Results for 'Geoffrey Frederick Lasky'

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  1.  73
    The history and narrative reader.Geoffrey Roberts (ed.) - 2001 - New York: Routledge.
    Are historians storytellers? Is it possible to tell true stories about the past? These are just a couple of the questions raised in this comprehensive collection of texts about philosophy, theory, and methodology of writing history. Drawing together seminal texts from philosophers and historians, this volume presents the great debate over the narrative character of history from the 1960s onwards. The History and Narrative Reader combines theory with practice to offer a unique overview of this debate and illuminates the practical (...)
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  2.  8
    Book Review: A Political Companion to Frederick Douglass, edited by Neil Roberts. [REVIEW]Gregory Laski - 2019 - Political Theory 47 (5):760-766.
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  3.  4
    Book Review: A Political Companion to Frederick Douglass, edited by Neil Roberts. [REVIEW]Gregory Laski - 2019 - Political Theory 47 (5):760-766.
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  4.  11
    Religion and the Great Exhibition of 1851. By Geoffrey Cantor. Pp. ix, 226, Oxford University Press, 2011, £70.00. [REVIEW]Frederick Hale - 2013 - Heythrop Journal 54 (3):522-523.
  5.  19
    Kierkegaard's Philosophy of Religion. By Reidar Thomte. (Princeton University Press; London, Geoffrey Cumberlege. 1948. Pp. viii, 228. 18s. net.). [REVIEW]Frederick C. Copleston - 1950 - Philosophy 25 (92):86-.
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  6.  29
    The Tragic Finale. An Essay on the Philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre. By Wilfrid Desan. (Harvard University Press: London, Geoffrey Cumberlege. 1954. Pp. xiv + 220. Price 34s.). [REVIEW]Frederick C. Copleston - 1957 - Philosophy 32 (120):86-.
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  7.  34
    Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist. By Walter A. Kaufmann. (Princeton University Press: London, Geoffrey Cumberlege. 1950. Pp. xi + 409. Price 40s.). [REVIEW]Frederick C. Copleston - 1952 - Philosophy 27 (103):367-.
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  8. Embodiment and abstraction: God in Puṣṭimārga.Frederick M. Smith - 2023 - In Ricardo Sousa Silvestre, Alan C. Herbert & Benedikt Paul Göcke (eds.), Vaiṣṇava concepts of god: philosophical perspectives. New York: Routledge.
     
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  9. The prison of avant-gardism. A changing of the avant guard.Frederick Turner - 2016 - In Elizabeth Millán (ed.), After the Avant-Gardes: Reflections on the Future of the Fine Arts. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing Company.
     
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  10.  42
    Aquinas.Frederick Charles Copleston - 1955 - Baltimore: Penguin Books.
    Aquinas' thought is of more than historical interest. There is a large group of contemporary philosophers, the Thomists, who draw inspiration from his writings. Indeed, strange as it may sound, his influence is greater today than it was during the Middle Ages. This book attempts to explain Aquinas' philosophical ideas in a way which can be understood by those who are unacquainted with medieval thought. And where possible, it relates these ideas to problems as discussed today. In a final chapter (...)
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  11.  39
    English philosophy since 1900.Geoffrey James Warnock - 1958 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
    This book briefly outlines the evolution of general philosophical ideas since 1900, emphasizing how the concept of philosophy itself has changed.
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  12. Indexicality and deixis.Geoffrey Nunberg - 1993 - Linguistics and Philosophy 16 (1):1--43.
    Words like you, here, and tomorrow are different from other expressions in two ways. First, and by definition, they have different kinds of meanings, which are context-dependent in ways that the meanings of names and descriptions are not. Second, their meanings play a different kind of role in the interpretations of the utterances that contain them. For example, the meaning of you can be paraphrased by a description like "the addressee of the utterance." But an utterance of (1) doesn't say (...)
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  13.  44
    Mind before matter?Geoffrey Underwood & Pekka Niemi - 1985 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (4):554-555.
  14.  18
    Hegel'den Sonra : 1840-1900 Yılları Arasında Alman Felsefesi.Frederick C. Beiser & Soner Soysal - 2018 - İstanbul, Turkey: Hil Yayınları.
