology Ph.D. students, 31 of whom self-identified as adaptationists and 137 others who identified with another non-adaptationist meta-theory. Results indicate that adaptationists are much less politically conservative than typical US citizens and no more (...)
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  23.  27
    Features and conjunctions in visual working memory.Weiwei Zhang, Jeffrey S. Johnson, Geoffrey F. Woodman & Steven J. Luck - 2012 - In Jeremy Wolfe & Lynn Robertson (eds.), From Perception to Consciousness: Searching with Anne Treisman. Oxford University Press.
  24.  34
    Women’s fertility across the cycle increases the short-term attractiveness of creative intelligence.Martie G. Haselton & Geoffrey F. Miller - 2006 - Human Nature 17 (1):50-73.
    Male provisioning ability may have evolved as a “good dad” indicator through sexual selection, whereas male creativity may have evolved partly as a “good genes” indicator. If so, women near peak fertility (midcycle) should prefer creativity over wealth, especially in short-term mating. Forty-one normally cycling women read vignettes describing creative but poor men vs. uncreative but rich men. Women’s estimated fertility predicted their short-term (but not long-term) preference for creativity over wealth, in both their desirability ratings of individual men (r=.40, (...)
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  25.  37
    Can we throw information out of visual working memory and does this leave informational residue in long-term memory?Ashleigh M. Maxcey & Geoffrey F. Woodman - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  26. Which evolutionary genetic models best explain the persistence of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders.Matt Keller & Geoffrey F. Miller - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (4).
  27.  34
    On Courage.Geoffrey Scarre - 2010 - Routledge.
    What is courage and why is it one of the oldest and most universally admired virtues? How is it relevant in the world today, and what contemporary forms does it take? In this insightful and crisply written book, Geoffrey Scarre examines these questions and many more. He begins by defining courage, asking how it differs from fearlessness, recklessness and fortitude, and why people are often more willing to ascribe it to others than to avow it for themselves. He (...)
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  28.  41
    Political Reconciliation, Forgiveness and Grace.Geoffrey Scarre - 2011 - Studies in Christian Ethics 24 (2):171-182.
    This essay argues that the overuse of the idiom of forgiveness has distorted our understanding of the nature and requirements of political reconciliation, and proposes its supplementation by a notion of grace. This is a mode of response to wrongs that is less hedged around by conventions and conditions, and grace complements forgiveness in contexts in which the latter is inappropriate; it is also more serviceable for maintaining inter-community harmony in the long term. Following a detailed analysis of grace in (...)
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  29.  27
    Appropriating the past: philosophical perspectives on the practice of archaeology.Geoffrey Scarre & Robin Coningham (eds.) - 2013 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    In this book an international and multidisciplinary team addresses significant ethical questions about the rights to access, manage and interpret the material remains of the past.
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  30. Donner and Riley on Qualitative Hedonism.Geoffrey Scarre - 1997 - Utilitas 9 (3):351.
  31.  37
    Children and Paternalism.Geoffrey Scarre - 1980 - Philosophy 55 (211):117 - 124.
  32. Epicurus as a Forerunner of Utilitarianism.Geoffrey Scarre - 1994 - Utilitas 6 (2):219.
    How original was the utilitarianism of Jeremy Bentham? In John Stuart Mill's opinion, not very original at all. Bentham maintained that pleasure and pain should provide our chief criteria of the moral quality of actions, because they are important above all other things in making our lives go well or ill. But two thousand years before Bentham defended the doctrine of utility that ‘all things are good or evil, by virtue solely of the pain or pleasure which they produce”, a (...)
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  33. Utilitarianism and Self-Respect.Geoffrey Scarre - 1992 - Utilitas 4 (1):27.
    Modern utilitarianism has largely abandoned the view that human well-being consists solely in pleasurable sensations. Too much was wanting in that view for it to withstand the critique of a more refined philosophical psychology than was available to Bentham and Mill. The objections are by now familiar and need no detailed rehearsal. The older view failed to characterize adequately the structure of human satisfactions, forgetting that we can care about things that will happen after we are dead, that we generally (...)
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  34.  28
    On Caring about One's Posthumous Reputation.Geoffrey Scarre - 2001 - American Philosophical Quarterly 38 (2):209 - 219.
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  35.  23
    The Philosopher's Stone.Geoffrey Scarre - 1993 - Philosophy Now 5:42-46.
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  36.  25
    Transient reduction of visual distraction following electrical stimulation of the prefrontal cortex.Joshua D. Cosman, Priyanka V. Atreya & Geoffrey F. Woodman - 2015 - Cognition 145:73-76.
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  37.  18
    Death.Geoffrey Scarre - 2006 - Routledge.
    What is death and why does it matter to us? How should the knowledge of our finitude affect the living of our lives and what are the virtues suitable to mortal beings? Does death destroy the meaningfulness of lives, or would lives that never ended be eternally and absurdly tedious? Should we reconcile ourselves to the fact of our forthcoming death, or refuse to "go gently into that good night"? Can death really be an evil if, after death, we no (...)
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  38.  37
    Proof and implication in mill's philosophy of logic.Geoffrey Scarre - 1984 - History and Philosophy of Logic 5 (1):19-37.
    Following a brief preface, the second section of this paper discusses Mill's early reflections on the problem of how deductive inference can be illuminating. In the third section it is suggested that in his Logic Mill misconstrued the feature that the premises of a logically valid argument contain the conclusion as the ground of a charge that deductive proof is question-begging. The fourth section discusses the nature of the traditional petitio objection to syllogism, and the fifth shows that Mill had (...)
