Results for 'Andrew John Davis'

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  1.  30
    Knowing and learning: from Hirst to Ofsted.Andrew John Davis - 2023 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (1):214-226.
    Hirst always highlighted knowledge when reflecting on the school curriculum. He replaced his early focus on liberal education, the development of mind and theoretical knowledge by emphasizing the practical and practices as a curriculum starting point and for the framing of educational aims. In this paper I explore links between Hirst’s philosophical treatment of knowledge and some currently contested aspects of UK government education policies. I also note some ways in which his work relates to selected present-day debates in philosophy (...)
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  2.  22
    Asymmetry – where evolutionary and developmental genetics meet.Philip Batterham, Andrew G. Davies, Anne Y. Game & John A. McKenzie - 1996 - Bioessays 18 (10):841-845.
    The mechanisms responsible for the fine tuning of development, where the wildtype phenotype is reproduced with high fidelity, are not well understood. The difficulty in approaching this problem is the identification of mutant phenotypes indicative of a defect in these fine‐tuning control mechanisms. Evolutionary biologists have used asymmetry as a measure of developmental homeostasis. The rationale for this was that, since the same genome controls the development of the left and right sides of a bilaterally symmetrical organism, departures from symmetry (...)
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  3.  67
    Accountability and School Inspection: In Defence of Audited Self-Review.Andrew Davis & John White - 2001 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 35 (4):667-681.
    Accountability involves not only schools answering to society, but parents and governments doing the same. In particular, governments should answer for the appropriateness of the educational aims they seek to promote. Making schools accountable to society through examination results is fundamentally flawed. Teachers must be able to account for how the specifics of their job relate to wider educational and social aims. The best approach to holding schools to account through external inspection is that of ‘audited self review’. The notion (...)
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  4.  28
    New Philosophies of Learning.Ruth Cigman & Andrew Davis (eds.) - 2009 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    Through a collection of contributions from an international team of empirical researchers and philosophers, _New Philosophies of Learning_ signals the need for a sharper critical awareness of the possibilities and problems that the recent spate of innovative learning techniques presents. Explores some of the many contemporary innovations in approaches to learning, including neuroscience and the focus on learners’ well-being and happiness Debates the controversial approaches to categorising learners such as dyslexia Raises doubts about the preoccupation with quasi-mathematical scrutiny and the (...)
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  5.  33
    It worked there. Will it work here? Researching teaching methods.Andrew Davis - 2017 - Ethics and Education 12 (3):289-303.
    ‘It worked there. Will it work here?’ We have to be able to identify the ‘it’ in that aphoristic question. Classifications of teaching methods belong in the social realm, where human intentions play a fundamental role in how phenomena are categorized. The social realm is characterized with the help of John Searle. Social phenomena are often open to interpretation, rather than definitive verdicts. The nature of the social limits the possibility of consistency in how teaching should be classified, which (...)
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  6.  12
    Mind, Value, and Cosmos: On the Relational Nature of Ultimacy.Andrew M. Davis - 2020 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    A engaging dialogue with the modern “axionoetic” proposals of A.N. Whitehead, Keith Ward, and John Leslie, arguing for the relational nature of ultimacy wherein Mind and Value, Possibility and Actuality, God and the World are affirmed as ultimate only in virtue of their relationality. This relationship Whitehead calls “mutual immanence.”.
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  7.  47
    Identifying how COVID-19-related misinformation reacts to the announcement of the UK national lockdown: An interrupted time-series study.Sally Sheard, Roberto Vivancos, Alex Singleton, Henrdramoorthy Maheswaran, Emily Dearden, Andrew Davies, John Tulloch, Patricia Rossini, Andrew Morse, Chris Kypridemos, Frances Darlington Pollock, Darren Charles, Francisco Rowe, Elena Musi & Mark Green - 2021 - Big Data and Society 8 (1).
    COVID-19 is unique in that it is the first global pandemic occurring amidst a crowded information environment that has facilitated the proliferation of misinformation on social media. Dangerous misleading narratives have the potential to disrupt ‘official’ information sharing at major government announcements. Using an interrupted time-series design, we test the impact of the announcement of the first UK lockdown on short-term trends of misinformation on Twitter. We utilise a novel dataset of all COVID-19-related social media posts on Twitter from the (...)
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  8. Online Deliberation: Design, Research, and Practice.Todd Davies & Seeta Peña Gangadharan (eds.) - 2009 - CSLI Publications/University of Chicago Press.
