Results for 'S. A. Hardy'

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  1.  34
    A “popout” effect with words and nonwords.S. A. Soraci, J. J. Franks, M. T. Carlin, T. P. Hoehn & J. K. Hardy - 1992 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30 (4):290-292.
  2. Moral identity: Where identity formation and moral development converge.S. A. Hardy & G. Carlo - 2011 - In Seth J. Schwartz, Koen Luyckx & Vivian L. Vignoles (eds.), Handbook of identity theory and research. New York: Springer Science+Business Media.
  3.  20
    Symposium: The Problem of Meaning.F. C. S. Schiller, A. C. Ewing & W. F. R. Hardie - 1927 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 7 (1):98 - 123.
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  4.  6
    IV.—Symposium: The Problem of Meaning.F. C. S. Schiller, A. C. Ewing & W. F. R. Hardie - 1927 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 7 (1):98-123.
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  5.  19
    A grain boundary groove measurement of the surface tension between ice and water.S. C. Hardy - 1977 - Philosophical Magazine 35 (2):471-484.
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  6.  2
    IV.—Symposium: The Problem of Meaning.F. C. S. Schiller, A. C. Ewing & W. F. R. Hardie - 1927 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 7 (1):98-123.
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  7.  44
    Book Review Section 2. [REVIEW]Richard A. Brosio, Ann Franklin, Erskine S. Dottin, David Slive, Milton K. Reimer, Thomas A. Brindley, F. C. Rankine, Stephen K. Miller, Clifford A. Hardy, Roy L. Cox, John T. Zepper, Paul W. Beals, William E. Roweton, Cheryl G. Kasson, George W. Bright & Robert Newton Barger - 1981 - Educational Studies 12 (3):328-349.
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  8.  20
    Radical reductionism in the psychological study of religion: Prospects for an alternative critical methodology1.Douglas S. Hardy - 2003 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 25 (1):25-41.
    The scholarly enterprise known as the psychology of religion can be understood as the psychological study of religious practice, belief, and experience. With one foot in the stream of psychological theory and research and the other in the flow of religious experience and understanding, it seeks to illuminate the latter through use of the former. In other words, religion becomes the object of psychological analysis, that is, in some sense subordinated to psychology. This relative inequality raises significant methodological issues for (...)
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  9.  8
    Re-Engaging the Wesleyan-Holiness Tradition in Response to Diversification and Fragmentation in Theological Education: Christian Spiritual Formation Teaching and Practice at Nazarene Theological Seminary.Derek L. Davis & Douglas S. Hardy - 2018 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 11 (2):141-162.
    Nazarene Theological Seminary, a graduate school in the Wesleyan-Holiness tradition, is undergoing significant self-examination and adjustment in response to changes and challenges in ecclesial and higher education cultures. This article gives readers a glimpse into NTS’s process for the teaching and practice of spiritual formation—something integral to its heritage and history, intentionally engaged curricularly and relationally, yet in need of assessment and revitalization due to increased diversification and fragmentation of learning platforms and contexts. The school’s ecclesial and institutional roots are (...)
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  10.  48
    Predatory Grooming and Epistemic Infringement.Lauren Leydon-Hardy - 2021 - In Jennifer Lackey (ed.), Applied Epistemology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 119-147.
    Predatory grooming is a form of abuse most familiar from high-profile cases of sexual misconduct, for example, the Nassar case at Michigan State. Predatory groomers target individuals in a systematic effort to lead them into relationships in which they are vulnerable to exploitation. This is an example of a broader form of epistemic misconduct that Leydon-Hardy describes as epistemic infringement, where this involves the contravention of social and epistemic norms in a way that undermines our epistemic agency. In this (...)
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  11. A Mathematician's Apology.G. H. Hardy - 1941 - Philosophy 16 (63):323-326.
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  12.  15
    From no whinge scenarios to viability tree.Luc Doyen, C. Armstrong, S. Baumgärtner, C. Béné, F. Blanchard, A. A. Cissé, R. Cooper, L. X. C. Dutra, A. Eide, D. Freitas, S. Gourguet, Felipe Gusmao, P.-Y. Hardy, A. Jarre, L. R. Little, C. Macher, M. Quaas, E. Regnier, N. Sanz & O. Thébaud - 2019 - Ecological Economics 163:183-188.
