Results for ' ideas of ideas'

941 found
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  1. Ethical Ideas of Mahatma Gandhi Seminar Papers and Discussion.Kewal Krishan Mittal & Seminar on Ethical Ideas of Gandhiji - 1981 - Gandhi Bhavan, University of Delhi Sole Distributors, Naya Prokash.
     
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  2.  64
    A critical discussion of Prior’s philosophical and tense-logical analysis of the ideas of indeterminism and human freedom.Peter Øhrstrøm - 2019 - Synthese 196 (1):69-85.
    This paper is a critical discussion of A.N. Prior’s contribution to the modern understanding of indeterminism and human freedom of choice. Prior suggested that these ideas should be conceived in terms of his tense logic. It can be demonstrated that his approach provides an attractive formalization that makes it possible to discuss indeterminism and human freedom of choice in a very precise manner and in a broader metaphysical context. It is also argued that Prior’s development of this approach was (...)
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  3. (1 other version)The Logic of the History of Ideas.Mark Bevir - 2000 - Philosophical Quarterly 50 (200):407-409.
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  4.  97
    Adventures of Ideas.Alfred North Whitehead - 1933 - Free Press.
    The title of this book, Adventures of Ideas, bears two meanings, both applicable to the subject-matter.
  5.  63
    Kant on limits, boundaries, and the positive function of ideas.Stephen Howard - 2022 - European Journal of Philosophy 30 (1):64-78.
    It is commonly claimed that Kant's critical philosophy aims to limit reason's speculative use and its metaphysical pretensions. This paper argues that such claims should be amended in light of a technical distinction between negative limits and positive boundaries that Kant held throughout his career. Kant's only extended discussion of this distinction appears in §§57–60 of the Prolegomena, a division entitled “On pure reason's boundary‐determination”. I examine these sections in detail in order to elucidate the account of the limits and (...)
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  6.  9
    Aquinas’ Solution of the Problem of the Persistence of Accidents in the Eucharist and Its Impact on Later Developments in the European History of Ideas.Gyula Klima - 2023 - In The Metaphysics and Theology of the Eucharist: A Historical-Analytical Survey of the Problems of the Sacrament. Springer Verlag. pp. 199-212.
    This chapter focuses on how Aquinas’ solution of the problem of the persistence of eucharistic species and other scholastics’ reactions to it opened up certain conceptual possibilities in the Scholastic Aristotelian tradition that would not have been there without it, and which, therefore, were pointing the way toward later conceptual developments in the post-medieval and early modern philosophical traditions in logic, and metaphysics.
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  7. Ideas of heredity, reproduction and eugenics in Britain, 1800–1875.John C. Waller - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (3):457-489.
    In this paper I begin by arguing that there are significant intellectual and normative continuities between pre-Victorian hereditarianism and later Victorian eugenical ideologies. Notions of mental heredity and of the dangers of transmitting hereditary ‘taints’ were already serious concerns among medical practitioners and laymen in the early nineteenth century. I then show how the Victorian period witnessed an increasing tendency for these traditional concerns about hereditary transmission and the integrity of bloodlines to be projected onto the level of national health. (...)
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  8.  49
    Berkeley and the Perception of Ideas.Douglas Odegard - 1971 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 1 (2):155 - 171.
    It is important to try to understand Berkeley's exact position on what it is for someone to perceive an idea. He is frequently presented as holding that to perceive an idea is to be confronted by an object which is in some sense mind-dependent and private, and, if taken in a certain way, such a remark is not inaccurate. But the interpretation which renders it accurate needs to be specified and this is a task which awaits completion. Until it is (...)
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  9.  3
    Philosophical Essays on the Ideas of a Good Society.Yeager Hudson & Creighton Peden - 1988 - Edwin Mellen Press.
    A collection of essays arising from the first International Conference on Social Philosophy, which addressed some of the issues facing humankind at the end of the 20th century including: justice; freedom; power; equality; privacy; conscience versus law; technology and changing values; population; business ethics; nuclear war; violence; terrorism; and peace.
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  10.  14
    Terrorism research and the diffusion of ideas.Edna O. F. Reid - 1993 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 6 (1):17-37.
    The diffusion of ideas about contemporary terrorism is analyzed using a sociology of science methodology. One of the most common means of creating understandings of a phenomenon is the development and diffusion of ideas that influence the positions adopted by a wide range of actors, including government bureaucrats and decision makers, legislative and corporate bodies, and the public. How did terrorism researchers interact with these actors to construct, maintain, and modify the development and perception of contemporary terrorism? How (...)
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  11.  25
    The re-orientation of aesthetics and its significance for aesthetic education. In The turn to aesthetics: an interdisciplinary exchange of ideas in applied and philosophical aesthetics.Alexandra Mouriki & D. Palmer, C. And Torevell - 2008 - Liverpool, UK: Liverpool Hope University Press.
    More and more these days it is asked whether aesthetics is still possible. A question that, given the context and phrasing, seems to direct us towards its answer. Conferences and meetings, books and journal specials examine the issue of aesthetics, talk about rediscovery or return of aesthetics. Well known philosophers and aestheticians underscore the need to reconsider the foundations of aesthetics and set new directions for aesthetics today (Berleant, 2004) or attempt to expand aesthetics beyond aesthetics–like Welsch, for example who (...)
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  12. Hobbes's System of Ideas.J. W. N. Watkins & Keith C. Brown - 1967 - Philosophy 42 (160):177-181.
     