    Can new technology enhance purpose-driven, democratic dialogue in groups, governments, and societies? Online Deliberation: Design, Research, and Practice is the first book that attempts to sample the full range of work on online deliberation, forging new connections between academic research, technology designers, and practitioners. Since some of the most exciting innovations have occurred outside of traditional institutions, and those involved have often worked in relative isolation from each other, work in this growing field has often failed to reflect the full (...)
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  9.  83
    Educational assessment: Reply to Andrew Davis.Christopher Winch & John Gingell - 1996 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 30 (3):377–388.
    Assessment is at the heart of teaching as it provides a necessary condition for judging success or failure. It is also necessary to ensure that providers of education are accountable to users and providers of resources. Inferential hazard is an inescapable part of any assessment procedure but cannot be an argument against assessment as such. Rich knowledge may be the aim of education but it does not follow that it is the aim of every stage of education. Teaching to tests (...)
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  10.  78
    Andrew Hodges. Alan Turing and the Turing machine. The universal Turing machine, A half-century survey, edited by Rolf Herken, Kammerer & Unverzagt, Hamburg and Berlin, and Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1988. pp. 3–15. - Stephen C. Kleene. Turing's analysis of computahility, and major applications of it. The universal Turing machine, A half-century survey, edited by Rolf Herken, Kammerer & Unverzagt, Hamburg and Berlin, and Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1988. pp. 17–54. - Robin Gandy. The confluence of ideas in 1936. The universal Turing machine, A half-century survey, edited by Rolf Herken, Kammerer & Unverzagt, Hamburg and Berlin, and Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1988. pp. 55–111. - Solomon Feferman. Turing in the land of O. The universal Turing machine, A half-century survey, edited by Rolf Herken, Kammerer & Unverzagt, Hamburg and Berlin, and Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1988. pp. 113–147. - Martin Davis. Mathematica. [REVIEW]John N. Crossley - 1991 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 56 (3):1089-1090.
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  11.  56
    Curiouser and curiouser: Davis, white and assessment.John Gingell & Christopher Winch - 2000 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 34 (4):673–685.
    Continuing the debate on assessment, we argue that Andrew Davis' use of examples fails to address issues in the assessibility of specific items of knowledge, and show that one of his examples supports our view rather than his. We argue that John White's preferred replacement of assessment by monitoring, based on teachers' personal knowledge of their pupils, confuses personal and professional knowledge, oversimplifies the teacher's role and does not address the need for objectivity. Finally we argue that (...)
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  12.  47
    Romanticism and the Sciences.Andrew Cunningham & Nicholas Jardine - 1990 - Cambridge University Press. Edited by Andrew Cunningham & Nicholas Jardine.
    Introduction: the age of reflexion Part I. Romanticism: 1. Romanticism and the sciences David Knight 2. Schelling and the origins of his Naturphilosophie S. R. Morgan 3. Romantic philosophy and the organization of the disciplines: the founding of the Humboldt University of Berlin Elinor S. Shaffer 4. Historical consciousness in the German Romantic Naturforschung Dietrich Von Engelhardt 5. Theology and the sciences in the German Romantic period Frederick Gregory 6. Genius in Romantic natural philosophy Simon Shaffer Part II. Sciences of (...)
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  13. Silent Music.Andrew Kania - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 68 (4):343-353.
    In this essay, I investigate musical silence. I first discuss how to integrate the concept of silence into a general theory or definition of music. I then consider the possibility of an entirely silent musical piece. I begin with John Cage’s 4′33″, since it is the most notorious candidate for a silent piece of music, even though it is not, in fact, silent. I conclude that it is not music either, but I argue that it is a piece of (...)
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  14.  8
    The duality of physical truth and cause.John Davis Lines - 1973 - New York,: Philosophical Library.
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  15. Two Sorts of Concept Reduction.John Davis Messer - 1977 - Dissertation, University of Georgia
  16. Time's character gauge.John Davis Freeman - 1944 - Nashville,: Broadman Press.
  17.  6
    What I believe.John Davys Beresford - 1938 - Toronto,: W. Heinemann.
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  18.  48
    Quine’s Paradox of Attribute Determination.John Davis Messer - 1978 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 16 (4):355-361.
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  19.  14
    Rethinking Innovation Accounting in Pharmaceutical Regulation: A Case Study in the Deconstruction of Therapeutic Advance and Therapeutic Breakthrough. [REVIEW]John Abraham & Courtney Davis - 2011 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 36 (6):791-815.
