Results for 'Albert Edmund Bouffard'

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  1. Works to Be Done in Buddhist Criticism.Albert J. Edmunds - 1911 - The Monist 21 (1):158-160.
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  2.  63
    An Ancient Moslem Account of Christianity.Albert J. Edmunds - 1905 - The Monist 15 (1):120-123.
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  3.  45
    A Buddhist Genesis.Albert J. Edmunds - 1904 - The Monist 14 (2):207-214.
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  4.  57
    Buddhist Influence on Christianity.Albert J. Edmunds - 1913 - The Monist 23 (4):600-603.
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  5.  87
    Buddhist Loans to Christianity.Albert J. Edmunds - 1912 - The Monist 22 (1):129-138.
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  6.  25
    Buddhist loans to christianity. With special reference to Richard garbe. Second article.Albert J. Edmunds - 1912 - The Monist 22 (4):636 - 637.
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  7.  44
    Corrections: The Washington manuscript and the resurrection in mark.Albert J. Edmunds - 1919 - The Monist 29 (4):525.
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  8.  39
    Note on “A Buddhist Genesis”.Albert J. Edmunds - 1904 - The Monist 14 (3):472-473.
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  9.  45
    The Accessibility of Buddhist Lore to the Christian Evangelists.Albert J. Edmunds - 1913 - The Monist 23 (4):517-522.
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  10.  65
    The End of Mark in the Curetonian Syriac.Albert J. Edmunds - 1920 - The Monist 30 (3):443-445.
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  11.  74
    The progress of buddhist research; with something about pentecost.Albert J. Edmunds - 1912 - The Monist 22 (4):633 - 635.
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  12.  70
    The Six Endings of Mark.Albert J. Edmunds - 1919 - The Monist 29 (4):520-525.
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  13.  58
    The Text of the Resurrection in Mark, and its Testimony to the Apparitional Theory: With a Preface on Luke’s Mutilation of Mark.Albert J. Edmunds - 1917 - The Monist 27 (2):161-178.
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  14.  58
    The Washington Manuscript and the Resurrection in Mark.Albert J. Edmunds - 1918 - The Monist 28 (4):528-529.
  15. (1 other version)ostscript to Buddhist and Christian Gospels. [REVIEW]Albert J. Edmunds - 1916 - Ancient Philosophy (Misc) 26:160.
     
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  16.  8
    Remembering Al Jonsen.Edmund G. Howe - 2020 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 31 (4):383-383.
    The author, editor-in-chief of The Journal of Clinical Ethics, recalls the contributions of Albert R. Jonsen, PhD, one of the founding members of the editorial board of the journal.
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  17. Europe, War and the Pathic Condition. A Phenomenological and Pragmatist Take on the Current Events in Ukraine.Albert Dikovich - 2023 - Pragmatism Today 14 (1):13-33.
    In my paper, I develop a phenomenological and pragmatist reflection on the fragility of liberal democracy’s moral foundations in times of war. Following Judith Shklar’s conception of the “liberalism of fear”, the legitimacy of the liberal-democratic order is seen as grounded in experiences of suffering caused by political violence. It is also assumed that the liberalism of fear delivers an adequate conception of the normative foundations of the European project. With the help of phenomenologists such as Edmund Husserl, Maurice (...)
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  18. (1 other version)Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung. Herausgeg. von Edmund Husserl. Band 7. [REVIEW]Albert Pagel - 1926 - Société Française de Philosophie, Bulletin 31:371.
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  19.  72
    Oneself as oneself and not as another.Albert A. Johnstone - 1996 - Husserl Studies 13 (1):1-17.
    In recent years it has become popular to model putative refutations of skepticism on Kant's answer to Hume, that is, on transcendental arguments purporting to show that the skeptical theses presupposes essential features of the very conceptual scheme they call into question. In his book, Oneself as Another, Paul Ricoeur makes the claim that transcendental considerations of the sort invalidate Edmund Husserl's foundationalist epistemological enterprise, that of uncovering the genesis of primitive concepts of oneself, world, and others in a (...)
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  20.  34
    American Occultism and Japanese Buddhism: Albert J. Edmunds, D. T. Suzuki, and Translocative History.Thomas Tweed - 2005 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 32 (2):249-281.
