Results for 'Michael Carver'

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  1.  28
    Origins and functions of positive and negative affect: A control-process view.Charles S. Carver & Michael F. Scheier - 1990 - Psychological Review 97 (1):19-35.
  2.  34
    Action, affect, and two-mode models of functioning.Charles S. Carver & Michael F. Scheier - 2009 - In Ezequiel Morsella, John A. Bargh & Peter M. Gollwitzer (eds.), Oxford handbook of human action. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 298--327.
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  3.  43
    Adulthood personality correlates of childhood adversity.Charles S. Carver, Sheri L. Johnson, Michael E. McCullough, Daniel E. Forster & Jutta Joormann - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  4. Engagement, disengagement, coping, and catastrophe.Charles S. Carver & Michael F. Scheier - 2005 - In Andrew J. Elliot & Carol S. Dweck (eds.), Handbook of Competence and Motivation. The Guilford Press. pp. 527--547.
  5.  9
    Rediscovering confidence as a mechanism and optimism as a construct.Charles S. Carver & Michael F. Scheier - 2015 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38.
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  6.  8
    Self-regulation and the self.Charles S. Carver & Michael F. Scheier - 1991 - In J. Strauss (ed.), The Self: Interdisciplinary Approaches. Springer Verlag. pp. 168--207.
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  7.  19
    Past, Present, and Future Research on Teacher Induction: An Anthology for Researchers, Policy Makers, and Practitioners.Betty Achinstein, Krista Adams, Steven Z. Athanases, EunJin Bang, Martha Bleeker, Cynthia L. Carver, Yu-Ming Cheng, Renée T. Clift, Nancy Clouse, Kristen A. Corbell, Sarah Dolfin, Sharon Feiman-Nemser, Maida Finch, Jonah Firestone, Steven Glazerman, MariaAssunção Flores, Susan Hanson, Lara Hebert, Richard Holdgreve-Resendez, Erin T. Horne, Leslie Huling, Eric Isenberg, Amy Johnson, Richard Lange, Julie A. Luft, Pearl Mack, Julia Moore, Jennifer Neakrase, Lynn W. Paine, Edward G. Pultorak, Hong Qian, Alan J. Reiman, Virginia Resta, John R. Schwille, Sharon A. Schwille, Thomas M. Smith, Randi Stanulis, Michael Strong, Dina Walker-DeVose, Ann L. Wood & Peter Youngs - 2010 - R&L Education.
    This book's importance is derived from three sources: careful conceptualization of teacher induction from historical, methodological, and international perspectives; systematic reviews of research literature relevant to various aspects of teacher induction including its social, cultural, and political contexts, program components and forms, and the range of its effects; substantial empirical studies on the important issues of teacher induction with different kinds of methodologies that exemplify future directions and approaches to the research in teacher induction.
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  8. Michael F. Scheier.Karen A. Matthews & Charles S. Carver - 1979 - In Geoffrey Underwood & Robin Stevens (eds.), Aspects of consciousness. New York: Academic Press. pp. 3--165.
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  9.  8
    Eine politische Geschichte kritischer Editionen?: Eine metakritische Reflexion der Kritik von Terrell Carver und Daniel Blank.Michael Quante - 2018 - Marx-Engels Jahrbuch 2017 (1):196-205.
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  10.  21
    Conserving copalillo: The creation of sustainable Oaxacan wood carvings. [REVIEW]Michael Chibnik & Silvia Purata - 2007 - Agriculture and Human Values 24 (1):17-28.
    Most accounts of the effect of the global marketplace on deforestation in Africa, Asia, and Latin America emphasize the demand for timber used in industrial processes and the conversion of tropical forests to pastures for beef cattle. In recent years, numerous scholars and policymakers have suggested that developing a market for non-timber forest products (NTFPs) might slow the pace of habitat destruction. Although increased demand for NTFPs rarely results in massive deforestation, the depletion of the raw materials needed to make (...)