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  39.  42
    Virtuous Condonation.Geoffrey Scarre - 2014 - Philosophical Papers 43 (3):405-428.
    Moral philosophers have mostly condemned the condonation of a bad act as being close to complicity in wrongdoing or, at best, as indicative of a lax moral conscience. I argue, in contrast, that condoning a wrongful act is sometimes not only permissible but positively virtuous. After considering the nature of condonation, I describe a range of circumstances in which it may be an appropriate response to wrongdoing, expressing such virtues as compassion and mercifulness, tolerance of human frailty, a love of (...)
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  40.  42
    Utilitarianism.Geoffrey Scarre - 1996 - New York: Routledge.
    Surveying the historical development and the present condition of utilitarian ethics, Geoffrey Scarre examines the major philosophers from Lao Tzu in the fifth century BC to Richard Hare in the twentieth. Utilitarianism traces the 'doctrine of utility' from the moralists of the ancient world, through the Enlightenment and Victorian utilitarianism up to the lively debate of the present day. Utilitarianism today faces challenges on several fronts: it cannot warrant the drawing of adequate protective boundaries around the essential interests (...)
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  41.  24
    Accuracy of administrative coding in identifying hip and knee primary replacements and revisions.Parham Daneshvar, Alan J. Forster & Geoffrey F. Dervin - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (3):555-559.
  42. Sex Differences in Detecting Sexual Infidelity.Paul W. Andrews, Steven W. Gangestad, Geoffrey F. Miller, Martie G. Haselton, Randy Thornhill & Michael C. Neale - 2008 - Human Nature 19 (4):347-373.
    Despite the importance of extrapair copulation (EPC) in human evolution, almost nothing is known about the design features of EPC detection mechanisms. We tested for sex differences in EPC inference-making mechanisms in a sample of 203 young couples. Men made more accurate inferences (φmen = 0.66, φwomen = 0.46), and the ratio of positive errors to negative errors was higher for men than for women (1.22 vs. 0.18). Since some may have been reluctant to admit EPC behavior, we modeled how (...)
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  43. Features and conjunctions in visual working memory.Weiwei Zhang Jeffrey, S. Johnson Geoffrey, F. Woodman Steven & J. Luck - 2012 - In Jeremy Wolfe & Lynn Robertson (eds.), From Perception to Consciousness: Searching with Anne Treisman. Oxford University Press.
     
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  44. Corrective justice and reputation.Geoffrey Scarre - 2006 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 3 (3):305-319.
    Courts of criminal jurisdiction commonly allow for mitigating circumstances when determining the punishment of convicted wrongdoers. This paper looks at some of the moral issues raised by mitigation, and asks in particular whether the damage that arraignment or conviction does to the good name of a previously well-reputed person may ever reasonably be considered as a circumstance justifying the imposition of a penalty lighter than is standard for the offence. It is argued that making an allowance for the loss of (...)
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  45.  20
    The Repatriation of Human Remains.Geoffrey Scarre - 2009 - In James O. Young & Conrad G. Brunk (eds.), The Ethics of Cultural Appropriation. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 72–92.
    This chapter contains sections titled: 1 2 3 References.
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  46.  70
    On Taking Back Forgiveness.Geoffrey Scarre - 2016 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 19 (4):931-944.
    I argue that the effectiveness of forgiveness in the healing of relationships is dependent on both the givers and recipients of forgiveness understanding that once it has been granted, forgiveness is not normally able to be retracted. When we forgive, we make a firm commitment not to return to our former state of moral resentment against the offender, replacing it by good-will. This commitment can be broken only where the forgiving party makes some significant cognitive adjustment to her appraisal of (...)
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  47.  8
    Logic and Reality in the Philosophy of John Stuart Mill.Geoffrey Scarre - 1988 - Springer Verlag.
    'Nobody reads Mill today,' wrote a reviewer in Time magazine a few years ago.! One could scarcely praise Mr Melvin Maddocks, who penned that remark, for his awareness of the present state of Mill studies, for of all nineteenth century philosophers who wrote in English, it is 1. S. Mill who remains the most read today. Yet it would not be so far from the truth to say that very few people pay much serious attention nowadays to Mill's writings about (...)
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  48.  88
    Can there be a good death?Geoffrey Scarre - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (5):1082-1086.
  49.  74
    The ‘Constitutive Thought’ of Regret.Geoffrey Scarre - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 25 (5):569-585.
    In this paper I defend and develop Bernard Williams’ claim that the ‘constitutive thought’ of regret is ‘something like “how much better if it had been otherwise”’. An introductory section on cognitivist theories of emotion is followed by a detailed investigation of the concept of ‘agent-regret’ and of the ways in which the ‘constitutive thought’ might be articulated in different situations in which agents acknowledge casual responsibility for bringing about undesirable outcomes. Among problematic cases discussed are those in which agents (...)
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  50.  13
    After Evil: Responding to Wrongdoing.Geoffrey Scarre - 2004 - Routledge.
    Evils, both large and small, are a constant feature of human life. This book is about responding to them and in particular about responding to moral evils, that is, those produced by the deliberate acts of human beings. Prominent in our repertoire of responses to moral evil are forgiveness and punishment, and these, with the numerous conceptual and moral problems they raise, are at the heart of the study in this book. After discussing the idea of evil, Scarre turns (...)
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