Results for 'Andrew Fuller'

951 found
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  1.  22
    Evil Media.Matthew Fuller & Andrew Goffey - 2012 - MIT Press.
    _Evil Media_ develops a philosophy of media power that extends the concept of media beyond its tried and trusted use in the games of meaning, symbolism, and truth. It addresses the gray zones in which media exist as corporate work systems, algorithms and data structures, twenty-first century self-improvement manuals, and pharmaceutical techniques. _Evil Media _invites the reader to explore and understand the abstract infrastructure of the present day. From search engines to flirting strategies, from the value of institutional stupidity to (...)
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  2.  13
    Insight Into Value: An Exploration of the Premises of a Phenomenological Psychology.Andrew Reid Fuller - 1990 - State University of New York Press.
    A systematic working out of the basic concepts of phenomenological psychology through an interdisciplinary synthesis of gestalt psychology and existential phenomenological thought.
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  3.  22
    Digital Infrastructures and the Machinery of Topological Abstraction.Matthew Fuller & Andrew Goffey - 2012 - Theory, Culture and Society 29 (4-5):311-333.
    Drawing on contemporary pragmatic philosophy and grounded in a reading of techniques associated with digital media as sophist practices of influence and manipulation, this paper proposes an ‘experimental’ reading of key aspects of the topological qualities of the infrastructure of the knowledge economy, with its obsessive attempts at measuring, recording and monitoring, or ‘qualculation’. Taking seriously, albeit with humour, early criticisms of actor-network for its ostensibly Machiavellian proclivities, it offers a series of playful stratagems for the exploration and analysis of (...)
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  4.  84
    Mathematical occultism and its explanation: A symposium. Editorial introduction.Paul Carus, J. F. C. Fuller, W. S. Andrews & Wm F. White - 1907 - The Monist 17 (1):109 - 114.
  5.  25
    Book Reviews : James M. Ostrow, Social Sensitivity: A Study of Habit and Experience. State University of New York Press, Albany, 1990. Pp.137. $49.50 (cloth), $16.95 (paper. [REVIEW]Andrew R. Fuller - 1994 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 24 (1):113-117.
  6.  12
    Swedenborg and Osteopathy: The Influence of Emanuel Swedenborg on the Genesis and Development of Osteopathy, Specifically Andrew Taylor Still and William Garner Sutherland.David B. Fuller - 2012 - Swedenborg Scientific Association Press.
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  7. Andrew Fuller and the Socinians.Alan Sell - 2000 - Enlightenment and Dissent 19:91-115.
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  8.  33
    ’Blessed are the Dead Which Die in the Lord’: Andrew Fuller on the Beatific Vision.E. D. Burns & Michael A. G. Haykin - 2019 - Perichoresis 17 (2):41-50.
    This essay examines the funeral sermon given by the Baptist theologian Andrew Fuller (1754–1815) for his friend and deacon Beeby Wallis in 1792 as a vantage-point from which to pursue reflection on Fuller’s concept of heaven and the beatific vision. The sermon has two main themes: the rest and rewards of those who die in Christ. The essay examines how Fuller interprets both of these phrases and then, looking at the rest of Fuller’s corpus, notes (...)
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  9. "Aesthetics after Modernism": Peter Fuller[REVIEW]Andrew Harrison - 1985 - British Journal of Aesthetics 25 (4):401.
     
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  10.  58
    A Composite Portrait of a True American Philosophy on Magnanimity.Andrew J. Corsa & Eric Schliesser - 2019 - In Sophia Vasalou (ed.), The Measure of Greatness: Philosophers on Magnanimity. Oxford University Press. pp. 235-265.
    This paper offers a composite portrait of the concept of magnanimity in nineteenth-century America, focusing on Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, and Henry David Thoreau. A composite portrait, as a method in the history of philosophy, is designed to bring out characteristic features of a group's philosophizing in order to illuminate characteristic features that may still resonate in today's philosophy. Compared to more standard methods in the historiography of philosophy, the construction of a composite portrait de-privileges the views of (...)
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  11.  41
    Francine F. Abeles; Mark E. Fuller . Modern Logic, 1850–1950, East and West. xiii + 258 pp., figs. Basel: Springer, 2016. $69.99. [REVIEW]Andrew Aberdein - 2017 - Isis 108 (3):719-720.
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  12.  9
    Spiritual Formation and Sexual Abuse: Embodiment, Community, and Healing.Andrew J. Schmutzer - 2009 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 2 (1):67-86.