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  11.  21
    Measuring corporate sustainability: measurement scale development based on the stakeholder theory.Michael Wang & Nasser Fathi Easa - 2024 - International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics 1 (1).
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  12.  10
    Walter Benjamin and the idea of natural history.Michael Villanova - forthcoming - Contemporary Political Theory:1-4.
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  13. Chapter 4. Communal organization in the diaspora.Michael Walzer - 2023 - In Julie Cooper & Samuel Hayim Brody (eds.), The king is in the field: essays in modern Jewish political thought. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
     
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  14.  3
    Effects of age on the interactions of attentional and emotional processes: a prefrontal fNIRS study.Michael K. Yeung - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    The aging of attentional and emotional functions has been extensively studied but relatively independently. Therefore, the relationships between aging and the interactions of attentional and emotional processes remain elusive. This study aimed to determine how age affected the interactions between attentional and emotional processes during adulthood. One-hundred forty adults aged 18–79 performed the emotional variant of the Attention Network Test, which probed alerting, orienting, and executive control in the presence and absence of threatening faces. During this task, contexts with varying (...)
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  15. Nonsubstantial Individuals.Michael V. Wedin - 2000 - In Michael V. Wedin (ed.), Aristotle's Theory of Substance : The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta: The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Wedin addresses the debate over whether nonsubstantial individuals, that inhere in a subject but are not said of a subject, i.e. accidents, such as the pallor of Socrates, are nonrecurring particulars or a kind of determinate universal. Wedin examines the secondary literature on this topic and divides it into two schools of thought, determined by the contributions of J.L. Ackrill and G.E.L. Owen. According to Ackrill, individuals in non‐substance categories are particular to the substance they are in; Owen critiques Ackrill's (...)
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  16. Tales of the Two Treatises.Michael V. Wedin - 2000 - In Michael V. Wedin (ed.), Aristotle's Theory of Substance : The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta: The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Wedin considers the problem of the compatibility of the Categories account of primary substance with the theory of substantial form of the Metaphysics. Wedin collects from the secondary literature the most important arguments for incompatibilism, and offers some proposals for restoring their harmony. While admitting the evident differences in the way Aristotle treats the question of substance in each treatise, Wedin is keen to argue that these differences are not sufficient to conclude that the treatises are incompatible. Wedin singles out (...)
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  17. Classical Opacity.Michael Caie, Jeremy Goodman & Harvey Lederman - 2019 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 101 (3):524-566.
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, EarlyView.
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  18. Agent‐Based Virtue Ethics.Michael Slote - 2001 - In Morals from motives. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Aristotelian virtue ethics does not treat motives or even character as the grounding basis for the rest of ethics, but the present agent‐based approach does. However, there are objections to agent‐basing that need to be considered. Having answered those objections, the chapter discusses three major forms of agent‐based virtue ethics: a somewhat less than plausible ”morality as inner strength” ; ”morality as universal benevolence” ; and ”morality as caring”. Any agent‐based morality does well to treat overall motivation, rather than occasional (...)
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  19. Forms of Pluralism.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Even though commonsense virtue ethics is less unified than utilitarianism, various forms of pluralism are inherent in utilitarianism.
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  20. Incoherence in Kantian and commonsense Moral Thinking.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Kantian and commonsense moral thinking are incoherent because self‐other asymmetry does not cogently combine with the belief that we owe more to people the closer they are to us in familial or personal terms. The latter is commonsensically explained by the claim that it is natural or inevitable that we should care about those closer to us more than about those less close to us, but this seemingly plausible assumption tends to undercut the justification that is typically and intuitively offered (...)
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  21. Morality and Rationality.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Commonsense views about practical rationality are self‐other asymmetric in a way diametrically opposed to the asymmetry involved in commonsense or Kantian morality. What is likely to harm others does not count as irrational in the same fundamental way that what is likely to harm oneself does. Commonsense or Kantian morality is agent sacrificingly asymmetrical, whereas commonsense rationality is agent favouringly asymmetrical. This means that these two parts of ordinary thinking tug in opposite directions, but a virtue‐ethical approach that focuses exclusively (...)
