Results for 'Jon Wainwright'

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  1.  18
    The Not So New Atheists?Jon Wainwright - 2010 - Philosophy Now 78:16-17.
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  2.  51
    W.K. Clifford and the Ethics of Belief. [REVIEW]Jon Wainwright - 2010 - Philosophy Now 77:42-44.
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  3.  13
    Situation Theory and Its Applications Vol. 2.Jon Barwise, Jean Mark Gawron, Gordon Plotkin & Syun Tutiya (eds.) - 1991 - CSLI Publications.
    Situation theory is the result of an interdisciplinary effort to create a full-fledged theory of information. Created by scholars and scientists from cognitive science, computer science, AI, linguistics, logic, philosophy, and mathematics, the theory is forging a common set of tools for the analysis of phenomena from all these fields. This volume presents work that evolved out of the Second Conference on Situation Theory and its Applications. Twenty-six essays exhibit the wide range of the theory, covering such topics as natural (...)
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  4. Alchemies of the Mind: Rationality and the Emotions.Jon Elster - 1998 - Cambridge University Press.
    Jon Elster has written a comprehensive, wide-ranging book on the emotions in which he considers the full range of theoretical approaches. Drawing on history, literature, philosophy and psychology, Elster presents a complete account of the role of the emotions in human behaviour. While acknowledging the importance of neurophysiology and laboratory experiment for the study of emotions, Elster argues that the serious student of the emotions can learn more from the great thinkers and writers of the past, from Aristotle to Jane (...)
     
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  5.  53
    Addressing Dual Agency: Getting Specific About the Expectations of Professionalism.Jon C. Tilburt - 2014 - American Journal of Bioethics 14 (9):29-36.
    Professionalism requires that physicians uphold the best interests of patients while simultaneously insuring just use of health care resources. Current articulations of these obligations like the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation's Physician Charter do not reconcile how these obligations fit together when they conflict. This is the problem of dual agency. The most common ways of dealing with dual agency: “bunkering”—physicians act as though societal cost issues are not their problem; “bailing”—physicians assume that they are merely agents of society (...)
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  6. Against Brain-in-a-Vatism: On the Value of Virtual Reality.Jon Cogburn & Mark Silcox - 2014 - Philosophy and Technology 27 (4):561-579.
    The term “virtual reality” was first coined by Antonin Artaud to describe a value-adding characteristic of certain types of theatrical performances. The expression has more recently come to refer to a broad range of incipient digital technologies that many current philosophers regard as a serious threat to human autonomy and well-being. Their concerns, which are formulated most succinctly in “brain in a vat”-type thought experiments and in Robert Nozick's famous “experience machine” argument, reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of the way that (...)
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  7. Kierkegaard’s Relations to Hegel Reconsidered.Jon Stewart - 2003 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 56 (1):55-57.
     
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  8.  31
    The Pursuit of Word Meanings.Jon Scott Stevens, Lila R. Gleitman, John C. Trueswell & Charles Yang - 2017 - Cognitive Science 41 (S4):638-676.
    We evaluate here the performance of four models of cross-situational word learning: two global models, which extract and retain multiple referential alternatives from each word occurrence; and two local models, which extract just a single referent from each occurrence. One of these local models, dubbed Pursuit, uses an associative learning mechanism to estimate word-referent probability but pursues and tests the best referent-meaning at any given time. Pursuit is found to perform as well as global models under many conditions extracted from (...)
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  9. Causal Pluralism versus Epistemic Causality.Jon Williamson - 2006 - Philosophica 77 (1):69-96.
    It is tempting to analyse causality in terms of just one of the indicators of causal relationships, e.g., mechanisms, probabilistic dependencies or independencies, counterfactual conditionals or agency considerations. While such an analysis will surely shed light on some aspect of our concept of cause, it will fail to capture the whole, rather multifarious, notion. So one might instead plump for pluralism: a different analysis for a different occasion. But we do not seem to have lots of different concepts of cause (...)
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  10. Models for prediction, explanation and control: recursive bayesian networks.Jon Williamson - 2011 - Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 26 (1):5-33.
