Results for 'Bart Smith'

947 found
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  1.  11
    Humanomics: Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations for the Twenty-First Century.Vernon L. Smith & Bart J. Wilson - 2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    While neo-classical analysis works well for studying impersonal exchange in markets, it fails to explain why people conduct themselves the way they do in their personal relationships with family, neighbors, and friends. In Humanomics, Nobel Prize-winning economist Vernon L. Smith and his long-time co-author Bart J. Wilson bring their study of economics full circle by returning to the founder of modern economics, Adam Smith. Sometime in the last 250 years, economists lost sight of the full range of (...)
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  2.  6
    Along Wisconsin's Ice Age Trail.Bart Smith & David Obey - 2008 - University of Wisconsin Press.
    Essays by notable writers--including journalists, scientists, poets, and others--add depth to the stunning images in a collection of photographs that were captured as the photographer hiked the Ice Age National Scenic Trail over the course of the four seasons. Original.
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  3.  35
    Review essay: Mr. Smith does not go to Washington.Bart Schultz - 2007 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 37 (3):366-386.
    A recent spate of books on the life and legacy of the political philosopher Leo Strauss, notably Steven B. Smith's Reading Leo Strauss: Politics, Philosophy, and Judaism , suggests a desperate effort to salvage Strauss and the Straussian school of political philosophy from the wreckage of American neoconservatism. Although a number of these works are quite thoughtful and helpfully counter many of the more extreme (and uglier) charges made concerning the meaning of Straussianism and its political influence, their general (...)
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  4. Can consequentialism cover everything?Bart Streumer - 2003 - Utilitas 15 (2):237-47.
    Derek Parfit, Philip Pettit and Michael Smith defend a version of consequentialism that covers everything. I argue that this version of consequentialism is false. Consequentialism, I argue, can only cover things that belong to a combination of things that agents can bring about.
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  5.  68
    Book Review Section 1. [REVIEW]Brian J. Spittle, Samuel M. Vinocur, Virginia Underwood, Robert L. Leight, L. Glenn Smith, Harold M. Bergsma, Robert H. Graham, William M. Bart, George D. Dalin, Lyle S. Maynard, Fred Drewe, Theodore Hutchcroft, Francesco Cordasco, Frank Andrews Stone, Roy R. Nasstrom, Edward B. Goellner, Margaret Gillett, Robert E. Belding, Kenneth V. Lottich & Arden W. Holland - 1981 - Educational Studies 12 (4):431-459.
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  6.  6
    “Dignifying the Ordinary”: Why, What, and How of Social Practice Theory in Christian Philosophy.Robert van Putten & Bart Cusveller - 2024 - Philosophia Reformata 89 (2):223-245.
    It seems remarkable that several philosophers in the Reformed tradition have recently interacted with social practice theory without interacting with each other. This gave rise to the question as to whether they interact differently or similarly with social practice theory and to what extent Reformed philosophy might benefit from such an interaction. In this article, therefore, we aim to clear the way by addressing three strands in Reformed philosophy, namely, Nicholas Wolterstorff, the normative practice approach, and James K. A. (...). We explore why they use social practice theory, what they do with it, and how they make it their own. Finally, we highlight what unites them and what divides them, and conclude with suggestions as to how they might benefit from each other’s work in social practice theory. (shrink)
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  7.  6
    Extravagance and misery: the emotional regime of market societies.Alan Thomas, Alfred Archer & Bart Engelen - 2024 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Edited by Alfred Archer & Bart Engelen.
    This book investigates the extensive and growing economic inequalities that characterize the affluent market societies in which we currently live. It uses insights both from political philosophy and the new science of happiness to make the case for more just alternatives. We diagnose the damaging impact that existing inequalities have on our well-being. We draw on philosophical, psychological, social scientific and other insights to diagnose what has gone wrong in our highly unequal and frequently unhappy societies. Combining the approaches both (...)
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  8.  13
    Review of Vernon L. Smith and Bart J. Wilson’s Humanomics: Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations for the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019, 215 pp. [REVIEW]Blaž Remic - 2020 - Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 12 (2).
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  9.  21
    Humanomics: Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations for the Twenty-First Century, Vernon L. Smith and Bart J. Wilson. Cambridge University Press, 2019, xx + 215 pages. [REVIEW]Robert Sugden - 2021 - Economics and Philosophy 37 (2):304-309.
  10. Formal ontology, common sense, and cognitive science.Barry Smith - 1995 - International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 43 (5-6):641–667.
    Common sense is on the one hand a certain set of processes of natural cognition - of speaking, reasoning, seeing, and so on. On the other hand common sense is a system of beliefs (of folk physics, folk psychology and so on). Over against both of these is the world of common sense, the world of objects to which the processes of natural cognition and the corresponding belief-contents standardly relate. What are the structures of this world? How does the scientific (...)