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  22. Rudiments of Virtue Ethics.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Virtue ethics treats aretaic, as opposed to deontic, concepts as fundamental and focuses in the first instance on character traits or motives rather than actions. Virtue ethics also contrasts with utilitarianism because although both these approaches are self‐other symmetric, they embrace different forms of symmetry. Utilitarianism holds that one's concern for oneself should be no different, fundamentally, from the concern one has for each and every other individual. But such ”in sensu diviso” symmetry differs from an ”in sensu composito” symmetry (...)
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  23.  1
    Cultural Coding in the Young: The Ongoing Dilemma.Michael Warren - 1990 - Listening 25 (1):47-60.
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  24. Living well and the promise of cosmopolitan identity : Aristotle's ergon and contemporary civic republicanism.Michael Weinman - 2016 - In Geoffrey C. Kellow & Neven Leddy (eds.), On Civic Republicanism: Ancient Lessons for Global Politics. University of Toronto Press.
  25. Paths from revolution : Jefferson, Paine, and the radicalization of Enlightenment thought.Michael Zuckert - 2013 - In Simon P. Newman & Peter S. Onuf (eds.), Paine and Jefferson in the Age of Revolutions. University of Virginia Press.
     
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  26.  4
    Clashes of Culture.Michael Smith - 2024 - In Sanjit Chakraborty (ed.), Human Minds and Cultures. Switzerland: Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 73-88.
    People from one cultural background often find themselves wondering how those from a different cultural background could willingly live the way they do and/or criticize others for living in the way they do. How are we to explain this kind of mutual incomprehension? Three different possible explanations will be considered. The first is that such mutual incomprehension is sourced in a moral flaw. The flaw might be in one of the cultures, as certain cultures might be premised on a moral (...)
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  27. Commitment and Configuration in the Categories.Michael V. Wedin - 2000 - In Michael V. Wedin (ed.), Aristotle's Theory of Substance : The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta: The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Wedin considers the relation between the ontological commitment in the Categories and the semantical theory of underlying ontological configurations for standard categorical statements. According to Wedin, Aristotle's fourfold division of beings, which divides things according to whether they are, or are not, said of, and/or present in a subject, is a meta‐ontology that is concerned with beings per se, i.e. the fundamental things that are. Wedin explains that the primacy of c‐substance involves an asymmetry in the relation between c‐substance and (...)
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  28. Form as Essence.Michael V. Wedin - 2000 - In Michael V. Wedin (ed.), Aristotle's Theory of Substance : The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta: The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Wedin argues that Aristotle makes form the substance of c‐substances because it is the essence of the c‐substance. Much of this chapter consists of a careful examination of a passage in Metaphysics Zeta 4, which Wedin calls the ‘New Primacy Passage’, that is crucial to Wedin's overall thesis, because here Aristotle appeals to a notion of definitional primacy, as opposed to the ontological primacy of the Categories. Z.4 focuses on this claim that form must be essence: Wedin argues that essence (...)
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  29. Generality and Compositionality: Z.13's Worries About Form.Michael V. Wedin - 2000 - In Michael V. Wedin (ed.), Aristotle's Theory of Substance : The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta: The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Wedin offers an interpretation of Metaphysics Zeta 13, a very important and difficult chapter, where Aristotle apparently denies that substance is a universal, having, on most accounts, already claimed that form is substance, and that form is a universal. This interpretation of the argument of Z.13, Wedin argues, threatens the possibility of attaining a definition of substance, and places in doubt what has gone before in the treatise. According to Wedin, what Aristotle is concerned with in Z.13 is not the (...)
