Results for 'Ian Cunningham'

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  1.  3
    Mimes.Ian Campbell Theophrastus, A. D. Cunningham, Jeffrey S. Knox, Rusten & Herodas - 1993
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  2.  10
    360° Virtual Reality: A SWOT Analysis in Comparison to Virtual Reality.Aden Kittel, Paul Larkin, Ian Cunningham & Michael Spittle - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  3.  3
    Medieval Manuscripts in British Libraries: Volume V: Indexes and Addenda.Andrew Watson & Ian Cunningham (eds.) - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    The four volumes of Neil Ker's Medieval Manuscripts in British Libraries were published by Oxford University Press between 1969 and 1992. They comprise a catalogue of about 3,000 manuscripts in Latin and Western European vernaculars in hitherto uncatalogued or inadequately catalogued institutional collections in the United Kingdom and form a major research tool for humanist scholars. The index volume, produced under the direction of A. G. Watson, a former pupil of Ker's and now his literary executor, and I. C. (...), formerly Keeper of Manuscripts in the National Library of Scotland, provides a variety of indexes, including authors/titles; owners; geographical origins and dates of manuscripts; vernacular manuscripts; Latin and vernacular incipits; manuscripts cited; repertories cited; and iconography. There are also lists of recent accessions to libraries and of manuscripts that have migrated from one institution to another. (shrink)
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  4.  32
    Ian C. Cunningham: Greek Manuscripts in Scotland: Summary Catalogue. Pp. iv + 27, with loose Addendum. Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, 1982. Paper, £1. [REVIEW]Philip Pattenden - 1983 - The Classical Review 33 (01):155-.
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  5.  7
    Ian C. Cunningham: Greek Manuscripts in Scotland: Summary Catalogue. Pp. iv + 27, with loose Addendum. Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, 1982. Paper, £1. [REVIEW]Philip Pattenden - 1983 - The Classical Review 33 (1):155-155.
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  6.  19
    Synagoge. Συναγωγὴ λέξεων χϱησίμων. Edited by Ian C. CUNNINGHAM. Sammlung griechischer und lateinischer Grammatiker (SGLG), 10. [REVIEW]Helmut van Thiel - 2005 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 98 (2):582-585.
    Die Synagoge ist das dritte der fünf großen byzantinischen Lexika: Kyrill, Hesych, Synagoge, Photios, Suda. Im Kyrill-Lexikon war erstmals der Wortschatz der heidnischen, hellenistischjüdischen und frühen christlichen griechischen Literatur gesammelt. Es ist in Hesych nachträglich eingearbeitet; etwa ein Drittel des „Hesych“ stammt aus „Kyrill“. Kyrill ist in der Synagoge exzerpiert; etwa 80 Prozent ihrer Glossen lassen sich auf ihn zurückführen, und sie kann durchaus als Kyrill-Rezension angesehen werden, wie es in einer ihrer Handschriften geschieht (vgl. p. 19, 49). Die Synagoge (...)
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  7.  51
    Logic of Statistical Inference.Ian Hacking - 1965 - Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
    One of Ian Hacking's earliest publications, this book showcases his early ideas on the central concepts and questions surrounding statistical reasoning. He explores the basic principles of statistical reasoning and tests them, both at a philosophical level and in terms of their practical consequences for statisticians. Presented in a fresh twenty-first-century series livery, and including a specially commissioned preface written by Jan-Willem Romeijn, illuminating its enduring importance and relevance to philosophical enquiry, Hacking's influential and original work has been revived for (...)
  8.  48
    Alien Phenomenology, or, What It's Like to Be a Thing.Ian Bogost - 2012 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Humanity has sat at the center of philosophical thinking for too long. The recent advent of environmental philosophy and posthuman studies has widened our scope of inquiry to include ecosystems, animals, and artificial intelligence. Yet the vast majority of the stuff in our universe, and even in our lives, remains beyond serious philosophical concern. In _Alien Phenomenology, or What It’s Like to Be a Thing_, Ian Bogost develops an object-oriented ontology that puts things at the center of being—a philosophy in (...)
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  9. Numerical ordering ability mediates the relation between number-sense and arithmetic competence.Ian M. Lyons & Sian L. Beilock - 2011 - Cognition 121 (2):256-261.
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  10.  31
    Empirical reconciliation of atmosphere and conversion interpretations of syllogistic reasoning errors.Ian Begg & J. Peter Denny - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 81 (2):351.
  11. Issues in Science and Religion.Ian G. Barbour - 1967 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 18 (3):259-261.
     