    The controversy over the prescription drug, alosetron, is examined in order to investigate what is permitted to count as ‘therapeutic advance’ and ‘therapeutic breakthrough’ within pharmaceutical innovation and regulation. It is argued that those official accounting categories can mask very modest efficacy of some drugs by reference to the official techno-scientific evidence, thus leading to questionable acceptance of risks to public health. This is explained by: the drug availability options set by the commercial interests of manufacturers; the FDA management's need (...)
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  20. Digital Democracy: Episode IV—A New Hope*: How a Corporation for Public Software Could Transform Digital Engagement for Government and Civil Society.John Gastil & Todd Davies - 2020 - Digital Government: Research and Practice (DGOV) 1 (1):Article No. 6 (15 pages).
    Although successive generations of digital technology have become increasingly powerful in the past 20 years, digital democracy has yet to realize its potential for deliberative transformation. The undemocratic exploitation of massive social media systems continued this trend, but it only worsened an existing problem of modern democracies, which were already struggling to develop deliberative infrastructure independent of digital technologies. There have been many creative conceptions of civic tech, but implementation has lagged behind innovation. This article argues for implementing one such (...)
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  21. The golden section and the structure of connotation.John Benjafield & Christine Davis - 1978 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 36 (4):423-427.
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  22.  42
    History and heritage: consuming the past in contemporary culture.John Arnold, Kate Davies & Simon Ditchfield (eds.) - 1998 - Donhead St. Mary, Shaftesbury: Donhead.
    Papers presented at the Conference, Consuming the past held at University of York, 29 November - 1 December 1996.
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  23.  17
    The harmonial philosophy: a compendium and digest of the works of Andrew Jackson Davis, the seer of Poughkeepsie..Andrew Jackson Davis - 1917 - London: William Rider & Son.
    Excerpt from The Harmonial Philosophy: A Compendium and Digest of the Works of Andrew Jackson Davis, the Seer of Poughkeepsie His Natural and Divine Revelations, Great Harmonia, Spiritual Inter course, Answers to ever-recurring Questions, Inner Life, Summer. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format (...)
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  24.  4
    The Metaphysics of Aristotle. Literally Translated from the Greek, with Notes, Analysis, Questions, and Index. By the Rev. John H. M'Mahon.Thomas Aristotle, Taylor Taylor, Wilks John Davis, J. White & John Johnson - 1857 - Printed for the Author, by Davis, Wilks, and Taylor, Chancery-Lane, and Sold by J. White, ... ; J. Johnson, ... ; J. Cuthell, ... ; and E. Jeffrey, ....
  25.  45
    Effects of denatonium saccharide on the drinking behavior of the grasshopper mouse.William M. Langley, John Theis, Stephen F. Davis, M. Melissa Richard & Cathy A. Grover - 1987 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 25 (1):17-19.
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  26.  24
    Scribes and Schools: The Canonization of the Hebrew Scriptures.John van Seters & Philip R. Davies - 2000 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 (2):264.
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  27.  11
    Practical Philosophy: Ethics, Society and Culture.John Haldane - 2009 - Imprint Academic.
    In this wide ranging volume of philosophical essays John Haldane explores some central areas of social life and issues of intense academic and public debate. These include the question of ethical relativism, fundamental issues in bioethics, the nature of individuals in relation to society, the common good, public judgement of prominent individuals, the nature and aims of education, cultural theory and the relation of philosophy to art and architecture. John Haldane is Professor of Philosophy, and Director of the (...)
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  28.  39
    [Omnibus Review].John Crossley - 1991 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 56 (3):1089-1090.
    Reviewed Works:Andrew Hodges, Rolf Herken, Alan Turing and the Turing Machine.Stephen C. Kleene, Turing's Analysis of Computability, and Major Applications of it.Robin Gandy, The Confluence of Ideas in 1936.Solomon Feferman, Turing in the Land of O.Martin Davis, Esther R. Phillips, Mathematical Logic and the Origin of Modern Computers.
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  29.  42
    "Examples Are Best Precepts": Readers and Meanings in Seventeenth-Century Poetry.John M. Wallace - 1974 - Critical Inquiry 1 (2):273-290.
    My title is taken from the frontispiece to Ogilby's translation of Aesop ; since every Renaissance poet believed the statement to be true, let me start with my own example. John Denham's only play, The Sophy, published in August 1642, is a tale about the perils of jealousy. The good prince Mirza, after a miraculous victory over the Turks, returns in glory to his father's court, but leaves it shortly thereafter. In his absense, Haly, the evil courtier, follows a (...)
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  30.  34
    Thinking about Assessment.John White - 1999 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 33 (2):201-211.