    As a distortion of God's created designs, sexual abuse carries a unique devastation-factor. Abuse that is sexual in nature damages a spectrum of internal and external aspects of personhood. In particular, the core realities of: self-identity, community, and spiritual communion with God can be deeply fractured through SA. In light of the significance of the image of God, movement toward healing includes strengthening personal agency, processing profound boundary ruptures, and managing disillusionment with God. Due to the multi-faceted trauma of sexual (...)
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  13.  56
    Notes on Sophocles' Antigone.Andrew Brown - 1991 - Classical Quarterly 41 (02):325-.
    My recent edition of Antigone was not intended primarily as a contribution to textual criticism. I did no work on the manuscripts, and little work on tracing the sources of old conjectures. Nevertheless, some of my thoughts on the text may merit fuller discussion than I was able to give them in a beginners' edition. And there have been more recent developments: in particular we now have a new Oxford Text of Sophocles with a companion volume of Sophoclea, and (...)
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  14.  14
    Classical Rhetoric and the Promotion of the New World.Andrew Fitzmaurice - 1997 - Journal of the History of Ideas 58 (2):221-243.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Classical Rhetoric and the Promotion of the New WorldAndrew FitzmauriceFor many years historians have characterized the relation between the Old World and the New as an encounter in which the New was assimilated to the Old. There is a striking uniformity in the reasons given for this process. It is argued that in their “discovery” the Europeans encountered a world which was radically different from their own and for (...)
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  15.  23
    Other People's Liberties.Andrew Halpin - 2024 - Ratio Juris 37 (1):2-24.
    When we seek a fuller understanding of individual liberty including its relational character, we confront a conundrum. The evident advantages of a single individual possessing liberty cannot be simply transferred to a greater number of beneficiaries. This conundrum is confronted with the resources of Hohfeld's analytical framework, developed specifically to elucidate the practical outworkings of interpersonal relations within the law. Attention is also paid to concerns expressed by von Wright over a representation of liberty (permission) within the resources of (...)
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  16. Poverty relief, global institutions, and the problem of compliance.Lisa Fuller - 2005 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 2 (3):285-297.
    Thomas Pogge and Andrew Kuper suggest that we should promote an ‘institutional’ solution to global poverty. They advocate the institutional solution because they think that non-governmental organizations (NGOs) can never be the primary agents of justice in the long run. They provide several standard criticisms of NGO aid in support of this claim. However, there is a more serious problem for institutional solutions: how to generate enough goodwill among rich nation-states that they would be willing to commit themselves to (...)
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  17.  42
    Fuller on Kuhn: Exciting polemic, destructive rhetoric. [REVIEW]Andrew N. Carpenter - 2003 - Social Epistemology 17 (2 & 3):139.
  18. Structural Racism, Institutional Agency, and Disrespect.Andrew J. Pierce - 2014 - Journal of Philosophical Research 39:23-42.
    In recent work, Joshua Glasgow has offered a definition of racism that is supposed to put to rest the debates between cognitive, behavioral, attitudinal, and institutionalist definitions. The key to such a definition, he argues, is the idea of disrespect. He claims: “φ is racist if and only if φ is disrespectful toward members of racialized group R as Rs.” While this definition may capture an important commonality among cognitive, behavioral, and attitudinal accounts of racism, I argue that his attempt (...)
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  19.  28
    The Awakenings of Charlotte Perkins Gilman.Andrew James Paravantes - 2019 - Utopian Studies 30 (3):505-530.
    “The sleeper awakes” is a convention of many literary utopias from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The plots of Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward, William Morris’s News from Nowhere, and H. G. Wells’sWhen the Sleeper Wakes all famously involve a sleeping modern everyman who awakens to a future where the conflicts and contradictions of the burgeoning capitalist society have been resolved. The Bleilers identify dozens of other speculative novels from the same period employing this very device, such as William (...)
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  20.  81
    Kuhn, Popper, and the Superconducting Supercollider.Andrew T. Domondon - 2009 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 40 (3):301-314.
    The demise of the Superconducting Supercollider is often explained in terms of the strain that it placed on the federal budget of the United States, and change in national security interests with the end of the Cold War. Recent work by Steve Fuller provides a framework to re-examine this episode in epistemological terms using the work of Kuhn and Popper. Using this framework, it is tempting to explain the demise as resulting from the overly Kuhnian character of its proponents, (...)
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  21.  28
    Book Reviews : Andrew R. Fuller, Insight into Value: An Exploration of the Premises of a Phenomenological Psychology. State University of New York Press, Albany, 1990. Pp. xii, 296. $59.50 (cloth), $19.95 (paper. [REVIEW]James M. Ostrow - 1994 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 24 (1):117-120.