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  12.  12
    Deleuzism: A Metacommentary.Ian Buchanan - 2000 - Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
    The conviction that Gilles Deleuze is doing something radical in his work has been accompanied by a corresponding anxiety as to how to read it. In this rigorous and lucid work, Ian Buchanan takes up the challenge by answering the following questions: How should we read Deleuze? How should we read _with_ Deleuze? To show us how Deleuze’s philosophy works, Buchanan begins with Melville’s notion that “a great book is always the inverse of another book that could only be written (...)
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  13. Kant on Formal Modality.Ian S. Blecher - 2013 - Kant Studien 104 (1):44-62.
    I propose to explain Kant’s novel claim, in the Critique of Pure Reason, that all judgments have a formal modality. I begin by distinguishing the modality of a judgment’s form from the modality of its content, and I suggest that the former is peculiar in merely affecting the subject’s understanding of his own act of judging. I then contrast the modal account of such an understanding (in terms of the possibility and actuality of a judgment) with the traditional, non-modal understanding (...)
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  14. From Food Justice to a Tool of the Status Quo: Three Sub-movements Within Local Food.Ian Werkheiser & Samantha Noll - 2014 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 27 (2):201-210.
    The local food movement has been touted by some as a profoundly effective way to make our food system become more healthy, just, and sustainable. Others have criticized the movement as being less a challenge to the status quo and more an easily co-opted support offering just another set of choices for affluent consumers. In this paper, we analyze three distinct sub-movements within the local food movement, the individual-focused sub-movement, the systems-focused sub-movement, and the community-focused sub-movement. These movements can be (...)
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  15.  57
    Kant, pestalozzi and the role of ideology in educational thought.Ian Adams - 1990 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 24 (2):257–269.
  16. Oxford.Ian Simpson Ross - 1995 - In Ian Simpson Ross (ed.), The Life of Adam Smith. Oxford University Press UK.
    Smith's experience at Balliol College was disappointing, since the dons he encountered were not interested in teaching, and their easy enjoyment of sinecures as Fellows did not encourage that competition for students, and therefore revenue, prevalent among the Glasgow professors, which kept them abreast of their subjects and in touch with the advances of Enlightenment thought, especially the New Philosophy of Locke and the New Science of Newton. Smith read widely on his own, in politics and modern languages, but with (...)
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  17. The Great Change.Ian Simpson Ross - 1995 - In Ian Simpson Ross (ed.), The Life of Adam Smith. Oxford University Press UK.
    Smith's last illness is described, along with his final order to have his unfinished manuscripts burned shortly before he died on 17 July 1790. His character is summed up as two‐sided: benevolent yet prudent, also firm and decisive, from one point of view; but from another darker one, that of a melancholy or, at times, volatile personality, subject to psychosomatic illness arising from his intense concentration on chains of abstract ideas. Nevertheless, he remained a tireless inquirer into human nature, particularly (...)
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  18. The Precariousness of This Life.Ian Simpson Ross - 1995 - In Ian Simpson Ross (ed.), The Life of Adam Smith. Oxford University Press UK.
    From April to July, 1787 Smith was in London receiving medical attention and conferring with the government about fiscal and commercial reforms that allowed Britain to recover from the strains of the American war. On his return to Edinburgh in somewhat restored health, he set about preparing a greatly expanded sixth edition of TMS. This developed further the concept of the impartial spectator, and included an entirely new part VI, focused on moral theory applicable to such crucial issues as new‐modelling (...)
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  19.  61
    Objectivity, abstraction, and the individual: The influence of Søren Kierkegaard on Paul Feyerabend.Ian James Kidd - 2011 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 42 (1):125-134.
    This paper explores the influence of Søren Kierkegaard upon Paul Feyerabend by examining their common criticisms of totalising accounts of human nature. Both complained that philosophical and scientific theories of human nature which were methodologically committed to objectivity and abstraction failed to capture the richness of human experience. Kierkegaard and Feyerabend argued that philosophy and the science were threatening to become obstacles to human development by imposing abstract theories of human nature and reality which denied the complexities of both. In (...)