    This paper defends certain of Andrew Davis’s arguments on assessment from critique by John Gingell and Christopher Winch. It emphasises the role of personal acquaintance in assessing ‘rich’ understanding, criticises Antony Flew’s claim that assessment is a necessary part of teaching, and rejects the argument that public assessment is necessary for purposes of accountability. It also suggests that parents’ monitoring of their young children’s progress could act as a yardstick, suitably modified, for what might be done in (...)
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  31.  26
    The Gildersleeve Prize for the Best Article Published in the American Journal of Philology in 2014 Has Been Presented to: William Josiah Edwards Davis, University of Toronto Faculty of Law.William M. Breichner - 2015 - American Journal of Philology 136 (3):1-1.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Gildersleeve Prize for the Best Article Published in the American Journal of Philology in 2014 Has Been Presented toWilliam Josiah Edwards Davis, University of Toronto Faculty of LawWilliam M. Breichnerfor his contribution to scholarship in “Terence Interrupted: Literary Biography and the Reception of the Terentian Canon,” AJP 135.3:387–409.Building on the serious and sophisticated attention that has been devoted to literary biography in recent years, Davis shows (...)
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  32.  37
    From Birdsong to Songbird: An adventure in collaborative creativity.John Matthias - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (3):309-313.
    This year I made an album with Jay Auborn. One of the tracks features a piano, a violin, a bass synthesizer, some vocals and the sound of me hitting two sticks rhythmically on the side of the piano. It is based on a previous piece of music which I wrote with Andrew Prior called Birdsong and is called Songbird. How did this happen? It started with the playing of a piano riff, a piano riff that was being played because (...)
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  33. Conflict of interest in the professions.Michael Davis & Andrew Stark (eds.) - 2001 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Conflicts of interest pose special problems for the professions. Even the appearance of a conflict of interest can undermine essential trust between professional and public. This volume is a comprehensive and accessible guide to the ramifications and problems associated with important issue. It contains fifteen new essays by noted scholars and covers topics in law, medicine, journalism, engineering, financial services, and others.
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  34.  54
    Beyond Criticism of Ethics Review Boards: Strategies for Engaging Research Communities and Enhancing Ethical Review Processes.Andrew Hickey, Samantha Davis, Will Farmer, Julianna Dawidowicz, Clint Moloney, Andrea Lamont-Mills, Jess Carniel, Yosheen Pillay, David Akenson, Annette Brömdal, Richard Gehrmann, Dean Mills, Tracy Kolbe-Alexander, Tanya Machin, Suzanne Reich, Kim Southey, Lynda Crowley-Cyr, Taiji Watanabe, Josh Davenport, Rohit Hirani, Helena King, Roshini Perera, Lucy Williams, Kurt Timmins, Michael Thompson, Douglas Eacersall & Jacinta Maxwell - 2022 - Journal of Academic Ethics 20 (4):549-567.
    A growing body of literature critical of ethics review boards has drawn attention to the processes used to determine the ethical merit of research. Citing criticism on the bureaucratic nature of ethics review processes, this literature provides a useful provocation for (re)considering how the ethics review might be enacted. Much of this criticism focuses on how ethics review boards _deliberate,_ with particular attention given to the lack of transparency and opportunities for researcher recourse that characterise ethics review processes. Centered specifically (...)
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  35.  13
    Criminal justice.J. Roland Pennock & John William Chapman (eds.) - 1985 - New York: New York University Press.
    This, the twenty-seventh volume in the annual series of publications by the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy, features a number of distinguised contributors addressing the topic of criminal justice. Part I considers "The Moral and Metaphysical Sources of the Criminal Law," with contributions by Michael S. Moore, Lawrence Rosen, and Martin Shapiro. The four chapters in Part II all relate, more or less directly, to the issue of retribution, with papers by Hugo Adam Bedau, Michael Davis, Jeffrie (...)
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  36.  45
    The Promise and Reality of Public Engagement in the Governance of Human Genome Editing Research.John M. Conley, R. Jean Cadigan, Arlene M. Davis, Eric T. Juengst, Kriste Kuczynski, Rami Major, Hayley Stancil, Julio Villa-Palomino, Margaret Waltz & Gail E. Henderson - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (7):9-16.
    This paper analyses the activities of five organizations shaping the debate over the global governance of genome editing in order to assess current approaches to public engagement (PE). We compare the recommendations of each group with its own practices. All recommend broad engagement with the general public, but their practices vary from expert-driven models dominated by scientists, experts, and civil society groups to citizen deliberation-driven models that feature bidirectional consultation with local citizens, as well as hybrid models that combine elements (...)