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  11. The Possibility of Philosophy of Action.Michael A. Smith - 1998 - In J. A. M. Bransen & S. E. Cuypers (eds.), Human Action, Deliberation and Causation. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 17--41.
    This article was conceived as a sequel to “The Humean Theory of Motivation.” The paper addresses various challenges to the standard account of the explanation of intentional action in terms of desire and means-end belief, challenges that didn’t occur to me when I wrote “The Humean Theory of Motivation.” I begin by suggesting that the attraction of the standard account lies in the way in which it allows us to unify a vast array of otherwise diverse types of action explanation. (...)
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  12.  8
    Chalk Lines: The Politics of Work in the Managed University.Randy Martin (ed.) - 1998 - Duke University Press.
    The increasing corporatization of education has served to expose the university as a business—and one with a highly stratified division of labor. In _Chalk Lines_ editor Randy Martin presents twelve essays that confront current challenges facing the academic workforce in U.S. colleges and universities and demonstrate how, like chalk lines, divisions between employees may be creatively redrawn. While tracing the socioeconomic conditions that have led to the present labor situation on campuses, the contributors consider such topics as the political implications (...)
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  13. The Development of Theology in Germany Since Kant, Tr. By J.F. Smith.Otto Pfleiderer & John Frederick Smith - 1890
  14. Living Issues in Philosophy [by] Harold H. Titus, Marilyn S. Smith [and] Richard T. Nolan. --.Harold Hopper Titus, Marilyn S. Smith & Richard T. Nolan - 1979 - Van Nostrand.
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  15.  28
    Moral Markets: The Critical Role of Values in the Economy.Paul J. Zak (ed.) - 2008 - Princeton University Press.
    Like nature itself, modern economic life is driven by relentless competition and unbridled selfishness. Or is it? Drawing on converging evidence from neuroscience, social science, biology, law, and philosophy, Moral Markets makes the case that modern market exchange works only because most people, most of the time, act virtuously. Competition and greed are certainly part of economics, but Moral Markets shows how the rules of market exchange have evolved to promote moral behavior and how exchange itself may make us more (...)
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  16.  96
    Rethinking sovereignty, rethinking revolution.Matthew Noah Smith - 2008 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 36 (4):405-440.
  17.  12
    Political Philosophy and the Republican Future: Reconsidering Cicero.Gregory Bruce Smith - 2018 - Notre Dame: Notre Dame University Press.
    Reflections on the tradition of Republicanism -- Initial reflections on political philosophy -- Who was Cicero? -- Cicero on the nature of philosophy -- Cicero on cosmology and natural philosophy -- Cicero on natural theology -- Cicero on ethics -- Cicero on oratory and the language arts -- Cicero on politics -- A brief reflection on Nietzsche -- Political philosophy and the Republican future.
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  18.  34
    Laws and societies in global contexts: contemporary approaches.Eve Darian-Smith - 2013 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This text seeks to situate sociolegal studies in a global context.
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  19.  22
    Cosmopolitan Citizenship: Virtue, Irony and Worldliness.William Smith - 2007 - European Journal of Social Theory 10 (1):37-52.
    In this article, it is argued that cosmopolitans should elucidate the qualities and dispositions, or ‘virtues’, associated with the ideal of cosmopolitan citizenship. Bryan Turner's suggestion that cosmopolitan virtue should be identified as a type of ‘Socratic irony’, which enables individuals to achieve distance from their homeland or way of life, is explored. While acknowledging the attractions of his account, certain limitations which indicate the need to generate a richer theory of cosmopolitan virtue are identified. To that end, an alternative (...)
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  20.  20
    Therapeutic Ethics in Context and in Dialogue.Kevin R. Smith - 2020 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Psychotherapy helps one enact ideas about a good life, and therapists practice orientations rooted in their chosen approach. A 'good life' can therefore mean different things depending on the therapy. Building on the philosophy of Charles Taylor, Smith examines the link between therapy, ethics and the root of therapeutic views in comparison to modern, Western ideas about 'living well'. This is one of two complementary volumes. This volume builds on the last to explore what it means to engage the (...)
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  21.  58
    As if by machinery: The levelling of educational research.Richard Smith - 2006 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 40 (2):157–168.
    Much current educational research shows the influence of two powerful but potentially pernicious lines of thought. The first, which can be traced at least as far back as Francis Bacon, is the ambition to formulate precise techniques of research, or ‘research methods’, which can be applied reliably irrespective of the talent of the researcher. The second is the recognition that in the social sciences we—humankind—are ourselves the objects of our study. The first line of thought threatens to cut educational research (...)