    Avoiding whinges from various and potentially conflicting stakeholders is a major challenge for sustainable development and for the identification of sustainability scenarios or policies for biodiversity and ecosystem services. It turns out that independently complying with whinge thresholds and constraints of these stakeholders is not sufficient because dynamic ecological-economic interactions and uncertainties occur. Thus more demanding no whinge standards are needed. In this paper, we first argue that these new boundaries can be endogenously exhibited with the mathematical concepts of viability (...)
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  13. The Final Good in Aristotle's Ethics.W. F. R. Hardie - 1965 - Philosophy 40 (154):277-295.
    Aristotle maintains that every man has, or should have, a single end, a target at which he aims. The doctrine is stated in E.N. I 2. ‘If, then, there is some end of the things we do which we desire for its own sake, and if we do not choose everything for the sake of something else, clearly this must be the good and the chief good. Will not the knowledge of it, then, have a great influence on life? Shall (...)
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  14. Aristotle’s Ethical Theory.William Francis Ross Hardie - 1968 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    This is a study of Aristotle's moral philosophy as it is contained in the Nicomachean Ethics. Hardie examines the difficulties of the text; presents a map of inescapable philosophical questions; and brings out the ambiguities and critical disagreements on some central topics, inclduing happiness, the soul, the ethical mean, and the initiation of action.
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  15.  37
    X—Aristotle's Doctrine that Virtue is a “Mean”.W. F. R. Hardie - 1965 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 65 (1):183-204.
    W. F. R. Hardie; X—Aristotle's Doctrine that Virtue is a “Mean”, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 65, Issue 1, 1 June 1965, Pages 183–204, https.
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  16.  10
    In search of Isaiah Berlin: a literary adventure.Henry Hardy - 2019 - London: Tauris Parke.
    Isaiah Berlin was one of the greatest thinkers of the twentieth century - a man who set ideas on fire. His defence of liberty and plurality was passionate and persuasive and inspired a generation. His ideas - especially his reasoned rejection of excessive certainty and political despotism - have become even more prescient and vital today.But who was the man behind such influential views? In Search of Isaiah Berlin tells the compelling story of a decades-long collaboration between Berlin and his (...)
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  17. Final report. A qualitative investigation into the use of withdrawal.E. de BenderDusch, M. F. McCann, S. Mayor, E. Hardy, L. C. Santos, M. J. Osis, G. Carvalho, J. G. Cecatti & A. Faundes - 1998 - Journal of Biosocial Science 30 (2):193-225.
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  18.  19
    “A Widely Applicable Model”: Teaching Sarah Manguso’s The Two Kinds of Decay Across Institutions.Sarah Boykin Hardy, Elizabeth Starr, Cindie Aaen Maagaard, Shena McAuliffe, Erin McConnell & Krista Quesenberry - 2023 - Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (4):431-453.
    Many of those teaching at the intersection of medicine and the humanities are siloed within institutional spaces. This essay recounts the teaching of Sarah Manguso’s The Two Kinds of Decay to students across different academic contexts and considers what we can learn when we put classrooms in conversation with each other. This essay argues for the value of texts like Manguso’s, which explicitly hold the narrating subject and form of illness narrative up for critical examination. The authors call for more (...)
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  19.  11
    The Education of Affect: Anatomical Replicas and ‘Feeling Fat’.Kristen A. Hardy - 2013 - Body and Society 19 (1):3-26.
    This article examines the cultural dimensions of synthetic ‘body fat replicas’, anatomically modelled objects used in educational and medical settings to train subjects in particular affective responses to fat/ness. Specifically, I focus on theorizing the phenomenological experience of embodied engagements with such models, and exploring the manner in which the replicas are designed to participate in the shaping of emotional orientations toward one’s own body and those of others. Appealing to the work of contemporary social and cultural theorists, I consider (...)