    Felsefedeki normal dönemler felsefenin belirlenmiş ve uzlaşılmış bir tanımının olduğu filozofların kendi disiplinlerinin ve onun içerdiği görevlerin doğası hakkında genel bir mutabakata sahip oldukları zamanlardır Devrimci zamanlar ise böyle bir tanımın olmadığı felsefeye ilişkin çelişen kavramsallaştırmaların olduğu zamanlardır Bu tanımlara göre geç on sekizinci erken on dokuzuncu ve geç yirminci yüzyıllar normal zamanlardı Bununla birlikte on dokuzuncu yüzyılın ikinci yarısı devrimciydi Çünkü bu dönem belirlenmiş ya da uzlaşılmış bir felsefe tanımının olmadığı disipline ilişkin çelişik birçok kavramsallaştırmanın olduğu bir dönemdi Filozoflar (...)
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  15.  5
    Christianity and Political Philosophy.Frederick D. Wilhelmsen - 2013 - New Brunswick (U.S.A.): Routledge.
    Each chapter in Christianity and Political Philosophy addresses a philosophical problem generated by history. Frederick D. Wilhelmsen discusses the limits of natural law; Cicero and the politics of the public orthodoxy; the problem of political power and the forces of darkness; Sir John Fortescue and the English tradition; Donoso Cortes and the meaning of political power; the natural law tradition and the American political experience; Eric Voegelin and the Christian tradition; and Jaffa, the School of Strauss, and the Christian (...)
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  16.  16
    Hermann Cohen: An Intellectual Biography.Frederick C. Beiser - 2018 - Oxford University Press.
    This book is the first complete intellectual biography of Hermann Cohen and the only work to cover all his major philosophical and Jewish writings. Frederick C. Beiser pays special attention to all phases of Cohen's intellectual development, its breaks and its continuities, throughout seven decades. The guiding goal behind Cohen's intellectual career, he argues, was the development of a radical rationalism, one committed to defending the rights of unending enquiry and unlimited criticism. Cohen's philosophy was therefore an attempt to (...)
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  17. The structure of a scientific paper.Frederick Suppe - 1998 - Philosophy of Science 65 (3):381-405.
    Scientific articles exemplify standard functional units constraining argumentative structures. Severe space limitations demand every paragraph and illustration contribute to establishing the paper's claims. Philosophical testing and confirmation models should take into account each paragraph, table, and illustration. Hypothetico-Deductive, Bayesian Inductive, and Inference-to-the-Best-Explanation models do not, garbling the logic of papers. Micro-analysis of the fundamental paper in plate tectonics reveals an argumentative structure commonplace in science but ignored by standard philosophical accounts that cannot be dismissed as mere rhetorical embellishment. Papers with (...)
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  18.  46
    A non-nativist account of language universals.Geoffrey Sampson - 1979 - Linguistics and Philosophy 3 (1):99 - 104.
  19. Empirical assessment of stimulus poverty arguments.Geoffrey K. Pullum - 2002 - Linguistic Review.
  20. Introduction to the argument of 1768.Robert E. Frederick - 1991 - In James Van~Cleve & Robert E. Frederick (eds.), The Philosophy of Right and Left: Incongruent Counterparts and the Nature of Space. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 1--14.
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  21. Die Philosophie im XX. Jahrhundert.Frederick Henry Heinemann - 1959 - Stuttgart,: E. Klett.
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  22.  64
    Choice and Chance: An Introduction to Inductive Logic.Geoffrey Hunter - 1968 - Philosophical Quarterly 18 (70):89-90.
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  23.  8
    The Identity of the Self.Geoffrey Madell - 1981 - Edinburgh University Press.
  24.  35
    Statistical Evidence and the Problem of Specification.Frederick Schauer - 2023 - Episteme 20 (2):367-376.
    Philosophical debates over statistical evidence have long been framed and dominated by L. Jonathan Cohen's Paradox of the Gatecrasher and a related hypothetical example commonly called Prison Yard. These examples, however, raise an issue not discussed in the large and growing literature on statistical evidence – the question of what statistical evidence is supposed to be evidence of. In actual practice, the legal system does not start with a defendant and then attempt to determine if that defendant has committed some (...)
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  25.  39
    Berkeley.Geoffrey James Warnock - 1953 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press. Edited by Ted Honderich.