    The Recursive Bayesian Net (RBN) formalism was originally developed for modelling nested causal relationships. In this paper we argue that the formalism can also be applied to modelling the hierarchical structure of mechanisms. The resulting network contains quantitative information about probabilities, as well as qualitative information about mechanistic structure and causal relations. Since information about probabilities, mechanisms and causal relations is vital for prediction, explanation and control respectively, an RBN can be applied to all these tasks. We show in particular (...)
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  11.  34
    Segmentation, attention and phenomenal visual objects.Jon Driver, Greg Davis, Charlotte Russell, Massimo Turatto & Elliot Freeman - 2001 - Cognition 80 (1-2):61-95.
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  12. Safety and the True–True Problem.Jon Cogburn & Jeffrey W. Roland - 2013 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 94 (2):246-267.
    Standard accounts of semantics for counterfactuals confront the true–true problem: when the antecedent and consequent of a counterfactual are both actually true, the counterfactual is automatically true. This problem presents a challenge to safety-based accounts of knowledge. In this paper, drawing on work by Angelika Kratzer, Alan Penczek, and Duncan Pritchard, we propose a revised understanding of semantics for counterfactuals utilizing machinery from generalized quantifier theory which enables safety theorists to meet the challenge of the true–true problem.
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  13. Motivating objective bayesianism: From empirical constraints to objective probabilities.Jon Williamson - manuscript
    Kyburg goes half-way towards objective Bayesianism. He accepts that frequencies constrain rational belief to an interval but stops short of isolating an optimal degree of belief within this interval. I examine the case for going the whole hog.
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  14.  82
    Mechanistic Theories of Causality Part I.Jon Williamson - 2011 - Philosophy Compass 6 (6):421-432.
    Part I of this paper introduces a range of mechanistic theories of causality, including process theories and the complex-systems theories, and some of the problems they face. Part II argues that while there is a decisive case against a purely mechanistic analysis, a viable theory of causality must incorporate mechanisms as an ingredient, and describes one way of providing an analysis of causality which reaps the rewards of the mechanistic approach without succumbing to its pitfalls.
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  15. Philosophy through video games.Jon Cogburn - 2009 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Mark Silcox.
    I, player : the puzzle of personal identity (MMORPGS and Virtual Communities) -- The game inside the mind, the mind inside the game (The Nintendo Wii Gaming Console) -- Realistic blood and gore : do violent games make violent gamers? (First-person Shooters) -- Games and God's goodness (World-builder and Tycoon Games) -- The metaphysics of interactive art (Puzzle and Adventure Games) -- Artificial and human intelligence (Single-player RPGS) -- Epilogue: Video games and the meaning of life.
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  16. How Can Causal Explanations Explain?Jon Williamson - 2013 - Erkenntnis 78 (2):257-275.
    The mechanistic and causal accounts of explanation are often conflated to yield a ‘causal-mechanical’ account. This paper prizes them apart and asks: if the mechanistic account is correct, how can causal explanations be explanatory? The answer to this question varies according to how causality itself is understood. It is argued that difference-making, mechanistic, dualist and inferentialist accounts of causality all struggle to yield explanatory causal explanations, but that an epistemic account of causality is more promising in this regard.
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  17.  24
    Hegel Myths and Legends.Jon Stewart - 1996 - Northwestern University Press.
    The essays collected in 'The Hegel Myths and Legends' serve the function of disabusing students and nonspecialists of these misconceptions by exposing these myths for what they are.
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  18.  47
    Classical Arabic Philosophy: An Anthology of Sources.Jon McGinnis & David C. Reisman (eds.) - 2007 - Hackett.
    This volume introduces the major classical Arabic philosophers through substantial selections from the key works (many of which appear in translation for the first time here) in each of the fields—including logic, philosophy of science, natural philosophy, metaphysics, ethics, and politics—to which they made significant contributions. -/- An extensive Introduction situating the works within their historical, cultural, and philosophical contexts offers support to students approaching the subject for the first time, as well as to instructors with little or no formal (...)
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  19.  21
    Avicenna's Metaphysics in Context.Jon McGinnis & Robert Wisnovsky - 2004 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 124 (2):392.