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  22.  8
    Shattering biopolitics: militant listening and the sound of life.Naomi Waltham-Smith - 2021 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    A missed phone call. A misheard word. An inaudible noise. All these can make the difference between life and death. Failures to listen are frequently at the root of the marginalization and exclusion of certain forms of life. Audibility decides livability. Shattering Biopolitics elaborates for the first time the intimate and complex relation between life and sound in recent European philosophy, as well as the political stakes of this entanglement. Nowhere is aurality more pivotal than in the dialogue between biopolitical (...)
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  23.  46
    The Groundwork for Dialectic in Statesman 277a-287b.Colin C. Smith - 2018 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 12 (2):132-150.
    In Plato’sStatesman, the Eleatic Stranger leads Socrates the Younger and their audience through an analysis of the statesman in the service of the interlocutors’ becoming “more capable in dialectic regarding all things” (285d7). In this way, the dialectical exercise in the text is both intrinsically and instrumentally valuable, as it yields a philosophically rigorous account of statesmanship and exhibits a method of dialectical inquiry. After the series of bifurcatory divisions in theSophistand earlyStatesman, the Stranger changes to a non-bifurcatory method of (...)
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  24. Reason-based Logic: A logic for reasoning with rules and reasons.Jaap Hage & Bart Verheij - 1994 - Inform. Commun. Technol. Law 3 (2-3):171-209.
  25.  94
    Dutch objections to evolutionary ethics.Robert J. Richards - 1989 - Biology and Philosophy 4 (3):331-343.
    While strolling the streets of Amsterdam, Sidney Smith, the renowned editor of the Edinburgh Review, called the attention of his companion to two Dutch housewives who were leaning out of their windows and arguing with one another across the narrow alley that separated their houses. Smith remarked to his companion that the two women would never agree. His friend thought the seasoned editor had in mind the stubborn Dutch character. No, said Smith. Rather it was because they (...)
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  26. The correspondence continuum.B. Smith - 1987 - Csli 87.
  27. The explanatory role of being rational.Michael Smith - 2009 - In David Sobel & Steven Wall (eds.), Reasons for Action. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 58--80.
    Humeans hold that actions are movements of an agent's body that are suitably caused by a desire that things be a certain way and a belief on the agent's behalf that something she can just do, namely perform a movement of her body of the kind to be explained, has some suitable chance of making things that way (Davidson 1963). Movements of the body that are caused in some other way aren't actions, but are rather things that merely happen to (...)
     
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  28.  7
    Music and Belonging Between Revolution and Restoration.Naomi Waltham-Smith - 2017 - Oup Usa.
    How is music implicated in the politics of belonging? Provocatively fusing recent European philosophy with music theory, Music and Belonging explores the instrumental music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, reveals connections between listening and constructions of community, and testifies to Classical music's enduring political significance in an age of neoliberal exclusion.
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  29. Miracles.Patrick Nowell-Smith - 1964 - In Antony Flew (ed.), New essays in philosophical theology. New York,: Macmillan.
     
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  30.  43
    Great Thinkers: (III) Aristotle (Part II).J. A. Smith - 1935 - Philosophy 10 (37):15 - 26.
    When we from what may be called Aristotle's Cosmology turn to his work traditionally called the Metaphysics, we are faced with something—an inquiry or doctrine—of a surprisingly different character. There what we find is the exposition of a sort or degree of knowledge superior to that of the Sciences. This is what we call his metaphysics, but he does not so name it; he names it Wisdom, or Theoretical Wisdom. At times he calls it First Philosophy, or, again, Theology. It (...)
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  31. Antonio Gramsci's proposal for the political education of the proletariat.Robert W. G. Smith - unknown
  32.  52
    (1 other version)Evolution and Consciousness.Oliver H. P. Smith - 1899 - The Monist 9 (2):219-233.
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  33.  41
    Speech and theology: language and the logic of Incarnation.James K. A. Smith - 2002 - New York: Routledge.
    This important contribution to the ground-breaking Radical Orthodoxy series revisits the works of Husserl, Heidegger, Augustine and Derrida to reconsider the challenge of speaking of God through predication, silence, confession and praise. James K. A. Smith argues for God's own refusal to avoid speaking as well as for our urgent need of words to make Him visible to us. This leads to a radical new "incarnational phenomenology" in which God's love endows imperfect signs with the means to indicate true (...)
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  34.  31
    Philosophy and Medicine. By E. K. Ledermann. (Tavistock Publications, 1970. Pp. xix + 180. £2.90.).Colin Smith - 1971 - Philosophy 46 (176):181-.
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  35.  27
    Knowledge of God.Constance I. Smith - 1958 - Philosophy 33 (124):56 - 57.
    In his interesting discussion of Mr. C. B. Martin's Mind article “A Religious Way of Knowing,” Mr. W. D. Glasgow ;“Knowledge of God”), agrees with Martin that emotions and feelings are part of what we call an aesthetic experience, and also that emotions and feelings are part of what we call a religious experience. “In this sense, at any rate,” Glasgow writes, “there is an analogy between aesthetic experience and religious experience. But...” he goes on, “are aesthetic statements more than (...)