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  20.  25
    Was Sir William Crookes epistemically virtuous?Ian James Kidd - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 48:67-74.
  21. Plato’s Timaeus and the Limits of Natural Science.Ian MacFarlane - 2023 - Apeiron 56 (3):495-517.
    The relationship between mind and necessity is one of the major points of difficulty for the interpretation of Plato’s Timaeus. At times Timaeus seems to say the demiurge is omnipotent in his creation, and at other times seems to say he is limited by pre-existing matter. Most interpretations take one of the two sides, but this paper proposes a novel approach to interpreting this issue which resolves the difficulty. This paper suggests that in his speech Timaeus presents two hypothetical models (...)
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  22.  4
    A Photographer's Guide to Ohio.Ian Adams - 2011 - Ohio University Press.
    In A Photographer’s Guide to Ohio Ian Adams, Ohio’s leading landscape photographer, guides readers to some of the most photogenic sites in the Buckeye State. Natural beauty and historic architecture are prime subjects for photographers, and in a state that boasts 3,600 buildings on the National Register of Historic Places and is home to the world’s largest Amish communities, the photographic subjects seem endless. With nearly one hundred color photographs, Adams demonstrates through his own work how to capture the beauty (...)
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  23.  22
    Clarifying the Relationship Between Serious Ethical Violations and Conflicts of Interest.Ian Kerridge, Narcyz Ghinea & Wendy Lipworth - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (1):48-50.
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  24. Skeptical Theism and Empirical Unfalsifiability.Ian Wilks - 2009 - Faith and Philosophy 26 (1):64-76.
    Arguments strong enough to justify skeptical theism will be strong enough to justify the position that every claim about God is empirically unfalsifiable. This fact is problematic because that position licenses further arguments which are clearly unreasonable, but which the skeptical theist cannot consistently accept as such. Avoiding this result while still achieving the theoretical objectives looked for in skeptical theism appears to demand an impossibly nuanced position.
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  25.  95
    Whatever Happened to Kant’s Ontological Argument?Ian Logan - 2007 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 74 (2):346–363.
  26.  16
    John Duns Scotus on the Passions of the Will.Ian Drummond - 2012 - In Martin Pickavé & Lisa Shapiro (eds.), Emotion and cognitive life in Medieval and early modern philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 51.
  27.  20
    Problems, Methods, and Theories in the Study of Politics, or What's Wrong with Political Science and What to Do About it.Ian Shapiro - 2002 - Political Theory 30 (4):596-619.
  28.  65
    Bodies of thought: embodiment, identity, and modernity.Ian Burkitt - 1999 - Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications.
    `The work develops and articulates a brilliant and original central thesis; namely that modern individuals are best understood as complex bodies of thought, as embodied symbolic and material beings. Future work on mind, self, body, society and culture will have to begin with Burkitt's text' - Norman K. Denzin, University of Illinois `After his excellent Social Selves, Ian Burkitt has produced a new theory of embodiment which will become required reading for those working in the areas of social theory, sociology, (...)
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  29.  39
    Jean Paul Sartre. Darstellung und Kritik seiner Philosophie.Ian W. Alexander & Hans Heinz Holz - 1953 - Philosophical Quarterly 3 (13):369.
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  30.  15
    Maine de Biran and Phenomenology.Ian W. Alexander - 1970 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 1 (1):24-37.
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  31.  10
    No Title available: PHILOSOPHY.Ian W. Alexander - 1971 - Philosophy 46 (177):269-270.
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  32.  11
    Reflection, Time and the Novel: Toward a Communicative Theory of Literature.by Angel Medina.Ian W. Alexander - 1984 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 15 (1):90-92.
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  33. The Phenomenological Philosophy in France an Analysis of its Themes, Significance and Implications.Ian W. Alexander - 1965 - [Basil Blackwell].
     