  20.  11
    The Cambridge Rawls Lexicon.Jon Mandle & David A. Reidy (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    John Rawls is widely regarded as one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century, and his work has permanently shaped the nature and terms of moral and political philosophy, deploying a robust and specialized vocabulary that reaches beyond philosophy to political science, economics, sociology, and law. This volume is a complete and accessible guide to Rawls' vocabulary, with over 200 alphabetical encyclopaedic entries written by the world's leading Rawls scholars. From 'basic structure' to 'burdened society', from 'Sidgwick' to (...)
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  21.  39
    Experimental thoughts about thought experiments in medieval Islam.Jon McGinnis - unknown
    The study begins with the language employed in and the psychological basis of thought experiments as understood by certain medieval Arabic philosophers. It then provides a taxonomy of different kinds of thoughts experiments used in the medieval Islamic world. These include purely fictional thought experiments, idealizations and finally thought experiments using ingenious machines. The study concludes by suggesting that thought experiments provided a halfway house during this period between a staunch rationalism and an emerging empiricism.
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  22.  21
    Noise, Economy, and the Emergence of Information Structure in a Laboratory Language.Jon S. Stevens & Gareth Roberts - 2019 - Cognitive Science 43 (2):e12717.
    The acceptability of sentences in natural language is constrained not only grammaticality, but also by the relationship between what is being conveyed and such factors as context and the beliefs of interlocutors. In many languages the critical element in a sentence (its focus) must be given grammatical prominence. There are different accounts of the nature of focus marking. Some researchers treat it as the grammatical realization of a potentially arbitrary feature of universal grammar and do not provide an explicit account (...)
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  23.  29
    Doubly distributing special obligations: what professional practice can learn from parenting.Jon Tilburt & Baruch Brody - 2018 - Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (3):212-216.
    A traditional ethic of medicine asserts that physicians have special obligations to individual patients with whom they have a clinical relationship. Contemporary trends in US healthcare financing like bundled payments seem to threaten traditional conceptions of special obligations of individual physicians to individual patients because their population-based focus sets a tone that seems to emphasise responsibilities for groups of patients by groups of physicians in an organisation. Prior to undertaking a cogent debate about the fate and normative weight of special (...)
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  24. Logic and Science: The Role of Genus and Difference in Avicenna's Logic, Science and Natural Philosophy.Jon Mcginnis - 2007 - Documenti E Studi Sulla Tradizione Filosofica Medievale 18:165-186.
    Il naturale senso della logica in relazione alla scienza è quello di fornire un linguaggio alle acquisizioni epistemologiche: tale sembra essere il senso assegnatogli anche da Avicenna in al-Mantiq. La questione in realtà è molto più profonda: quale relazione c'è fra gli universali predicabili e gli oggetti della scienza? Attraverso l'esame della questione quale è delineata nel Madkhal, in particolare in merito al genere e alla differenza, e il loro ruolo nelle scienze in alcuni passaggi del Kitab al-Burhan, l'A. verifica (...)
     
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  25.  25
    Context and scale: Distinctions for improving debates about physician “rationing”.Jon C. Tilburt & Daniel P. Sulmasy - 2017 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 12:5.
    Important discussions about limiting care based on professional judgment often devolve into heated debates over the place of physicians in bedside rationing. Politics, loaded rhetoric, and ideological caricature from both sides of the rationing debate obscure precise points of disagreement and consensus, and hinder critical dialogue around the obligations and boundaries of professional practice. We propose a way forward by reframing the rationing conversation, distinguishing between the scale of the decision and its context avoiding the word “rationing.” We propose to (...)
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  26.  26
    Context and scale: Distinctions for improving debates about physician “rationing”.Jon C. Tilburt & Daniel P. Sulmasy - 2017 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 2017 12:1 12 (1):5.
    Important discussions about limiting care based on professional judgment often devolve into heated debates over the place of physicians in bedside rationing. Politics, loaded rhetoric, and ideological caricature from both sides of the rationing debate obscure precise points of disagreement and consensus, and hinder critical dialogue around the obligations and boundaries of professional practice. We propose a way forward by reframing the rationing conversation, distinguishing between the scale of the decision and its context avoiding the word “rationing.” We propose to (...)