  21.  11
    At the existentialist café: freedom, being, and apricot cocktails with Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Martin Heidegger, Karl Jaspers, Edmund Husserl, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and others.Sarah Bakewell - 2016 - New York: Other Press.
    "[This book is] account of one of the twentieth centurys major intellectual movements and the revolutionary thinkers who came to shape it"--Amazon.com.
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  22.  68
    The First Buddhist Council. (With Prefatory Note by Albert J. Edmunds).Teitaro Suzuki - 1904 - The Monist 14 (2):253-282.
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  23.  41
    “This New Conquering Empire of Light and Reason”: Edmund Burke, James Gillray, and the Dangers of Enlightenment.James Schmidt - 2014 - Diametros 40:126-148.
    This article examines the use of images of “light” and “enlightenment” in Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France and in the controversy that greeted the book, with an emphasis on caricatures of Burke and his book by James Gillray and others. Drawing on Hans Blumenberg’s discussion of the metaphor of “light as truth,” it situates this controversy within the broader usage of images of light and reason in eighteenth-century frontispieces and (drawing on the work of J. G. (...)
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  24. Logical Investigations.Edmund Husserl - 1970 - London, England: Routledge. Edited by Dermot Moran.
  25.  28
    Analyses Concerning Passive and Active Synthesis: Lectures on Transcendental Logic.Edmund Husserl - 2001 - Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    These lectures are the first extensive application of Husserl's newly developed genetic phenomenology to perceptual experience & to the way in which it is connected to judgments & cognition. Students of phenomenology will find this work indispensable.
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  26.  21
    Existentialism and human existence: an account of five major philosophers.Thomas Koenig - 1992 - Malabar, Fla.: Krieger.
    [1] The phenomenology of Edmund Husserl -- The existential philosophy of Albert Camus -- The existenz philosophy of Karl Jaspers -- The philosophy of Gabriel Marcel -- The philosophy of Martin Heidegger -- v. 2. The existential philosophy of Søren Kierkegaard -- The existential philosophy of Ortega y Gasset -- The philosophy of Martin Buber -- The existential philosophy of Nicolas Berdyaev -- The philosophy of Paul Ricoeur.
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  27. The internal morality of clinical medicine: A paradigm for the ethics of the helping and healing professions.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 2001 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 26 (6):559 – 579.
    The moral authority for professional ethics in medicine customarily rests in some source external to medicine, i.e., a pre-existing philosophical system of ethics or some form of social construction, like consensus or dialogue. Rather, internal morality is grounded in the phenomena of medicine, i.e., in the nature of the clinical encounter between physician and patient. From this, a philosophy of medicine is derived which gives moral force to the duties, virtues and obligations of physicians qua physicians. Similarly, an ethic specific (...)
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  28. From self-defense to violent protest.Edmund Tweedy Flanigan - 2023 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 26 (7):1094-1118.
    It is an orthodoxy of modern political thought that violence is morally incompatible with politics, with the important exception of the permissible violence carried out by the state. The “commonsense argument” for permissible political violence denies this by extending the principles of defensive ethics to the context of state-subject interaction. This article has two aims: First, I critically investigate the commonsense argument and its limits. I argue that the scope of permissions it licenses is significantly more limited than its proponents (...)
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  29. THE PHILOSOPHY OF KURT GODEL - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS.Alexis Karpouzos - 2024 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy 8 (14):12.
    Gödel's Philosophical Legacy Kurt Gödel's contributions to philosophy extend beyond his incompleteness theorems. He engaged deeply with the work of other philosophers, including Immanuel Kant and Edmund Husserl, and explored topics such as the nature of time, the structure of the universe, and the relationship between mathematics and reality. Gödel's philosophical writings, though less well-known than his mathematical work, offer rich insights into his views on the nature of existence, the limits of human knowledge, and the interplay between the (...)
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  30. Addiction: choice or compulsion?Edmund Henden, Hans Olav Melberg & Ole Rogeberg - 2013 - Frontiers in Psychiatry 4 (77):11.