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  13. The ideas of pure reason.Michael Rohlf - 2010 - In Paul Guyer (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  14.  52
    Decolonising ideas of healing in medical education.Amali U. Lokugamage, Tharanika Ahillan & S. D. C. Pathberiya - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (4):265-272.
    The legacy of colonial rule has permeated into all aspects of life and contributed to healthcare inequity. In response to the increased interest in social justice, medical educators are thinking of ways to decolonise education and produce doctors who can meet the complex needs of diverse populations. This paper aims to explore decolonising ideas of healing within medical education following recent events including the University College London Medical School’s Decolonising the Medical Curriculum public engagement event, the Wellcome Collection ’s (...)
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  15. Darwin and some leading ideas of contemporary Western culture.Stanley N. Salthe - 2009 - Ludus Vitalis 17 (32):173-178.
     
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  16.  22
    Max Skjönsberg, The Persistence of Party: Ideas of Harmonious Discord in Eighteenth-Century Britain.Craig Smith - 2022 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 20 (1):73-77.
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  17. The Social and Political Ideas of the Muckrakers.David Chalmers - 1964 - Science and Society 28 (4):466-468.
  18.  8
    The Bankruptcy of Ideas: Why Modern Schools of Architecture Ignore Traditional Urbanism.Victor Deupi - 2000 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 20 (4):271-274.
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  19.  16
    Understanding Modernity: Ideas of Liberty in Early Modern Europe: From Machiavelli to Milton, by Hilary Gatti, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 2015, x + 215 pp., $46.95/£39.95 (cloth), $22.95/£18.95.Brayton Polka - 2020 - The European Legacy 25 (5):600-605.
    Volume 25, Issue 5, August 2020, Page 600-605.
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  20.  10
    (1 other version)Plato's doctrine of ideas.John Alexander Stewart - 1909 - Oxford,: The Clarendon press.
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  21. (1 other version)The Confusion of Ideas.Roger-pol Droit - 1993 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 98:136.
     
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  22. The Wealth of Ideas: A History of Economic Thought.Alessandro Roncaglia - 2005 - Cambridge University Press.
    The Wealth of Ideas, first published in 2005, traces the history of economic thought, from its prehistory to the present day. In this eloquently written, scientifically rigorous and well documented book, chapters on William Petty, Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Karl Marx, William Stanley Jevons, Carl Menger, Léon Walras, Alfred Marshall, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter and Piero Sraffa alternate with chapters on other important figures and on debates of the period. Economic thought is seen as developing between two opposite (...)
     
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  23. The Logic of the History of Ideas. By Mark Bevir.D. W. Price - 2002 - The European Legacy 7 (1):138-138.
     