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  30. Zeta 6 on the Immediacy of Form.Michael V. Wedin - 2000 - In Michael V. Wedin (ed.), Aristotle's Theory of Substance : The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta: The Categories and Metaphysics Zeta. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Wedin discusses Aristotle's claims in Metaphysics Zeta 6 that the essence of a thing is to be sought among its per se attributes, and that each thing that is primary and spoken of per se, e.g. primary substance, is the same as its essence. Wedin argues that the Zeta 6 Thesis, i.e. that the essence of a thing is the thing's immediate essence, is a crucial requirement of the explanatory role of essence as the substance of c‐substances. According to Wedin, (...)
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  31.  2
    Weitere Beobachtungen zur demokratischen Regression und ihren Beobachtungen.Michael Zürn - 2024 - In Julian Nida-Rümelin, Timo Greger & Andreas Oldenbourg (eds.), Normative Konstituenzien der Demokratie. De Gruyter. pp. 329-340.
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  32.  6
    How to Change the World.Michael Steinberg - 2016 - In Daniel Breazeale & Tom Rockmore (eds.), Fichte's Addresses to the German Nation Reconsidered. SUNY Press. pp. 223-242.
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  33. Trans women participation in sport: A feminist alternative to Pike’s position.Michael Burke - 2022 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 49 (2):212-229.
    Both the approach taken by World Rugby to address the question of trans women participation in women’s rugby and the paper by Jon Pike that explains the ethical justification for the exclusion of trans women players from world rugby are compelling when understood within the dominant rugby/sport narrative. However, in this article, I suggest that what is absent is a radical feminist understanding that engages with the political purposes of separate sport spaces for women in producing feminist counternarratives that challenge (...)
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  34. Belief and Indeterminacy.Michael Caie - 2012 - Philosophical Review 121 (1):1-54.
    An attractive approach to the semantic paradoxes holds that cases of semantic pathology give rise to indeterminacy. What attitude should a rational agent have toward a proposition that it takes to be indeterminate in this sense? Orthodoxy holds that rationality requires that an agent disbelieve such a proposition. I argue that a rational agent should be such that it is indeterminate whether it believes the proposition in question. For rational agents, indeterminacy in the objects of their attitudes will filter up (...)
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  35.  16
    Ethics: a quick immersion.Michael Slote - 2023 - New York: Tibidabo Publishing.
    This introduction treats the field of ethics in a new way. The main topic is normative ethics and in particular the ethics of moral right and wrong, and the emphasis is on the recently highlighted division or conflict between ethical rationalism and moral sentimentalism. Rationalism treats moral judgment and motivation as a matter of rational judgment, and its main practitioners have been Immanuel Kant and, more recently, the intuitionists H. A. Prichard and W. D. Ross. Philosophical weaknesses in intuitionism have (...)
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  36. The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, 2nd ed.Michael Slote (ed.) - 2005 - Oxford University Press.
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  37. Utilitarianism.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Utilitarianism does best to approach justice, rationality, and various virtues in symmetric and impartialist fashion. A scalar form of utilitarianism that makes only comparative judgments of better and worse may be preferable for abstract theoretical purposes, though not in practice.
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  38.  2
    Utilitarian Underdetermination.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Utilitarianism is also underdetermined as a theory. It must be stated either in actualist form or in some sort of expectabilist terms. But neither choice seems preferable to the other, and this makes it difficult to settle on and defend any particular version of utilitarianism.
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  39. Virtue in Friends and Citizens.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    The value of personal relationships and of political involvement can be understood in virtue‐ethical terms, but it is not clear that a good friend who prefers his friends is morally superior to someone who is always impartial.
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  40.  2
    Virtue‐Ethical Luck.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Just like commonsense morality, commonsense virtue ethics faces complicated issues about luck. However, if luck plays a role in our development of virtuous or vicious traits of character, then we can evaluate such traits in virtue‐ethical terms without blaming or condemning those, e.g., whom we wish, in favored terms, to criticize. This approach is very reminiscent of Spinoza.