    Normative thinking about addiction has traditionally been divided between, on the one hand, a medical model which sees addiction as a disease characterized by compulsive and relapsing drug use over which the addict has little or no control and, on the other, a moral model which sees addiction as a choice characterized by voluntary behaviour under the control of the addict. Proponents of the former appeal to evidence showing that regular consumption of drugs causes persistent changes in the brain structures (...)
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  31.  47
    Is maximization theory general, and is it refutable?Edmund J. Fantino - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (3):390-391.
  32. The commodification of medical and health care: The moral consequences of a paradigm shift from a professional to a market ethic.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 1999 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 24 (3):243 – 266.
    Commodification of health care is a central tenet of managed care as it functions in the United States. As a result, price, cost, quality, availability, and distribution of health care are increasingly left to the workings of the competitive marketplace. This essay examines the conceptual, ethical, and practical implications of commodification, particularly as it affects the healing relationship between health professionals and their patients. It concludes that health care is not a commodity, that treating it as such is deleterious to (...)
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  33. (1 other version)Quandary ethics.Edmund Pincoffs - 1971 - Mind 80 (320):552-571.
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  34.  21
    Leçons pour une phénoménologie de la conscience intime du temps.Edmund Husserl - 1996 - Presses Universitaires de France - PUF.
    Une philosophie atteste sa grandeur en affrontant les questions les plus difficiles. Donc, au premier chef, celle du Temps. Aussi est-ce dès 1904-1905, à Göttingen, que Husserl tenta une analyse phénoménologique du temps, en lui appliquant les concepts fondamentaux d'intentionnalité et de réduction. En 1916, Edith Stein, alors assistante de Husserl, entreprit d'éditer ces cours, et de les compléter par d'autres textes, postérieurs (1905-1910). Ce n'est pourtant qu'en 1928 que l'entreprise aboutit, quand Heidegger, qui venait de publier Etre et Temps (...)
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  35.  83
    The American medical ethics revolution: how the AMA's code of ethics has transformed physicians' relationships to patients, professionals, and society.Robert Baker (ed.) - 1999 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    The American Medical Association enacted its Code of Ethics in 1847, the first such national codification. In this volume, a distinguished group of experts from the fields of medicine, bioethics, and history of medicine reflect on the development of medical ethics in the United States, using historical analyses as a springboard for discussions of the problems of the present, including what the editors call "a sense of moral crisis precipitated by the shift from a system of fee-for-service medicine to a (...)
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  36. Principlism and Its Alleged Competitors.Tom L. Beauchamp - 1995 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5 (3):181-198.
    Principles that provide general normative frameworks in bioethics have been criticized since the late 1980s, when several different methods and types of moral philosophy began to be proposed as alternatives or substitutes. Several accounts have emerged in recent years, including: (1) Impartial Rule Theory (supported in this issue by K. Danner Clouser), (2) Casuistry (supported in this issue by Albert Jonsen), and (3) Virtue Ethics (supported in this issue by Edmund D. Pellegrino). Although often presented as rival methods (...)
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  37.  35
    Marxisme orthodoxe ou marxisme occidental? La réception de Lukács en France dans les années 1940 et 1950.Alix Bouffard & Alexandre Feron - 2021 - Actuel Marx 69 (1):11-27.
    En France, Lukács est considéré aussi bien comme un représentant de l’orthodoxie marxiste que comme un auteur subversif fondateur de la tradition du marxisme hétérodoxe. Cet article revient sur la genèse de cette appréciation ambivalente, qui trouve ses sources dans les années 1940 et 1950. C’est durant ces années que s’élaborent les cadres et présupposés de la réception française de son œuvre, à travers une série d’épisodes dont les enjeux sont à la fois théoriques, éditoriaux et politiques : l’intervention de (...)
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  38. Phänomenologische Psychologie: Vorlesungen Sommersemester 1925.Edmund Husserl - 1962 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 18 (2):203-206.
     
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  39.  76
    Probability and Opinion: A Study in the Medieval Presuppositions of Post-Medieval Theories of Probability.Edmund F. Byrne (ed.) - 1968 - The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.
    Recognizing that probability (the Greek doxa) was understood in pre-modern theories as the polar opposite of certainty (episteme), the author of this study elaborates the forms which these polar opposites have taken in some twentieth century writers and then, in greater detail, in the writings of Thomas Aquinas. Profiting from subsequent more sophisticated theories of probability, he examines how Aquinas’s judgments about everything from God to gossip depend on schematizations of the polarity between the systematic and the non-systematic: revelation/reason, science/opinion, (...)