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  20.  95
    Identification of common variants influencing risk of the tauopathy progressive supranuclear palsy.Günter U. Höglinger, Nadine M. Melhem, Dennis W. Dickson, Patrick M. A. Sleiman, Li-San Wang, Lambertus Klei, Rosa Rademakers, Rohan de Silva, Irene Litvan, David E. Riley, John C. van Swieten, Peter Heutink, Zbigniew K. Wszolek, Ryan J. Uitti, Jana Vandrovcova, Howard I. Hurtig, Rachel G. Gross, Walter Maetzler, Stefano Goldwurm, Eduardo Tolosa, Barbara Borroni, Pau Pastor, P. S. P. Genetics Study Group, Laura B. Cantwell, Mi Ryung Han, Allissa Dillman, Marcel P. van der Brug, J. Raphael Gibbs, Mark R. Cookson, Dena G. Hernandez, Andrew B. Singleton, Matthew J. Farrer, Chang-En Yu, Lawrence I. Golbe, Tamas Revesz, John Hardy, Andrew J. Lees, Bernie Devlin, Hakon Hakonarson, Ulrich Müller & Gerard D. Schellenberg - unknown
    Progressive supranuclear palsy is a movement disorder with prominent tau neuropathology. Brain diseases with abnormal tau deposits are called tauopathies, the most common of which is Alzheimer's disease. Environmental causes of tauopathies include repetitive head trauma associated with some sports. To identify common genetic variation contributing to risk for tauopathies, we carried out a genome-wide association study of 1,114 individuals with PSP and 3,247 controls followed by a second stage in which we genotyped 1,051 cases and 3,560 controls for the (...)
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  21. Conington's Virgil: Eclogues.Philip Hardie & Brian W. Breed (eds.) - 2008 - Liverpool University Press.
    John Conington was a towering figure in Victorian scholarship, not least because of his remarkably sensitive and literate commentaries on Virgil’s _Aeneid. _The three-volume cloth edition of _The Works of Virgil_, begun by Conington in 1852, has been unavailable for over a century, except in rare second-hand sets. Now, for the first time, the whole of Conington’s work is being reissued in a set of six paperback volumes. Each volume includes a new introduction by an established scholar, setting Conington's commentary (...)
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  22.  45
    James Leigh Strachan-Davidson (1843–1916) and William Ross Hardie (1862–1916).A. S. J. - 1916 - The Classical Review 30 (04):125-126.
  23.  12
    Alea Capta Est: Foucault’s Dispositif and Capturing Chance.Nick Hardy - 2015 - Foucault Studies 19:191-216.
    It is somewhat of a mystery why one of Foucault's most important concepts—that of ‘dispositif’—is still quite vague in social and political theory; and while a small number of analyses have moved understanding forward, it remains stubbornly opaque. This paper argues that a strengthening of Foucault's concept can be achieved by integrating elements of Althusser’s formulation of a dispositif events), and a detailed examination of the shared conceptual history between dispositifs and discursive formations. Regarding, the paper contends that dispositifs restrict (...)
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  24.  19
    Library trolls and database animals: Kenneth Halliwell and Joe orton’s library book alterations.Melissa Hardie - 2018 - Angelaki 23 (1):48-60.
    This article considers the case for a theory of the queer object that focuses on its pliability – an object which operates queerly to amplify and elaborate the context in which it appears. It looks at the case of the altered book covers that Kenneth Halliwell and Joe Orton circulated through the Islington Public Library, activities for which the men were convicted and incarcerated. It considers their activities as versions of “trolling” and of otaku database fixation. It argues that rather (...)
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  25.  9
    Nature's Suit: Husserl's Phenomenological Philosophy of the Physical Sciences.Lee Hardy - 2013 - Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
    Edmund Husserl, founder of the phenomenological movement, is usually read as an idealist in his metaphysics and an instrumentalist in his philosophy of science. In _Nature’s Suit_, Lee Hardy argues that both views represent a serious misreading of Husserl’s texts. Drawing upon the full range of Husserl’s major published works together with material from Husserl’s unpublished manuscripts, Hardy develops a consistent interpretation of Husserl’s conception of logic as a theory of science, his phenomenological account of truth and rationality, (...)
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  26.  20
    Von Glaserfeld's Radical Constructivism: A Critical Review.Michael D. Hardy - 1997 - Science & Education 6 (1-2):135-150.
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  27.  15
    A preliminary determination of the functional relationship of effective reaction potential (sER) to the ordinal number of Vincentized extinction reactions (n). [REVIEW]Hardy C. Wilcoxon, Ruth Hays & Clark L. Hull - 1950 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 40 (2):194.