    Berkeley is one of the most influential and yet most misunderstood of eighteenth-century philosophers. In this new, revised edition of his classic introduction, G.J. Warnock examines all Berkeley's major philosophical works and discusses his most original and interesting contributions to questions still debated by philosophers today. The aim of the book is to help the reader learn not so much about Berkeley, but rather, through Berkeley, something about philosophy itself.
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  26.  13
    Knowledge-based artificial neural networks.Geoffrey G. Towell & Jude W. Shavlik - 1994 - Artificial Intelligence 70 (1-2):119-165.
  27.  97
    Pure consciousness: Distinct phenomenological and physiological correlates of "consciousness itself".Frederick T. Travis & C. Pearson - 2000 - International Journal of Neuroscience 100 (1):77-89.
  28. Summary of Anscombe's Intention.Frederick Stoutland - 2011 - In Anton Ford, Jennifer Hornsby & Frederick Stoutland (eds.), Essays on Anscombe's Intention. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
  29. Natural languages and context-free languages.Geoffrey K. Pullum & Gerald Gazdar - 1980 - Linguistics and Philosophy 4 (4):471 - 504.
    Notice that this paper has not claimed that all natural languages are CFL's. What it has shown is that every published argument purporting to demonstrate the non-context-freeness of some natural language is invalid, either formally or empirically or both.18 Whether non-context-free characteristics can be found in the stringset of some natural language remains an open question, just as it was a quarter century ago.Whether the question is ultimately answered in the negative or the affirmative, there will be interesting further questions (...)
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  30.  19
    Judging the Past: Ethics, History and Memory.Geoffrey Scarre - 2023 - Springer Nature Switzerland.
    This book presents an extended argument for the thesis that people of the present day are not debarred in principle from passing moral judgement on people who lived in former days, notwithstanding the inevitable differences in social and cultural circumstances that separate us. Some philosophers argue that because we can see things only from our own peculiar historical situation, we lack a sufficiently objective vantage point from which to appraise past people and their acts. If they are correct, then the (...)
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  31.  56
    The effect of culture on consumers' willingness to punish irresponsible corporate behaviour: Applying hofstede's typology to the punishment aspect of corporate social responsibility.Geoffrey Williams & John Zinkin - 2008 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 17 (2):210–226.
    This paper explores the relationship between attitudes to corporate social responsibility (CSR) and the cultural dimensions of business activity identified by Hofstede & Hofstede using a sample of nearly 90,000 stakeholders drawn from 28 countries. We develop five general propositions relating attitudes to CSR to aspects of culture. We show that the propensity of consumers to punish firms for bad behaviour varies in ways that appear to relate closely to the cultural characteristics identified by Hofstede. Furthermore, this variation appears to (...)
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  32.  6
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau.Frederick Neuhouser - 2018 - In Ludwig Siep, Heikki Ikaheimo & Michael Quante (eds.), Handbuch Anerkennung. Springer. pp. 241-244.
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  33.  78
    Dissociations among attention, perception, and awareness during object-substitution masking.Geoffrey F. Woodman & Steven J. Luck - 2003 - Psychological Science 14 (6):605-611.
  34.  11
    Word shape, orthographic regularity, and contextual interactions in a reading task.Geoffrey Underwood & Katherine Bargh - 1982 - Cognition 12 (2):197-209.
  35.  67
    Demos on lying to oneself.Frederick A. Siegler - 1962 - Journal of Philosophy 59 (August):469-474.
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  36. Structuralism without structures.Hellman Geoffrey - 1996 - Philosophia Mathematica 4 (2):100-123.
    Recent technical developments in the logic of nominalism make it possible to improve and extend significantly the approach to mathematics developed in Mathematics without Numbers. After reviewing the intuitive ideas behind structuralism in general, the modal-structuralist approach as potentially class-free is contrasted broadly with other leading approaches. The machinery of nominalistic ordered pairing (Burgess-Hazen-Lewis) and plural quantification (Boolos) can then be utilized to extend the core systems of modal-structural arithmetic and analysis respectively to full, classical, polyadic third- and fourthorder number (...)
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  37.  7
    Indywidua.Peter Frederick Strawson - 2019 - Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria:13-34.