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  27.  4
    Hegel's Century: Alienation and Recognition in a Time of Revolution.Jon Stewart - 2021 - Cambridge University Press.
    The remarkable lectures that Hegel gave in Berlin in the 1820s generated an exciting intellectual atmosphere which lasted for decades. From the 1830s, many students flocked to Berlin to study with people who had studied with Hegel, and both his original students, such as Feuerbach and Bauer, and later arrivals including Kierkegaard, Engels, Bakunin, and Marx, evolved into leading nineteenth-century thinkers. Jon Stewart's panoramic study of Hegel's deep influence upon the nineteenth century in turn reveals what that century contributed to (...)
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  28. Religious Disagreement and Divine Hiddenness.Jon Matheson - 2018 - Philosophia Christi 20 (1):215-225.
    In this paper, I develop and respond to a novel objection to Conciliatory Views of disagreement. Having first explained Conciliationism and the problem of divine hiddenness, I develop an objection that Conciliationism exacerbates the problem of divine hiddenness. According to this objection, Conciliationism increases God’s hiddenness in both its scope and severity, and is thus incompatible with God’s existence (or at least make God’s existence quite improbable). I respond to this objection by showing that the problem of divine hiddenness is (...)
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  29.  24
    History of Islamic Philosophy.Jon McGinnis, Seyyed Hossein Nasr & Oliver Leaman - 2002 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 122 (4):855.
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  30. Wedding Cakes and Muslims: Religious Freedom and Politics in contemporary American legal practice.Jon Mahoney - 2019 - Politologija 1:25-36.
    This paper offers a critical examination of two recent American Supreme Court verdicts, Masterpiece Cake Shop v Colorado Civil Rights Commission and Trump v Hawaii. In Masterpiece the Court ruled against the state of Colorado on grounds that religious bias on the part of state officials undermines government’s authority to enforce a policy that might otherwise be constitutional. In Trump the Court ruled in favor of an executive order severely restricting immigration from seven countries, five of which are Muslim majority. (...)
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  31.  14
    Nothing happens here: Songs about Perth.Jon Stratton & Adam Trainer - 2016 - Thesis Eleven 135 (1):34-50.
    This essay examines Perth as portrayed through the lyrics of popular songs written by people who grew up in the city. These lyrics tend to reproduce the dominant myths about the city: that it is isolated, that it is self-satisfied, that little happens there. Perth became the focus of song lyrics during the late 1970s time of punk with titles such as ‘Arsehole of the Universe’ and ‘Perth Is a Culture Shock’. Even the Eurogliders’ 1984 hit, ‘Heaven Must Be There’, (...)
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  32.  23
    Focus games.Jon Scott Stevens - 2016 - Linguistics and Philosophy 39 (5):395-441.
    This paper provides a game-theoretic analysis of contrastive focus, extending insights from recent work on the role of noisy communication in prosodic accent placement to account for focus within sentences, sub-sentential phrases and words. The shared insight behind these models is that languages with prosodic focus marking assign prosodic prominence only within elements which constitute material critical for successful interpretation. We first take care to distinguish the information-structural notion of focus from an ontologically distinct notion of givenness marking, and then (...)
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  33. Inductive influence.Jon Williamson - 2007 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 58 (4):689 - 708.
    Objective Bayesianism has been criticised for not allowing learning from experience: it is claimed that an agent must give degree of belief ½ to the next raven being black, however many other black ravens have been observed. I argue that this objection can be overcome by appealing to objective Bayesian nets, a formalism for representing objective Bayesian degrees of belief. Under this account, previous observations exert an inductive influence on the next observation. I show how this approach can be used (...)
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  34. How Uncertain Do We Need to Be?Jon Williamson - 2014 - Erkenntnis 79 (6):1249-1271.