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  41. Virtue Rules.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Virtue ethics allows general rules, and these can cover both perfect and imperfect duties in Kant's sense – though the concepts used are not the specifically moral notions of rightness and wrongness, but rather such notions as what is admirable/deplorable or counts as a virtue/vice.
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  42. Virtue, Self, and Other.Michael Slote - 1992 - In From morality to virtue. New York: Oxford University Press.
    In commonsense terms, many traits count as virtues independently of the benefit they bring their possessors or others. For example, the courage to face the fact that one has cancer may actually make things less pleasant for both the cancer victim and his/her friends and relations. In addition, many virtuous traits have both self‐regarding and other‐regarding versions: e.g. honesty, loyalty, and trustworthiness. A commonsense virtue ethics makes use of that fact to underscore the significance and plausibility of its self‐other symmetric (...)
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  43. First-Person Propositions.Michael Caie & Dilip Ninan - forthcoming - Philosophers' Imprint.
    A central dispute in discussions of self-locating attitudes is whether attitude relations like believing and knowing are relations between an agent and properties (things that vary in truth value across individuals) or between an agent and propositions (things that do not so vary). Proponents of the proposition view have argued that the property view is unable to give an adequate account of relations like communication and agreement. We agree with this critique of the property view, and in this essay we (...)
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  44.  31
    Darwinism and Human Affairs.Michael Ruse - 1981 - Philosophy of Science 48 (4):627-628.
  45. Doxastic Logic.Michael Caie - 2019 - In Jonathan Weisberg & Richard Pettigrew (eds.), The Open Handbook of Formal Epistemology. PhilPapers Foundation. pp. 499-541.
  46.  10
    PLATO AND WRITING - (M.) Esposito The Realm of Mimesis in Plato. Orality, Writing, and the Ontology of the Image. (Brill's Plato Studies Series 13.) Pp. xii + 173. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2023. Cased, €119. ISBN: 978-90-04-53311-0. [REVIEW]Michael Weinman - forthcoming - The Classical Review:1-2.
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  47.  39
    Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason.Michael Byron (ed.) - 2004 - New York, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    How do we think about what we plan to do? One dominant answer is that we select the best possible option available. However, a growing number of philosophers would offer a different answer: since we are not equipped to maximize we often choose the next best alternative, one that is no more than satisfactory. This strategy choice is called satisficing. This collection of essays explores both these accounts of practical reason, examining the consequences for adopting one or the other for (...)
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  48.  16
    Transposing Gestalt Phenomena from Visual Fields to Practical and Interactional Work: Garfinkel’s and Sacks’ Social Praxeology.Michael Eisenmann Lynch - 2022 - Philosophia Scientiae:95-122.
    In lectures and writings in the decades following the publication of Studies in Ethnomethodology [1967], Harold Garfinkel, the founder of ethnomethodology, developed what he called a “misreading” of the phenomenological writings of Aron Gurwitsch, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and others. Garfinkel’s “misreading” included a selective and creative treatment of themes that Gurwitsch drew from Gestalt psychology, such as figure-ground, Gestalt contexture, and the phenomenal field. Rather than identifying these themes with visual perception demonstrated with picture-puzzles (for example, of animals hidden in foliage) (...)
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  49. Satisficing and optimality.Michael Byron - 1998 - Ethics 109 (1):67-93.
    It is common, though perhaps not correct, to think that practical rationality is strictly instrumental.1 The functions of instrumental reason include finding suitable means to our determinate ends, helping to determine our indeterminate ends, and implementing our principles in appropriate actions. One reason that might be given for adopting instrumentalism with respect to rationality might be that our best scientific evidence offers little support for the idea that our brains have powers to detect good and bad as such in persons, (...)
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  50. Taking luck seriously.Michael J. Zimmerman - 2002 - Journal of Philosophy 99 (11):553-576.
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