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  28.  40
    The philosopher as poet — a study of vedântadeśika's dehalîśastuti.Friedhelm Hardy - 1979 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 7 (3):277-325.
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  29.  17
    Hegel and the Twofold Transformation of the Concept of Reality in the Background of Kant’s Critics to the Inbegriff aller Realität.Hardy Neumann - 2021 - Revista de Humanidades de Valparaíso 18:101-116.
    In the context of a dialogue between Kant and Hegel, this paper aims at presenting some aspects of the reception that Hegel made in the Logic of Being on the so-called notion of Inbegriff aller Realität. It is a notion that Hegel retrieves and examines dialectically and speculatively, not just in a way of an exposition. The paper seeks to identify and explain the main connections of the moments in which Hegel, in the field of the development of a pure (...)
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  30.  12
    Nature’s Suit: Husserl’s Phenomenological Philosophy of the Physical Sciences.Lee Hardy - 2013 - Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
    Edmund Husserl, founder of the phenomenological movement, is usually read as an idealist in his metaphysics and an instrumentalist in his philosophy of science. In _Nature’s Suit_, Lee Hardy argues that both views represent a serious misreading of Husserl’s texts. Drawing upon the full range of Husserl’s major published works together with material from Husserl’s unpublished manuscripts, Hardy develops a consistent interpretation of Husserl’s conception of logic as a theory of science, his phenomenological account of truth and rationality, (...)
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  31.  4
    Value and Free Choice: Lavelle's Attempt at a Reconciliation.Gilbert G. Hardy - 1984 - Philosophy Today 28 (4):308-318.
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  32. Foundations of Ancient Ethics/Grundlagen Der Antiken Ethik.Jörg Hardy & George Rudebusch - 2014 - Göttingen, Germany: Vandenhoek.
    This book is an anthology with the following themes. Non-European Tradition: Bussanich interprets main themes of Hindu ethics, including its roots in ritual sacrifice, its relationship to religious duty, society, individual human well-being, and psychic liberation. To best assess the truth of Hindu ethics, he argues for dialogue with premodern Western thought. Pfister takes up the question of human nature as a case study in Chinese ethics. Is our nature inherently good (as Mengzi argued) or bad (Xunzi’s view)? Pfister ob- (...)
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  33. Conington's Virgil: Georgics.Philip Hardie & Monica R. Gale (eds.) - 2008 - Liverpool University Press.
    John Conington was a towering figure in Victorian scholarship, not least because of his remarkably sensitive and literate commentaries on Virgil’s _Aeneid. _The three-volume cloth edition of _The Works of Virgil_, begun by Conington in 1852, has been unavailable for over a century, except in rare second-hand sets. Now, for the first time, the whole of Conington’s work is being reissued in a set of six paperback volumes. Each volume includes a new introduction by an established scholar, setting Conington's commentary (...)
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  34.  62
    Ovid's Theban History: The First 'Anti- Aeneid'?Philip Hardie - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (01):224-.
    The magnificence of Augustan Rome is the indispensable setting for Ovid the urbane love poet, rusticitas is the one unforgivable sin. Yet in Ovid's perpetuum carmen cities are for the most part invisible, at best incidental backdrops; the countryside, present in many vividly drawn landscapes, constantly thrusts itself on our attention, a place where mysterious powers menace the individual's identity. This neglect of the city makes a striking, and deliberate, contrast with the Aeneid, a ktistic epic whose meaning is governed (...)
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  35.  31
    Seeking the Truth and Taking Care for Common Goods–Plato on Expertise and Recognizing Experts.Jörg Hardy - 2010 - Episteme 7 (1):7-22.
    In this paper I discuss Plato's conception of expertise as a part of the Platonic theory of a good, successful life (eudaimonia). In various Platonic dialogues, Socrates argues that the good life requires a certain kind of knowledge that guides all our good, beneficial actions: the “knowledge of the good and bad”, which is to be acquired by “questioning ourselves and examining our and others’ beliefs”. This knowledge encompasses the particular knowledge of how to recognize experts in a given technical (...)
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  36.  14
    A Developmental Perspective on Pediatric Decision-Making Capacity.N. Hardy & N. Nortjé - 2021 - In Nico Nortjé & Johan C. Bester (eds.), Pediatric Ethics: Theory and Practice. Springer Verlag. pp. 23-37.