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  38.  7
    Von Wright.Frederick Stoutland - 2010 - In Timothy O'Connor & Constantine Sandis (eds.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Action. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 589–597.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Von Wright on Causality Actions, Events, and Intentionality; Results and Consequences Practical Inference and the Logical Connection Argument Two Kinds of Explanation and Their Compatibility and Congruence The Determinants of Action References Further reading.
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  39.  60
    Psychological and physiological characteristics of a proposed object-referral/self-referral continuum of self-awareness.Frederick Travis, Alarik Arenander & David DuBois - 2004 - Consciousness and Cognition 13 (2):401-420.
    This research extends and confirms recent brainwave findings that distinguished an individual’s sense-of-self along an Object-referral/Self-referral Continuum of self-awareness. Subjects were interviewed and were given tests measuring inner/outer orientation, moral reasoning, anxiety, and personality. Scores on the psychological tests were factor analyzed. The first unrotated PCA component of the test scores yielded a “Consciousness Factor,” analogous to the intelligence “g” factor, which accounted for over half of the variance among groups. Analysis of unstructured interviews of these subjects revealed fundamentally different (...)
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  40.  53
    The moral philosophy of T.H. Green.Geoffrey Thomas - 1987 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Examining Thomas Hill Green's moral philosophy, Thomas defends a radically new perception of Green as an independent thinker rather than a devoted partisan of Kant or Hegel. Green's moral philosophy, argues Thomas, includes a widely misunderstood defense of free will, an innovative model of deliberation that rejects both Kantian and Humean conceptions of practical reason, a barely recognized theory of character, and an account of moral objectivity that involves no dependence on religion--all of which yield a coherent body of moral (...)
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  41. Time's arrow and the structure of spacetime.Geoffrey Matthews - 1979 - Philosophy of Science 46 (1):82-97.
    The theory of general relativity has produced some great insights into the nature of space and time. Unfortunately, its relevance to the problem of the direction of time has been overestimated. This paper points out that the problem of the direction of time can be formulated in purely local ways, and that in this kind of formulation considerations of general relativity are of little or no importance. On the basis of this, positions which assume that relativistic considerations are always relevant (...)
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  42.  10
    The Idea of a Hegelian ‘Science’ of Society.Frederick Neuhouser - 2011 - In Stephen Houlgate & Michael Baur (eds.), A Companion to Hegel. Malden, MA: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 281–296.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Aim of Hegel's Science of Society The Method of Hegel's Science of Society Comprehension versus Critique.
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  43.  53
    Argument or no argument?Geoffrey K. Pullum & Kyle Rawlins - 2007 - Linguistics and Philosophy 30 (2):277 - 287.
    We examine an argument for the non-context-freeness of English that has received virtually no discussion in the literature. It is based on adjuncts of the form 'X or no X', where X is a nominal. The construction has been held to exemplify unbounded syntactic reduplication. We argue that although the argument can be made in a mathematically valid form, its empirical basis is not secure. First, the claimed unbounded syntactic identity between nominals does not always hold in attested cases, and (...)
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  44.  11
    Ethnography and psychoanalysis.Geoffrey R. Skoll - 2012 - Human and Social Studies 1 (1):29-50.
    This methodological essay describes and advocates using certain psychoanalytic techniques for ethnography. It focuses on the self analysis of the ethnographer using evenly hovering attention, dream analysis, and free association. It presents an argument that using those techniques enhances the goal of ethnography as a human science and of social research. Fear of crime serves as a point of departure for the methodological argument. Finally, it links psychoanalytic ethnography to a fractal model of society and the self with reference to (...)
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  45.  26
    Summer School for Bosses.Geoffrey N. Smith - 2006 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 20 (2):14-17.
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  46.  2
    Wolność a uraza.Peter Frederick Strawson - 2019 - Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria:35-57.
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  47.  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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  48. Value Systems and Social Process.Geoffrey Vickers - 1969 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 20 (2):176-177.
  49. Kant on free and dependent beauty.Geoffrey Scarre - 1981 - British Journal of Aesthetics 21 (4):351-362.
  50.  13
    Visual Metaphors and Aesthetics: A Formalist Theory of Metaphor.Geoffrey Ventalon - 2024 - Metaphor and Symbol 39 (1):75-78.
    Over the last two decades, studies on visual metaphor processing have gained increasing attention. The present paper is a review of the book entitled Visual Metaphors and Aesthetics: A Formalist Th...
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