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  40.  15
    Phänomenologische Psychologie: Vorlesungen Sommersemester 1925.Edmund Husserl & Walter Biemel - 1962 - Martinus Nijhoff.
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  41. Philosophical Reasoning.Edmund L. Gettier - 1965 - Philosophical Review 74 (2):266.
  42.  73
    The small improvement argument, epistemicism and incomparability.Edmund Tweedy Flanigan & John Halstead - 2018 - Economics and Philosophy 34 (2):199-219.
    :The Small Improvement Argument is the leading argument for value incomparability. All vagueness-based accounts of the SIA have hitherto assumed the truth of supervaluationism, but supervaluationism has some well-known problems. This paper explores the implications of epistemicism, a leading rival theory. We argue that if epistemicism is true, then options are comparable in small improvement cases. Moreover, even if SIAs do not exploit vagueness, if epistemicism is true, then options cannot be on a par. The epistemicist account of the SIA (...)
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  43. L'origine de la géométrie.Edmund Husserl & Jacques Derrida - 1965 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 70 (1):122-123.
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  44. Die Frage nach dem Ursprung der Geometrie als intentional-historisches Problem.Edmund Husserl - 1939 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 1 (2):203-225.
     
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  45. Moral Animals and Moral Responsibility.Albert W. Musschenga - 2015 - Les ateliers de l'éthique/The Ethics Forum 10 (2):38-59.
    Albert Musschenga | : The central question of this article is, Are animals morally responsible for what they do? Answering this question requires a careful, step-by-step argument. In sections 1 and 2, I explain what morality is, and that having a morality means following moral rules or norms. In sections 3 and 4, I argue that some animals show not just regularities in their social behaviour, but can be rightly said to follow social norms. But are the norms they (...)
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  46.  13
    Einleitung in die Philosophie: Vorlesungen 1922/23.Edmund Husserl & Berndt Goossens - 2012 - Springer.
    Die im vorliegenden Band veröffentlichte Vorlesung "Einleitung in die Philosophie" aus dem Wintersemester 1922/23 ist aus vier 1922 von Husserl in London unter dem Titel "Phänomenologische Methode und phänomenologische Philosophie" gehaltenen Vorträgen hervorgegangen. Die Vorlesung befasst sich vor allem mit dem für die Grundlegung eines philosophischen Systems zentralen Problem der Letztbegründung. Radikale philosophische Letztbegründung ist gemäß Husserl nur möglich in einer sich in apodiktischer Selbstkritik bewährenden phänomenologischen Transzendentalphilosophie. Die tatsächliche Durchführung einer solchen letzten, in seinen späten Schriften und Vorlesungstexten immer (...)
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  47. Professing medicine, virtue based ethics, and the retrieval of professionalism.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 2007 - In Rebecca L. Walker & Philip J. Ivanhoe (eds.), Working virtue: virtue ethics and contemporary moral problems. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 113--134.
     
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  48.  11
    Vorlesungen Über Bedeutungslehre Sommersemester 1908.Edmund Husserl & Ursula Panzer - 1986 - Norwell, MA, USA: Springer. Edited by Ursula Panzer.
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  49. Do We Have Reasons to Obey the Law?Edmund Tweedy Flanigan - 2020 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 17 (2):159-197.
    Instead of the question, ‘do we have an obligation to obey the law?,’ we should first ask the more modest question, ‘do we have reasons to obey the law?’ This paper offers a new account of the notion of the content-independence of legal reasons in terms of the grounding relation. That account is then used to mount a defense of the claim that we do indeed have content-independent moral reasons to obey the law (because it is the law), and that (...)
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  50.  12
    Neuroculture: On the Implications of Brain Science.Edmund T. Rolls - 2012 - Oxford University Press.
    Why do we have emotions? What is the relationship between mind and brain? Why do we appreciate art? How do we make decisions? Why do so many people follow religions? Neuroculture considers the implications of our modern understanding of how the brain works, and how it can help us understand many mental issues central to everyday life.
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