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  22. What Stakeholder Theory is Not.Andrew C. Wicks - 2003 - Business Ethics Quarterly 13 (4):479-502.
    Abstract:The term stakeholder is a powerful one. This is due, to a significant degree, to its conceptual breadth. The term means different things to different people and hence evokes praise or scorn from a wide variety of scholars and practitioners. Such breadth of interpretation, though one of stakeholder theory’s greatest strengths, is also one of its most prominent theoretical liabilities. The goal of the current paper is like that of a controlled burn that clears away some of the underbrush of (...)
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  23. Ubuntu and Business Ethics: Problems, Perspectives and Prospects.Andrew West - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 121 (1):47-61.
    The African philosophy of Ubuntu is typically characterised as a communitarian philosophy that emphasises virtues such as compassion, tolerance and harmony. In recent years there has been growing interest in this philosophy, and in how it can be applied to a variety of disciplines and issues. Several authors have provided useful introductions of Ubuntu in the field of business ethics and suggested theoretical ways in which it could be applied. The purpose of this paper is to extend this discussion by (...)
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  24.  26
    Riposte.Andrew Wall - 1994 - Health Care Analysis 2 (4):317-318.
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  25.  20
    Patenting Culture in Science: Reinventing the Scientific Wheel of Credibility.Andrew Webster & Kathryn Packer - 1996 - Science, Technology and Human Values 21 (4):427-453.
    This article discusses the emergence of a patenting culture in university science. Patenting culture is examined empirically in the context of the increasing commerciali zation of science, and theoretically within debates over scientific "credibility." The article explores the translation of academic credit into patents, and vice versa, and argues that this process raises new questions for our understanding of scientific recognition and of scientists' networks. In particular, the analysis suggests that scientists must move between two distinct social worlds to manage (...)
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  26.  26
    Sense of an Ending.Andrew Gibson - 1999 - Film-Philosophy 3 (1).
    Timothy Murray _Like a Film: Ideological Fantasy on Screen, Camera and Canvas_ London: Routledge, 1993 0-415-07734-6 267 pages.
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  27.  5
    Hegel and the art of negation: negativity, creativity and contemporary thought.Andrew Hass - 2014 - London: I.B. Tauris.
    Why is the philosopher Hegel returning as a potent force in contemporary thinking? Why, after a long period when Hegel and his dialectics of history have seemed less compelling than they were for previous generations of philosophers, is study of Hegel again becoming important? Exploring this revival via the notion of 'negation' in Hegelian thought, and relating such negativity to sophisticated ideas about art and artistic creation, Andrew Hass argues that the notion of Hegelian negation moves us into an (...)
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  28.  29
    Culture, Sexual Lifeways, and Developmental Subjectivities: Rethinking Sexual Taxonomies.Andrew Hostetler & Gilbert Herdt - 1998 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 65.
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  29. Multiple objects : fragmentation and process in the Neolithic of Britain and Ireland.Andrew Meirion Jones - 2023 - In Anna Sörman, Astrid A. Noterman & Markus Fjellström (eds.), Broken bodies, places and objects: new perspectives on fragmentation in archaeology. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  30.  25
    Why Deliberation Cannot Tame Globalization: The Impossibility of a Deliberative Democrat.Andrew Kuper - 2003 - Analyse & Kritik 25 (2):176-198.
    How is it possible for individuals to exercise any control over a political order that is supranational and multilayered? This key question must be answered if we are to reconcile democratic principles with the requirement of global justice as well as with the cosmopolitan political institutions that play an ever-increasing role in our world. The leading answer to this question, at present, is that of Juergen Habermas and his followers: deliberative democracy. This article, however, argues that theories of deliberative democracy (...)
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  31. Psychopathy, Mental Time Travel, and Legal Responsibility.Andrew Vierra - 2015 - Neuroethics 9 (2):129-136.
    Neil Levy argues that the degree to which psychopaths ought to be held blameworthy for their actions depends on the extent to which they are capable of mental time travel—episodic memory and episodic foresight. Levy claims that deficits in mental time travel prevent psychopaths from fully appreciating what it is to be a person, and, without this understanding, we can at best hold psychopaths blameworthy for harming non-persons. In this paper, I build upon and clarify various aspects of Levy’s view. (...)