    Decision-making capacityDecision-making capacity for pediatric patients can be difficult to determine and is influenced by a myriad of developmental considerations. This chapter begins with a discussion concerning the nature of decision-makingDecision-making and what constitutes competency. The “rule of sevensRule of sevens” frameworkFramework is then used to explicate pertinent developmental milestonesMilestones for children, dividing pediatric developmentDevelopment into 0–7, 7–14, and 14+ years of age. In particular, the authors highlight the most important cognitiveCognitive, socialSocial, andSocial emotionalemotionalEmotional considerations in each of these periods (...)
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  37. Liberty Incorporating 'Four Essays on Liberty'.Edited Henry Hardy (ed.) - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Liberty is a new, expanded edition of what Isaiah Berlin himself regarded as his most important book - Four Essays on Liberty, a standard text of liberalism and constantly in demand since it was first published in 1969. Berlin's editor, Henry Hardy, has revised the text, incorporating a fifth essay that Berlin himself had hoped to include. He has also added further pieces that bear on the same topic, so that all Berlin's principal statements on liberty are at last (...)
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  38.  35
    Mass Violence and the Continuum of Destruction: A study of C. P. Taylor’s Good.James Hardie-Bick - 2020 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 33 (2):477-495.
    There are important studies that have directly focused on how, in times of conflict, it is possible for previously law abiding people to commit the most atrocious acts of cruelty and violence. The work of Erich Fromm, Hannah Arendt, Zygmunt Bauman and Ernest Becker have all contemplated the driving force of aggression and mass violence to further our understanding of how people are capable of engaging in extreme forms of cruelty and violence. This paper specifically addresses these issues by focusing (...)
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  39.  60
    Expert Knowledge and Human Wisdom: A Socratic Note on the Philosophy of Expertise.Jörg Hardy & Margarita Kaiser - 2018 - Topoi 37 (1):79-89.
    In this paper we attempt to understand what Socrates says about expertise and virtue in Plato’s dialogue Laches in the light of Socrates’ idea of “human wisdom” in the Apology of Socrates. Conducting a good life requires both “knowledge about good and bad things”, that is, knowledge about human well-being, and “human wisdom”. Socrates aspires to epistemic autonomy: Trust in your own reason, and don’t let any expert tell you anything about your own happiness.
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  40.  38
    gunpowder plot, 7 Hampshire, S., 79-80 Handel, GF, 137 Hardy, T., 18 Hare, RM, x, xii, 24.G. Eliot, T. S. Eliot, W. Empsom, M. Ernst, M. C. Escher, B. Flanagan, H. Focillon, F. M. Ford, A. Fowler & F. J. Haydn - 2004 - In John Hawthorne (ed.), Ethics. Wiley Periodicals. pp. 81.
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  41. Embodied thoughts. Concepts and compositionality without language.B. Hardy-Vallee & Pierre Poirier - 2006 - Theoria Et Historia Scientarum 1:53-72.
    Is thinking necessarily linguistic? Do we _think with words_, to use Bermudez’s (2003) phrase? Or does thinking occur in some other, yet to be determined, representational format? Or again do we think in various formats, switching from one to the other as tasks demand? In virtue perhaps of the ambiguous nature of first-person introspective data on the matter, philosophers have traditionally disagreed on this question, some thinking that thought had to be pictorial, other insisting that it could not be but (...)
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  42.  36
    One table or two? scientific anti-realism and Husserl’s phenomenology.Lee Hardy - 2020 - Continental Philosophy Review 54 (4):437-452.
    In this study I argue that Husserl’s phenomenology is compatible with a realistic interpretation of scientific theories. That said, I distinguish between the realistic interpretation of scientific theories and scientific realism. The former holds that the theoretical terms of a scientific theory are intended to refer, and that if we have good reason to believe that a scientific theory is true then we also have good reason to believe the entities it refers to exist. Scientific realism holds that the world (...)
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  43. Conington's Virgil: Aeneid Books I - Ii.Philip Hardie & Anne Rogerson (eds.) - 2008 - Liverpool University Press.