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  24.  28
    The control of ideas by facts. II.John Dewey - 1907 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 4 (10):253-259.
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  25.  14
    A history of ideas in Brazil.Cruz Costa - 1964 - Berkeley,: University of California Press.
  26. Modelling the History of Ideas.Arianna Betti & Hein van den Berg - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (4):812-835.
    We propose a new method for the history of ideas that has none of the shortcomings so often ascribed to this approach. We call this method the model approach to the history of ideas. We argue that any adequately developed and implementable method to trace continuities in the history of human thought, or concept drift, will require that historians use explicit interpretive conceptual frameworks. We call these frameworks models. We argue that models enhance the comprehensibility of historical texts, (...)
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  27.  73
    The Epistemological Status of Ideas: Locke Compared to Arnauld.Martha Brandt Bolton - 1992 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 9 (4):409 - 424.
  28.  94
    On The Power Of Ideas.Oren Harman - 2007 - Minerva 45 (2):175-189.
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  29. Waging the war of ideas" : economics as a textbook science and its possible influence on human minds.Silja Graupe - 2019 - In Samuel Decker, Wolfram Elsner & Svenja Flechtner (eds.), Advancing pluralism in teaching economics: international perspectives on a textbook science. New York: Routledge.
     
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  30. The political-ideas of Marshall, John.Sk Padover - 1959 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 26 (1):47-70.
  31.  2
    The Politico-social Ideas of Hugues Félicité Robert de Lammennais, 1830-1854.Charles Siegfried Pearson - 1936
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  32.  47
    The Regime of Castes in Populations of Ideas.Pierre Auger & James H. Labadie - 1958 - Diogenes 6 (22):39-54.
    Nothing has yet been done, and, here, in the middle of the twentieth century, it is fast becoming too late to draw up a suitable catalogue of the works of human wisdom. We are forced to project for the future the complete realization of our desires. This future will no doubt discover a conscious and effective organization of thought and action—a constant good fortune in the pursuit of legitimate satisfactions through a total mastery of natural forces—in a word, a perfect (...)
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  33.  68
    The development of ideas of spiritual value in chinese philosophy.T'ang Chun-I. - 1959 - Philosophy East and West 9 (1/2):32-34.
  34. The ethics of pardon and peace : A dialogue of ideas between the thought of Pope John II and the risale-I nur.Thomas Michel - 2005 - In Ian S. Markham & İbrahim Özdemir (eds.), Globalization, ethics, and Islam: the case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. Burlington, Vt: Ashgate.
     