    Expert probability forecasts can be useful for decision making . But levels of uncertainty escalate: however the forecaster expresses the uncertainty that attaches to a forecast, there are good reasons for her to express a further level of uncertainty, in the shape of either imprecision or higher order uncertainty . Bayesian epistemology provides the means to halt this escalator, by tying expressions of uncertainty to the propositions expressible in an agent’s language . But Bayesian epistemology comes in three main varieties. (...)
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  35.  7
    Kierkegaard: A Literary Approach.Jon Stewart - 2003 - In Kierkegaard and His Contemporaries: The Culture of Golden Age Denmark. De Gruyter.
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  36.  65
    An objective Bayesian account of confirmation.Jon Williamson - 2011 - In Dennis Dieks, Wenceslao Gonzalo, Thomas Uebel, Stephan Hartmann & Marcel Weber (eds.), Explanation, Prediction, and Confirmation. Springer. pp. 53--81.
  37.  22
    A Penetrating Question in the History of Ideas: Space, Dimensionality and Impenetrability in the Thought of Avicenna.Jon Mcginnis - 2006 - Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 16 (1):47.
    Avicenna's discussion of space is found in his comments on Aristotle's account of place. Aristotle identified four candidates for place: a body's matter, form, the occupied space, or the limits of the containing body, and opted for the last. Neoplatonic commentators argued contra Aristotle that a thing's place is the space it occupied. Space for these Neoplatonists is something possessing dimensions and distinct from any body that occupies it, even if never devoid of body. Avicenna argues that this Neoplatonic notion (...)
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  38. Religion, Identity, and Violence.Jon Mahoney - 2018 - Global Conversations 1:59-71.
  39. Bayesianism and language change.Jon Williamson - 2003 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 12 (1):53-97.
    Bayesian probability is normally defined over a fixed language or eventspace. But in practice language is susceptible to change, and thequestion naturally arises as to how Bayesian degrees of belief shouldchange as language changes. I argue here that this question poses aserious challenge to Bayesianism. The Bayesian may be able to meet thischallenge however, and I outline a practical method for changing degreesof belief over changes in finite propositional languages.
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  40.  12
    The Unity of Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit": A Systematic Interpretation.Jon Stewart - 2000 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    Hegel's _Phenomenology_ is considered by many to be the most difficult book in the philosophical canon. While some authors have published excellent essays on various chapters and aspects of the book, few authors have successfully tackled the whole. In _The Unity of Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit_", Jon Stewart interprets Hegel's work as a dialectical transformation of Kantian transcendental philosophy, providing from this unified standpoint a case for Hegel's own conception of philosophy as a system. In restoring them to their larger (...)
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  41.  8
    Introduction.Jon Stewart - 2003 - In Kierkegaard and His Contemporaries: The Culture of Golden Age Denmark. De Gruyter.
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  42.  25
    Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics: A Critical Guide.Jon Miller (ed.) - 2011 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics is one of the most important ethical treatises ever written, and has had a profound influence on the subsequent development of ethics and moral psychology. This collection of essays, written by both senior and younger scholars in the field, presents a thorough and close examination of the work. The essays address a broad range of issues including the compositional integrity of the Ethics, the nature of desire, the value of emotions, happiness and the virtues. The result is (...)
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  43.  15
    Setting the empirical record straight: Acceptability judgments appear to be reliable, robust, and replicable.Jon Sprouse & Diogo Almeida - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  44.  78
    Objective bayesian probabilistic logic.Jon Williamson - 2008
    This paper develops connections between objective Bayesian epistemology—which holds that the strengths of an agent’s beliefs should be representable by probabilities, should be calibrated with evidence of empirical probability, and should otherwise be equivocal—and probabilistic logic. After introducing objective Bayesian epistemology over propositional languages, the formalism is extended to handle predicate languages. A rather general probabilistic logic is formulated and then given a natural semantics in terms of objective Bayesian epistemology. The machinery of objective Bayesian nets and objective credal nets (...)