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  36.  88
    Hope and critical theory.Nicholas Smith - 2005 - Critical Horizons 6 (1):45-61.
    In the first part of the paper I consider the relative neglect of hope in the tradition of critical theory. I attribute this neglect to a low estimation of the cognitive, aesthetic, and moral value of hope, and to the strong—but, I argue, contingent—association that holds between hope and religion. I then distinguish three strategies for thinking about the justification of social hope; one which appeals to a notion of unfulfilled or frustrated natural human capacities, another which invokes a providential (...)
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  37. Improving australian universities.Peter Godfrey-Smith - manuscript
    Published as "Useful Lessons from California" in Quadrant Magazine, Volume 50, October 2006. An edited version appears in the Australian newspaper's Higher Education Supplement, as "The Model of Achievement," November 1, 2006.
     
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  38.  13
    Grandmother Zofia’s Table.Teresa Halikowska-Smith - 2023 - The European Legacy 28 (7):789-796.
    In the entrance hall of our family house in Leamington Spa stands a slender Regency style table of noble wood and fine proportions. It suits the house, which dates from 1828, perfectly. Few visitor...
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  39.  18
    Application of the strain invariant failure theory to metals and fiber–polymer composites.L. J. Hart-Smith - 2010 - Philosophical Magazine 90 (31-32):4263-4331.
  40.  30
    Love and sex in the home. By David Matzko McCarthy.Alexander Lucie-Smith - 2008 - Heythrop Journal 49 (3):498–499.
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  41.  42
    Rethinking Human Nature: A Christian Materialist Alternative to the Soul. By Kevin J. Corcoran.Alexander Lucie-Smith - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (3):493-493.
  42.  29
    The wealth of humans: core, periphery and frontiers of humanomics.Paolo Silvestri & Benoît Walraevens - 2022 - Journal of Economic Methodology 30 (1):15-33.
    Among the various attempts to re-humanize economics, the ‘humanomics’ proposed by Vernon Smith and Bart Wilson stands out. We contribute to the “humanomics project” by mapping its territory – core, periphery and frontiers – with an eye, also, on future explorations. First, we critically study the core: Smith and Wilson’s interpretation and experimental application of Adam Smith’s ideas on beneficence and injustice. Using the distinction between reciprocal cooperation and reciprocal kindness, we provide a different interpretation of (...)
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  43. how to watch and download animes movie?John Smith John Smith - 2017 - Anime.
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  44.  21
    Space-Shaping Technologies and the Geographical Disembedding of Place.Jonathan Smith - 1998 - Philosophy and Geography 3:239-263.
    Semantic Scholar extracted view of "Space-Shaping Technologies and the Geographical Disembedding of Place" by Jonathan Smith.
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  45. An Introduction to Catholic Social Thought.Michael P. Hornsby-Smith - 2006 - Cambridge University Press.
    Michael Hornsby-Smith offers an overview of Catholic social thought particularly in recent decades. While drawing on official teaching such as papal encyclicals and the pastoral letters of bishops' conferences, he takes seriously the need for dialogue with secular thought. The 2006 book is organized in four stages. Part I outlines the variety of domestic and international injustices and seeks to offer a social analysis of the causes of these injustices. Part II offers a theological reflection on the characteristics of (...)
     
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  46.  27
    When Time Is Not a River.Nancy A. Barta-Smith - 1997 - International Philosophical Quarterly 37 (4):423-440.
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  47.  21
    God and morality: A philosophical enquiry. By John E. Hare.Alexander Lucie-Smith - 2008 - Heythrop Journal 49 (3):500–501.
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  48.  43
    Practice, Constraint, and Mathematical Concepts.Mark C. R. Smith - 2012 - Philosophia Scientiae 16 (1):15-28.
    Dans cet article je propose d'exprimer et de défendre une conception des pratiques et du domaine de discours mathématiques qui soit sensible, d'une part, au pluralisme des relations entre pratiques inférentielles et intérêts, et d'autre part, à la structure objective et déterminante des concepts mathématiques. J'ébauche tout d'abord une caractérisation générale des pratiques, pour ensuite préciser certains phénomènes propres aux pratiques mathématiques. Suit un recensement des idées qui se dégagent des arguments pluralistes, et de celles qui sont à retenir. Mais (...)
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  49.  13
    Property rights: Philosophic foundations.G. W. Smith - 1979 - Philosophical Books 20 (1):21-23.
  50.  26
    Re-Thinking Therapy with Taylor: Beyond the Therapeutic.Kevin R. Smith - 2021 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 29 (5):776-790.
    In his critique of the therapeutic, Taylor argues that therapy fails to engage with the ethical and spiritual significance of human suffering. Therapy’s denial of ethics is representative of a wide...
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