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  34.  8
    Reloading the Canon.Ian James Kidd - 2021 - The Philosophers' Magazine 93:57-63.
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  35.  7
    Easy problems are sometimes hard.Ian P. Gent & Toby Walsh - 1994 - Artificial Intelligence 70 (1-2):335-345.
  36. Rival Enlightenments: Civil and Metaphysical Philosophy in Early Modern Germany.Ian Hunter - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Rival Enlightenments, first published in 2001, is a major reinterpretation of early modern German intellectual history. Ian Hunter approaches philosophical doctrines as ways of fashioning personae for envisaged historical circumstances, here of confessional conflict and political desacralization. He treats the civil philosophy of Pufendorf and Thomasius and the metaphysical philosophy of Leibniz and Kant as rival intellectual cultures or paideiai, thereby challenging all histories premised on Kant's supposed reconciliation and transcendence of the field. This study reveals the extraordinary historical self-consciousness (...)
     
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  37.  13
    Negative Theology, Derrida and the Critique of Presence: A Poststructuralist Reading of Meister Eckhart.Ian Almond - 1999 - Heythrop Journal 40 (2):150-165.
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  38. Music and cognitive evolution.Ian Cross - 2009 - In Robin Dunbar & Louise Barrett (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology. Oxford University Press.
     
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  39.  67
    Exploring Corporate Social Responsibility in the U.K. Asian Small Business Community.Ian Worthington, Monder Ram & Trevor Jones - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 67 (2):201-217.
    Within the limited, but growing, literature on small business ethics almost no attention has been paid to the issue of social responsibility within ethnic minority businesses. Using a social capital perspective, this paper reports on an exploratory and qualitative investigation into the attitudinal and behavioural manifestations of CSR within small and medium-sized Asian owned or managed firms in the U.K., with particular reference to the distinctive factors motivating organisational responses. It offers alternative explanations of entrepreneurial behaviour and suggests areas for (...)
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  40. The nature of music and its evolution.Ian Cross - 2008 - In Susan Hallam, Ian Cross & Michael Thaut (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Music Psychology. Oxford University Press.
     
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  41.  6
    Understudied social influences on work-related and parental burnout: Social media-related emotions, comparisons, and the “do it all discrepancy”.Kristen Jennings Black, Christopher J. L. Cunningham, Darria Long Gillespie & Kara D. Wyatt - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Recent societal changes, including a global pandemic, have exacerbated experiences of and attention to burnout related to work and parenting. In the present study, we investigated how several social forces can act as demands and resources to impact work-related and parental burnout. We tested two primary hypotheses in a sample of women who responded to an online survey. We found that social comparisons, social media use, negative emotions when comparing oneself to others on social media, and a high do it (...)
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  42.  18
    EEG Alpha Asymmetry, Depression, and Cognitive Functioning.Ian H. Gotlib - 1998 - Cognition and Emotion 12 (3):449-478.
  43.  38
    Charles Taylor's Catholicism.Ian Fraser - 2005 - Contemporary Political Theory 4 (3):231-252.
    Charles Taylor is quite rightly ranked as one of the leading philosophers writing in the world today. As such, his recent endorsement of Catholicism as his preferred vision for the good life warrants careful attention. To this end, I examine the core aspects of his Catholicism that centre on four main themes: Catholicism as difference, the need for transcendence, the necessity for acts of 'unconditional love', and his support for Matteo Ricci's Jesuit mission of the 16th century as a model (...)
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  44.  62
    Physical Properties.Ian Ravenscroft - 2010 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 35 (3):419-431.
  45.  14
    Authentic Tradition and the Right to Dissent.Ian Christopher Levy - 2012 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 86 (3):457-485.
    As a young bachelor of theology William of Ockham found himself under attack for—among other things—views he had expressed regarding the Aristotelian accident of quantity and the related question of Christ’s presence in the Eucharist. This essay focuses on Ockham’s conception of academic freedom as it was articulated in defense of his own position. Against fellow schoolmen who mistake their own magisterial opinions for settled Catholic dogma, Ockham insists on the latitude that is afforded scholars in matters that have not (...)
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  46.  14
    Personality in Greek Epic, Tragedy, and Philosophy: The Self in Dialogue.Ian Crystal - 2001 - Mind 110 (439):759-764.
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  47. Democracy's Value.Ian Shapiro & Casiano Hacker-cordón - 2000 - Utopian Studies 11 (2):296-300.
  48.  53
    Optimal deliberation?Ian Shapiro - 2002 - Journal of Political Philosophy 10 (2):196–211.
  49. Cities After COVID: Ten philosophers consider how COVID has impacted the life of the city.Ian Olasov, Michael Menser, Jennifer Gammage, Eduardo Souza dos Santos, John Rennie Short, Kenny Easwaran, Ronald R. Sundstrom, Irfan Khawaja, Quill R. Kukla & Katherine Melcher - 2022 - The Philosophers' Magazine.
  50. Platonism and the study of Nature.Ian Mueller - 1998 - In Jyl Gentzler (ed.), Method in ancient philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 67--90.
     
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