    John Conington was a towering figure in Victorian scholarship, not least because of his remarkably sensitive and literate commentaries on Virgil’s _Aeneid. _The three-volume cloth edition of _The Works of Virgil_, begun by Conington in 1852, has been unavailable for over a century, except in rare second-hand sets. Now, for the first time, the whole of Conington’s work is being reissued in a set of six paperback volumes. Each volume includes a new introduction by an established scholar, setting Conington's commentary (...)
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  44.  16
    Catcher in the lie: resisting bovine ordure in social epistemology.Nick Hardy - 2021 - Journal of Critical Realism 20 (2):125-145.
    ABSTRACT This paper takes Lee McIntyre’s argument for post-truth and uses it to explain the contemporary rise of bad faith and bullshitting social actors. The paper then posits the critical realist metatheoretical framework of ontological realism, epistemic relativity, and judgemental rationality as a means of understanding the societal placement and the operation of bullshit and bad faith. Utilizing the CR concept of alethic truth enables epistemologies to be judged on a standard of truth separate from the epistemology itself. Using this (...)
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  45.  7
    Three Critics of the Enlightenment: Vico, Hamann, Herder.Henry Hardy (ed.) - 2000 - Princeton University Press.
    Isaiah Berlin was deeply admired during his life, but his full contribution was perhaps underestimated because of his preference for the long essay form. The efforts of Henry Hardy to edit Berlin's work and reintroduce it to a broad, eager readership have gone far to remedy this. Now, Princeton is pleased to return to print, under one cover, Berlin's essays on Vico, Hamann, and Herder. These essays on three relatively uncelebrated thinkers are not marginal ruminations, but rather among Berlin's (...)
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  46.  12
    On the origin of domesticity: A test of Keeler’s “black-gene” hypothesis.Carroll W. Hughes, Hardy J. Pottinger & Joe Safron - 1981 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 17 (6):289-292.
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  47.  91
    The speech of Pythagoras in Ovid Metamorphoses_ 15: Empedoclean _Epos.Philip Hardie - 1995 - Classical Quarterly 45 (01):204-.
    Ovidians continue to be puzzled by the 404-line speech put into the mouth of Pythagoras in book 15 of the Metamorphoses. Questions of literary decorum and quality are insistently raised: how does the philosopher's popular science consort with the predominantly mythological matter of the preceding fourteen books? Do Pythagoras' revelations provide some kind of unifying ground, a ‘key’, for the endless variety of the poem? Can one take the Speech as a serious essay in philosophical didactic, or is it all (...)
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  48.  25
    The Tangle of Science: Reliability Beyond Method, Rigour, and Objectivity.Nancy Cartwright, Jeremy Hardie, Eleonora Montuschi, Matthew Soleiman & Ann C. Thresher - 2022 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Science is remarkably reliable. It puts people on the moon, performs laser eye surgery, tells us about ancient civilisations and species, and predicts the future of our climate. What underwrites this reliability? This book argues that the standard answers—the scientific method, rigour, and objectivity—are insufficient for the job. Here we propose a new model of science that places its products front and centre. This is the ‘Tangle of Science’. In this book we show how any reliable piece of science is (...)
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  49.  12
    Are We Prepared for Tomorrow’s Health Challenges?Angela Z. Monson, George E. Hardy & Ed Thompson - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (s4):33-38.
    Thank you so much for the invitation to be here with you. It is always a pleasure to be with people who understand, believe in, and know the importance of public health. Those of us who work in the legislative arena know how infrequent it is to have dialogue and conversation with people who really have a good, tangible, hands-on working knowledge of health care, and particularly of public health.The notion of public health is an interesting one. It will range—if (...)
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  50.  10
    Molecular biology of herbicides.R. W. F. Hardy & R. T. Giaquinta - 1984 - Bioessays 1 (4):152-156.
    One of the most dynamic areas of plant molecular biology is the investigation of the actions of three classes of herbicides: s‐triazines (atrazine, simazine), glyphosate, and sulfonylureas (chlorsulfuron, sulfometuron methyl) (Figure 1). The results of this work are expected to provide the first significant applications of plant biotechnology: directly, in the genetic engineering of crop plants resistant to specific herbicides and, indirectly, in providing a molecular basis for the rational design of new herbicides for specific biological targets.s‐Triazines affect photosynthesis by (...)
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