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  37.  22
    Bernhard Riemann, the Ear, and an Atom of Consciousness.Andrew Bell, Bryn Davies & Habib Ammari - 2022 - Foundations of Science 27 (3):855-873.
    Why did Bernhard Riemann, arguably the most original mathematician of his generation, spend the last year of life investigating the mechanism of hearing? Fighting tuberculosis and the hostility of eminent scientists such as Hermann Helmholtz, he appeared to forsake mathematics to prosecute a case close to his heart. Only sketchy pages from his last paper remain, but here we assemble some significant clues and triangulate from them to build a broad picture of what he might have been driving at. Our (...)
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  38.  33
    (6 other versions)Matching.Andrew Davis - 1998 - Journal of the Philosophy of Education 32 (1):107-121.
    Andrew Davis; 7. Matching, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 32, Issue 1, 7 March 2003, Pages 107–121, https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9752.00080.
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  39.  46
    To read or not to read: decoding Synthetic Phonics.Andrew Davis - 2013 - Impact 2013 (20):1-38.
    In England, current government policy on children's reading is strongly prescriptive, insisting on the delivery of a pure and exclusive form of synthetic phonics, where letter sounds are learned and blended in order to ‘read’ text. A universally imposed phonics ‘check’ is taken by all five year olds and the results are widely reported. These policies are underpinned by the claim that research has shown systematic synthetic phonics to be the most effective way of teaching children to read. Andrew (...)
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  40. Ian Hacking, learner categories and human taxonomies.Andrew Davis - 2008 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 42 (3-4):441-455.
    I use Ian Hacking 's views to explore ways of classifying people, exploiting his distinction between indifferent kinds and interactive kinds, and his accounts of how we 'make up' people. The natural kind/essentialist approach to indifferent kinds is explored in some depth. I relate this to debates in psychiatry about the existence of mental illness, and to educational controversies about the credentials of learner classifications such as 'dyslexic'. Claims about the 'existence' of learning disabilities cannot be given a clear, simple (...)
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  41. Assessment and evaluation.Andrew Davis - 2023 - In Winston C. Thompson, Philosophical foundations of education. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  42.  54
    Learning and the social nature of mental powers.Andrew Davis - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (5):635–647.
    Over the last two decades the traditional conception of intelligence and other mental powers as stable individual assets has been challenged by approaches in psychology emphasising context and ‘situated cognition’. This paper argues that the debate should not be seen as an empirical dispute, and relates it to discussions in philosophy of mind between methodological solipsists and varieties of externalists. In the light of this I argue that attempts to conceptualise the identity over time of mental powers qua individual assets (...)
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  43.  6
    On the Goodness of Whitehead's God: A Defense and Metaphysical Interpretation.Andrew M. Davis - 2024 - Process Studies 53 (2):192-212.
    My purpose in this article is to defend the goodness of Whitehead's God against two recent critics: Pierfrancesco Basile and Peter Sjöstedt-Hughes. I will both rely on Whitehead's own statements regarding God's goodness and offer a metaphysical interpretation of these statements in relation to his “axianoetic” universe.
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  44.  14
    Jackdaws.John Langdon-Davies - 1965 - British Journal of Educational Studies 13 (2):234.
  45.  20
    Neuroscience and Education: A Philosophical Approach.Andrew Davis - 2018 - Educational Theory 68 (2):235-242.
  46. Medicine and Health-Against the Spirit of System: The French Impulse in Nineteenth-Century American Medicine.John Harley Warner & A. B. Davis - 1999 - Annals of Science 56 (3):328.
     
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  47.  80
    (1 other version)‘Lookism’, Common Schools, Respect and Democracy.Andrew Davis - 2007 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 41 (4):811–827.
    The Common School should promote a sense of the distinctive worth of all human beings. How is the respect thus owed to every individual to be properly understood? This familiar question is explored by discussing ‘lookism’, a form of discrimination on the grounds of appearance. The treatment is located within a wider analysis of stereotyping. Ultimately stereotyping overlooks persons as sources of actions with moral significance and as potential owners of moral virtues. The Common School could profitably approach traditionally emotive (...)
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  48. Assessment and evaluation.Andrew Davis - 2023 - In Winston C. Thompson, Philosophical foundations of education. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  49. Man and his universe.John Langdon-Davies - 1930 - London,: Harper & Brothers.
  50.  1
    Science and common sense.John Langdon-Davies - 1931 - London,: H. Hamilton.
    pt. I. The world of reality.--pt. II. The world of make-believe.
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