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  35.  13
    The political ideas of Benoy Kumar Sarkar.Bholanath Bandyopadhyay - 1984 - Calcutta: K.P. Bagchi.
  36.  4
    A history of ideas: three areas of Western philosophy.Gunnar Norlén - 2002 - Usa River, Tanzania: Research Institute of Makumira University College.
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  37.  47
    Uncertainty and the history of ideas.Adrian Blau - 2011 - History and Theory 50 (3):358-372.
    ABSTRACTIntellectual historians often make empirical claims, but can never know for certain if these claims are right. Uncertainty is thus inevitable for intellectual historians. But accepting uncertainty is not enough: we should also act on it, by trying to reduce and report it. We can reduce uncertainty by amassing valid data from different sources to weigh the strengths and weaknesses of competing explanations, rather than trying to “prove” an empirical claim by looking for evidence that fits it. Then we should (...)
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  38.  50
    John Sergeant's Criticism of Locke's Theory of Ideas.Brian Cooney - 1973 - Modern Schoolman 50 (2):143-158.
  39.  18
    The persistence of party: ideas of harmonious discord in eighteenth-century Britain.Andrew C. Thompson - 2023 - Intellectual History Review 33 (2):360-362.
    Max Skjönsberg’s contribution to the “Ideas in Context” series represents a serious, intelligent and insightful attempt to gather together thinking about political parties in Britain from a series...
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  40. The Crooked Timber of Humanity: Chapters in the History of Ideas.Isaiah Berlin - 1990 - Oxford: Pimlico. Edited by Henry Hardy.
    "Out of the crooked timber of humanity, no straight thing was ever made."--Immanuel Kant Isaiah Berlin was one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century--an activist of the intellect who marshaled vast erudition and eloquence in defense of the endangered values of individual liberty and moral and political pluralism. In the Crooked Timber of Humanity he exposes the links between the ideas of the past and the social and political cataclysms of our present century: between the Platonic (...)
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  41.  48
    Leibniz and the Ideas of Sensible Qualities.Hidé Ishiguro - 1971 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures 5:49-63.
    In order to understand the thoughts of Leibniz it is important to stop putting Leibniz into the convenient pigeon-hole of rationalist, and stop thinking of him merely as the metaphysician and constructor of systems so vividly ridiculed by Voltaire in Candide . Most important of all, one should not attempt to see Leibniz's philosophy as a completely articulated and integrated whole or as built on three or five metaphysical and logical principles. It is better to remember that Leibniz was a (...)
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  42.  64
    Reflections on the History of Ideas.Arthur O. Lovejoy - 1940 - Journal of the History of Ideas 1 (1/4):3.
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  43.  11
    Hume’s Theory of Ideas.Wayne Waxman - 2016 - In Paul Russell (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of David Hume. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Commentators divide on whether the basic elements of Hume’s philosophy—perceptions, their division into impressions and ideas, and their associative relation—should be construed as objects and relations between objects or as representations of objects and their relations. Although the latter reading is generally favored, in this chapter the author argues that the textual evidence favors the former and that Hume’s philosophy should be interpreted accordingly. The focus is on Part 1 of the first book of the Treatise but subsequent texts (...)
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  44.  8
    Experiments on the unreflective ideas of men and women.Genevieve Savage Manchester - 1905 - Psychological Review 12 (1):50-66.
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  45.  82
    (1 other version)Towards a Formal Ontology of Information. Selected Ideas of K. Turek.Roman Krzanowski - 2016 - Zagadnienia Filozoficzne W Nauce 61:23-52.
    There are many ontologies of the world or of specific phenomena such as time, matter, space, and quantum mechanics1. However, ontologies of information are rather rare. One of the reasons behind this is that information is most frequently associated with communication and computing, and not with ‘the furniture of the world’. But what would be the nature of an ontology of information? For it to be of significant import it should be amenable to formalization in a logico-grammatical formalism. A candidate (...)
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  46.  20
    The Wanderings of Ideas or a Model of Humanity?Aleksander Lewin - 1997 - Dialogue and Universalism 7 (9):11-24.
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  47. The Practical Origins of Ideas: Genealogy as Conceptual Reverse-Engineering (Open Access).Matthieu Queloz - 2021 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Why did such highly abstract ideas as truth, knowledge, or justice become so important to us? What was the point of coming to think in these terms? This book presents a philosophical method designed to answer such questions: the method of pragmatic genealogy. Pragmatic genealogies are partly fictional, partly historical narratives exploring what might have driven us to develop certain ideas in order to discover what these do for us. The book uncovers an under-appreciated tradition of pragmatic genealogy (...)
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  48.  27
    The Status and Appraisal of Classic Texts: An Essay on Political Theory, Its Inheritance, and the History of Ideas.Thomas W. Simon - 1988 - Philosophical Books 29 (3):141-144.
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  49.  14
    Ideas of Liberty in Early Modern Europe: From Machiavelli to Milton.Hilary Gatti - 2015 - Princeton University Press.
    Europe's long sixteenth century—a period spanning the years roughly from the voyages of Columbus in the 1490s to the English Civil War in the 1640s—was an era of power struggles between avaricious and unscrupulous princes, inquisitions and torture chambers, and religious differences of ever more violent fervor. Ideas of Liberty in Early Modern Europe argues that this turbulent age also laid the conceptual foundations of our modern ideas about liberty, justice, and democracy. Hilary Gatti shows how these (...) emerged in response to the often-violent entrenchment of monarchical power and the fragmentation of religious authority, against the backdrop of the westward advance of Islam and the discovery of the New World. She looks at Machiavelli's defense of republican political liberty, and traces how liberty became intertwined with free will and religious pluralism in the writings of Luther, Erasmus, Jean Bodin, and Giordano Bruno. She examines how the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre and the clash of science and religion gave rise to concepts of liberty as freedom of thought and expression. Returning to Machiavelli and moving on to Jacques Auguste de Thou, Paolo Sarpi, and Milton, Gatti delves into debates about the roles of parliamentary government and a free press in guaranteeing liberties. Drawing on a breadth of canonical and lesser-known writings, Ideas of Liberty in Early Modern Europe reveals how an era stricken by war and injustice gave birth to a more enlightened world. (shrink)
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  50.  33
    The Deadly Ideas of Neoliberalism: How the IMF undermined Public Health and the Fight Against AIDS – By Rick Rowden.Solomon R. Benatar - 2011 - Developing World Bioethics 11 (1):55-56.
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