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  45. Maximising entropy efficiently.Jon Williamson - 2002
    Recommended citation: . . Link¨ oping Electronic Articles in Computer and Information Science, Vol. 7(2002): nr 0. http://www.ep.liu.se/ea/cis/2002/00/. September 18, 2002. </div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-WILMEE"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/thermodynamics-and-statistical-mechanics' rel='section'>Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/philosophy-of-physical-science' rel='section'>Philosophy of Physical Science</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=WILMEE&proxyId=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fkar.kent.ac.uk%2F7376%2F"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/WILMEE'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-WILMEE" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('WILMEE')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-WILMEE" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('WILMEE','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/WILMEE"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 3 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-WILMEE"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eVERTEO' onclick="ee('click','VERTEO')" onmouseover="ee('over','VERTEO')" onmouseout="ee('out','VERTEO')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/VERTEO#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>73 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/VERTEO"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>The Ethics of Restrictive Licensing for Handguns: Comparing the United States and Canadian Approaches to Handgun Regulation.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon S. Vernick" href="/s/Jon S.%20Vernick"><span class='name'>Jon S. Vernick</span></a>, <a class='discreet' title="View other works by James G. Hodge" href="/s/James G.%20Hodge"><span class='name'>James G. Hodge</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Daniel W. Webster" href="/s/Daniel W.%20Webster"><span class='name'>Daniel W. Webster</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2007</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics</i> 35 (4):668-678.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">The United States and Canada regulate frearms, particularly handguns, quite differently. With only a few state and local exceptions, the U.S. approach emphasizes the ability of most individuals to purchase, possess, and carry handguns. By comparison, Canada has a form of restrictive licensing for handguns that places a premium on community safety. The authors first review the potential individual and community level harms and benefits associated with these differing fre-arm policies. Using this information, they explore the ethical dimensions of the<span id="VERTEO-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("VERTEO-abstract2").show();$("VERTEO-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="VERTEO-abstract2" style="display:none"> U.S. and Canadian approaches through three major themes of autonomy, prevention of harms, and social justice. The authors conclude that the Canadian approach is consistent with respect for the autonomy of persons, fosters the prevention of harms, and more appropriately furthers social justice. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("VERTEO-abstract2").hide();$("VERTEO-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-VERTEO"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/autonomy-in-applied-ethics' rel='section'>Autonomy in Applied Ethics</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/applied-ethics' rel='section'>Applied Ethics</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=VERTEO&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1111%2Fj.1748-720x.2007.00189.x"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/VERTEO'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-VERTEO" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('VERTEO')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-VERTEO" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('VERTEO','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/VERTEO"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 6 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-VERTEO"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eMCGAMA-3' onclick="ee('click','MCGAMA-3')" onmouseover="ee('over','MCGAMA-3')" onmouseout="ee('out','MCGAMA-3')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/MCGAMA-3#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>29 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/MCGAMA-3"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>A Medieval Arabic Analysis Of Motion At An Instant: the Avicennan sources to the forma fluens/fluxus formae debate.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Mcginnis" href="/s/Jon%20Mcginnis"><span class='name'>Jon Mcginnis</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2006</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>British Journal for the History of Science</i> 39 (2):189-205.