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  1.  16
    The Moral Good and Normative Nature in the Aristotelian Ethics.Robert Geis - 2013 - Review of Metaphysics 67 (2):291-310.
    Nature as the source of moral ordinance in Aristotle received doubt with the publication of J. Donald Monan’s Moral Knowledge and Its Methodology in Aristotle. Arguing for an earlier versus later Aristotle, he opined for the φρόνιμος as Aristotle’s final word on the criterion for ethical right. “Normative Nature and the Moral Good in the Aristotelian Ethics” argues exegetically and on Aristotelian grounds the inaccuracy of such a view. As early as the Protrepticus, Nature as the guide to proper conduct (...)
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  2.  17
    A Failed Point in Kant.Robert Geis - 2016 - International Philosophical Quarterly 56 (4):445-467.
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  3.  10
    In My Ever After: Immortality and its Critics.Robert J. Geis - 2010 - Lanham, Md.: Upa.
    This book argues against neurophilosophy's virtual equation of consciousness and the world. Part I identifies scientific grounds for a real world outside consciousness and self-refutational flaws in quantum physics; Part II explores why consciousness cannot be electrical in origin, and how partibility and subjectivity evince reasons for accepting immortal consciousness.
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  4.  8
    On the Existence of God.Robert Geis - 2009 - Upa.
    Geis' work addresses questions about gratuitous claims of empiricism in Hume, unfounded assumptions in Kant, presumptions of science, and improbabilities identified in Darwinism. Geis argues that evil, used as a means to betterment of oneself and the world, takes on the role commensurate with the doctrine of an omnibenevolent deity.
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  5.  15
    Death. [REVIEW]Robert Geis - 1990 - Review of Metaphysics 43 (3):656-657.
    Fourteen essays from thirteen contributors in philosophy, law, and medicine comprise this text. They focus on a question that medical technology has pushed into the public policy arena: what are the criteria, if any, which permit a valid, sure determination of death--its time, its occurrence--in the patient believed irreversibly dying? Success at such a determination would have consequences not only for the patient, but for his family, the law, medicine, and society at large; so would failure.
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