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  32.  15
    The ethics of expert testimony.Louise B. Andrew - 2010 - In Gail A. Van Norman, Stephen Jackson, Stanley H. Rosenbaum & Susan K. Palmer (eds.), Clinical Ethics in Anesthesiology: A Case-Based Textbook. Cambridge University Press. pp. 261.
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  33. A Critical Examination of James's Theory of Knower-Known Relations in "Does Consciousness Exist?".Andrew S. Bernstein - 1986 - Dissertation, City University of New York
    There is a traditional view concerning the relation between mind and matter, knower and known. It posits a bifurcation between the two, maintaining, as Ryle puts it, that mind and matter are two distinct orders of existence. This traditional view comes, in large part, from Descartes. James rejects the traditional view, arguing instead for a close relationship between thought and object. His argument contains two components. The first stresses the close functional relationship between thought and object in our everyday experience. (...)
     
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  34.  8
    On the Ayn Rand Cliffs Notes.Andrew Bernstein - 2002 - Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 3 (2).
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  35.  17
    In Defence of Liberalism.Andrew Collier - 1989 - Philosophical Books 30 (1):52-53.
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  36.  12
    L'attuale contesto culturale e religioso europeo alla luce di alcuni documenti ecclesiali recenti.Andrew Galea - 2013 - Miscellanea Francescana 113.
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  37. The religions of Ireland.Andrew Greeley - 1999 - In Greeley Andrew (ed.), Ireland North and South: Perspectives from Social Science. pp. 141-160.
     
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  38. Dati, Goro transcription of the'ottimo commento'on Dante.Andrew P. McCormick - 1982 - Rinascimento 22:251.
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  39. Short Journal Reviews.Andrew Mclaughlin - 1982 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 52:231.
     
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  40.  8
    Naturalized? And If So, How?Andrew Melnyle - 2013 - In Don Ross, James Ladyman & Harold Kincaid (eds.), Scientific metaphysics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 79.
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  41.  13
    Connaturality in Aquinas and Rahner.Andrew Tallon - 1984 - Philosophy Today 28 (2):138-147.
  42.  15
    The myth of the minstrel manuscript.Andrew Taylor - 1991 - Speculum 66 (1):43-73.
    Whether known as jongleur, minstrel, gestour, disour, mimus, scurra, or by some other term, the professional entertainer who sings, tells jokes and stories, and declaims the deeds of great men is a ubiquitous figure in both medieval literature and modern scholarship. A large body of literature, not only heroic narrative such as the chansons de geste and the romances, but also fabliaux, political satires, and short comic monologues, has been confidently placed in the minstrel repertoire, and terms such as “minstrel (...)
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  43.  10
    The sturdy protestants of science: Larmor, Trouton, and the earth's motion through the ether.Andrew Warwick - 1995 - In Jed Z. Buchwald (ed.), Scientific practice: theories and stories of doing physics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 300--343.
  44.  95
    A trope-bundle ontology for field theory.Andrew Wayne - 2008 - In Dennis Geert Bernardus Johan Dieks (ed.), The Ontology of Spacetime II. Elsevier.
    Field theories have been central to physics over the last 150 years, and there are several theories in contemporary physics in which physical fields play key causal and explanatory roles. This paper proposes a novel field trope-bundle (FTB) ontology on which fields are composed of bundles of particularized property instances, called tropes and goes on to describe some virtues of this ontology. It begins with a critical examination of the dominant view about the ontology of fields, that fields are properties (...)
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  45.  11
    The Early Lonergan and the Function of Philosophy in Overcoming Fragmentation.Andrew Barrette - 2022 - The Lonergan Review 13:19-40.
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  46.  14
    Connectomic methods for functional imaging.Zalesky Andrew - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  47.  51
    Operant conditioning and natural selection.Andrew M. Colman - 1984 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7 (4):684-685.
  48.  20
    Neuroscience and Education: A Philosophical Approach.Andrew Davis - 2018 - Educational Theory 68 (2):235-242.
  49.  25
    Transmediation: Tracing the social aesthetic.Andrew Dewdney - 2011 - Philosophy of Photography 2 (1):97-113.
    This article discusses how the use of mobile media in digital culture is ushering in a new set of conditions for the realization of the social reception of art. This is to say that mobile media practices present a renewed challenge to major national art museums in their organization and practices of display and exhibition. The problematic explored here is that between the art museum's continued attachment to aesthetic abstraction in the modernist trope and the clamouring and tumultuous world of (...)
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  50.  14
    Bilingualism and the Latin Language (review).Andrew R. Dyck - 2006 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 99 (2):197-198.
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