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">The forma fluens/fluxus formae debate concerns the question as to whether motion is something distinct from the body in motion, the flow of a distinct form identified with motion , or nothing more than the successive states of the body in motion, the flow of some form found in one of Aristotle's ten categories . Although Albertus Magnus introduced this debate to the Latin West he drew his inspiration from Avicenna. This study argues that Albertus misclassified Avicenna's position, since Albertus<span id="MCGAMA-3-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("MCGAMA-3-abstract2").show();$("MCGAMA-3-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="MCGAMA-3-abstract2" style="display:none"> could not conceptualize motion at an instant, whereas it is claimed here this was the very position Avicenna adopted. The paper includes an overview of Albertus's discussion and a brief survey of the Avicennan sources upon which Albertus drew. The heart of the paper treats Avicenna's analysis of motion at an instant. Avicenna's general argument was that since spatial points have no extremities, nothing in principle prevents a moving object from being at a spatial point for more than an instant, understood as a limit. It is then argued that Avicenna had the philosophical machinery to make sense of a limit, albeit not in mathematical terms, but in terms of an Aristotelian potential infinite. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("MCGAMA-3-abstract2").hide();$("MCGAMA-3-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-MCGAMA-3">No categories</div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=MCGAMA-3&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1017%2Fs0007087406007941"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/MCGAMA-3'>(3 more)</a>   <div id="la-MCGAMA-3" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('MCGAMA-3')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-MCGAMA-3" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('MCGAMA-3','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/MCGAMA-3"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 4 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-MCGAMA-3"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eMCGASD' onclick="ee('click','MCGASD')" onmouseover="ee('over','MCGASD')" onmouseout="ee('out','MCGASD')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/MCGASD#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>33 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/MCGASD"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>A Small Discovery: Avicenna’s Theory of Minima Naturalia.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon McGinnis" href="/s/Jon%20McGinnis"><span class='name'>Jon McGinnis</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2015</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Journal of the History of Philosophy</i> 53 (1):1-24.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-MCGASD"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/avicenna' rel='section'>Avicenna</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/medieval-and-renaissance-philosophy' rel='section'>Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy</a></div> <div><a class='catName' href='/browse/history-of-western-philosophy' rel='section'>History of Western Philosophy</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=MCGASD&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1353%2Fhph.2015.0002"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/MCGASD'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-MCGASD" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('MCGASD')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-MCGASD" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('MCGASD','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/MCGASD"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 2 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-MCGASD"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eSTEHAO-2' onclick="ee('click','STEHAO-2')" onmouseover="ee('over','STEHAO-2')" onmouseout="ee('out','STEHAO-2')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/STEHAO-2#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>24 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/STEHAO-2"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>Hegel's Analysis of Egyptian Art and Architecture as a Form of Philosophical Anthropology.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon Stewart" href="/s/Jon%20Stewart"><span class='name'>Jon Stewart</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2019</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>The Owl of Minerva</i> 50 (1):69-90.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">In his different analyses of ancient Egypt, Hegel underscores the marked absence of writings by the Egyptians. Unlike the Chinese with the I Ching or the Shoo king, the Indians with the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, the Persians with the Avesta, the Jews with the Old Testament, and the Greeks with the poems of Homer and Hesiod, the Egyptians, despite their developed system of hieroglyphic writing, left behind no great canonical text. Instead, he claims, they left their mark by means<span id="STEHAO-2-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("STEHAO-2-abstract2").show();$("STEHAO-2-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="STEHAO-2-abstract2" style="display:none"> of the architecture and art. This paper explores Hegel’s analysis of the Egyptians’ obelisks, pyramids, sphinxes, etc. in order to understand why he believes that these are so important for understanding the Egyptian spirit. This analysis illustrates Hegel’s use of history and culture in the service of philosophical anthropology. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("STEHAO-2-abstract2").hide();$("STEHAO-2-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-STEHAO-2"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/g-w-f-hegel' rel='section'>G. W. F. Hegel</a><span class='catIn'> in </span><a class='catArea' href='/browse/19th-century-philosophy' rel='section'>19th Century Philosophy</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=STEHAO-2&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.5840%2Fowl2019501%2F26"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/STEHAO-2'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-STEHAO-2" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('STEHAO-2')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-STEHAO-2" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('STEHAO-2','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/STEHAO-2"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 1 citation</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-STEHAO-2"></span></div></div></li> <li id='eVERHTL' onclick="ee('click','VERHTL')" onmouseover="ee('over','VERHTL')" onmouseout="ee('out','VERHTL')" class='entry'><div style='float:right' class='subtle'> <a href='/rec/VERHTL#analytics'><span style='color:#109D49'>15 <i class="fa fa-download"></i></span></a></div><span class="citation"><a href="/rec/VERHTL"><span class='articleTitle recTitle'>How the Law Affects Gun Policy in the United States: Law as Intervention or Obstacle to Prevention.</span></a><a class='discreet' title="View other works by Jon S. Vernick" href="/s/Jon S.%20Vernick"><span class='name'>Jon S. Vernick</span></a> & <a class='discreet' title="View other works by Julie Samia Mair" href="/s/Julie Samia%20Mair"><span class='name'>Julie Samia Mair</span></a> - <span class="pubYear">2002</span> - <span class='pubInfo'> <i class='pubName'>Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics</i> 30 (4):692-704.</span></span><span class='toggle' style='display:none' data-target='extras'>details</span><div class="extras"><div class="abstract">In our experience, public health practitioners seeking to address a health problem often have just two very basic questions about the law: how can I use the law to create new interventions, or improve existing ones, to protect the public’s health; and will the law prevent me from successfully implementing certain interventions? In this way, the law is seen as either an opportunity for intervention to affect a public health problem, or an obstacle to enacting or implementing a desired intervention.In<span id="VERHTL-absexp"> (<span class="ll" onclick='$("VERHTL-abstract2").show();$("VERHTL-absexp").hide()'>...</span>)</span><span id="VERHTL-abstract2" style="display:none"> addition, because some public health practitioners may not fully understand the intricacies of a given legal area, some possible obstacles to intervention may be either real or perceived. A real legal obstacle is not necessarily an insurmountable one, but it does have genuine legal force. A perceived obstacle has little, if any, true legal application to a given kind of intervention. (<span class="ll" onclick='$("VERHTL-abstract2").hide();$("VERHTL-absexp").show();'>shrink</span>)</span></div><div class="catsCon" id="ecats-con-VERHTL"><div><a class='catName' href='/browse/applied-ethics' rel='section'>Applied Ethics</a></div> </div><div class="options"><a rel="nofollow" class='outLink' href="https://philpapers.org/go.pl?id=VERHTL&proxyId=&u=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1111%2Fj.1748-720x.2002.tb00436.x"><i class="fa fa-download"></i> Direct download</a> <a href='/rec/VERHTL'>(2 more)</a>   <div id="la-VERHTL" title="Export to another format" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span class="ll" onclick="showExports('VERHTL')"><i class="fa fa-external-link"></i> Export citation<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>   <div id="ml-VERHTL" class="yui-skin-sam ldiv"> </div><span title="Bookmark this publication" class="ll" onclick="showLists('VERHTL','')"><i class="fa fa-bookmark"></i> Bookmark<img src="/philpapers/raw/subind.gif"></span>  <a href="/citations/VERHTL"><i class="fa fa-share-alt"></i> 6 citations</a>   <span class="eMsg" id="msg-VERHTL"></span></div></div></li> </ol> </div> <div id='prevNextHtml' class='centered'><center><table><td><span class='prevNext'><i class="glyphicon glyphicon-triangle-left"></i></td><td>1 — 50 / 1000</td><td><span class='prevNext'><span title='Next page' class='clickable pager-btn' onclick='goToNextPage()'><i class="glyphicon glyphicon-triangle-right"></i></span></span></td></table></center></div> </div> </div> </div> <!-- frame col-md9 --> <div class="col-md-3 nopadding-xs nopadding-sm nopadding-right"> <div class="panel panel-default hidden-sm hidden-xs"> <div class="panel-body"> <form name="expform"> <div class="sideBox"> <div class="sideBoxH">Export</div> <div class="sideBoxC"> <select name="expf" class="expf" id="expf" onChange="$j('.expLimit').show()"> <option value=''>Format</option> <option value='htm'>Formatted text</option><option value='txt'>Plain text</option><option value='bib'>BibTeX</option><option value='zot'>Zotero</option><option value='enw'>EndNote</option><option value='ris'>Ref Manager</option></select> <div id='expLimit' class='expLimit' style="display:none; margin-top:5px"> Limit to <input class='expLimitI' type="text" id="expLimitI" size="3" value="500"> items. <input style="margin-top:5px" class='' type="button" value="Export" onclick=" if ($j('.expf:visible').val()) { $j('#ap-format').val($j('.expf:visible').val()); $j('#ap-limit').val($j('.expLimitI:visible').val()); refreshWith($('allparams')); } else { alert('You must first choose a format.') } "> </div> </div> <!-- sideB[M#EoxC --> </div> <!-- sideBox --> </form> <form id="moreOptions" name="more"> <div class="sideBox"> <div class="sideBoxH">Filters</div> <div class="sideBoxC filters-box"> <input class='checkbox' type='checkbox' name='proOnly' id='proOnly' onClick="createCookie('proOnly',this.checked ? 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