Results for 'Ben Tsiyon ben Yitshak Nesher'

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  1. Sefer Be-ʻiḳvot moʻade H.: maʼamre musar u-maḥshavah be-ʻinyene ha-Yamim ha-Noraʼim ṿe-ḥag ha-Sukot.Ben-Tsiyon ben Śimḥah Ḳuḳ - 2001 - Yerushalayim: Mekhon Daʻat Torah.
     
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  2. Doresh ṭov le-ʻamo: osef sipurim ṿe-ʻuvdot mi-gedole ha-dorot ha-aḥaronim.Ben-Tsiyon Mutsafi - 2008 - Yerushalayim: [Ḥ. Mo. L.].
     
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  3. Sefer Or le-Tsiyon: zikhron hadasah: ḥokhmah u-musar: amarot ṭehorot, le-ʻorer ha-levavot..Aba Shaʼul & Ben Tsiyon - 1995 - Yerushalayim: Mekhon "Or le-Tsiyon".
     
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  4. Sefer Beʼer melekh: ʻal Hilkhot Isure biʼah.Moses Maimonides & Eldad ben Tsiyon Aharon Sabag (eds.) - 2014 - [Ḥefah]: [Eldad Sabag].
    ḥeleḳ 1. Isure biʼah, ḳedushah u-tseniʻut -- ḥeleḳ 2. Hilkhot yiḥud ṿe-onaʼat mamon u-devarim.
     
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  5. Sefer Leḳeṭ Teshuvah u-tsedaḳah: u-vo sheʼelot u-teshuvot... be-ʻinyene mitsṿot ha-teshuvah, tsedaḳah u-maʻśar kesafim, Ṭaʻamehem ṿe-dinehem u-meḳorotehem... maʻaśiyot be-ʻinyene teshuvah u-tsedaḳahah.Menasheh ben Tsiyon Kohen (ed.) - 2005 - Yerushalayim: Menasheh Kohen.
     
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  6. Sefer Leḳeṭ Teshuvah u-tsedaḳah: u-vo sheʼelot u-teshuvot... be-ʻinyene mitsṿot ha-teshuvah, tsedaḳah u-maʻśar kesafim, Ṭaʻamehem ṿe-dinehem u-meḳorotehem... maʻaśiyot be-ʻinyene teshuvah u-tsedaḳahah.Menasheh ben Tsiyon Kohen (ed.) - 2005 - Yerushalayim: Menasheh Kohen.
     
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  7. Sefer Mevaśer ṭov: shaʻare ʻavodat H.: Adam le-ʻamal yulad.Betsalʼel Śimḥah Menaḥem Ben Tsiyon Rabinovits - 1996 - Yerushalayim: Megamah. Edited by Meʼir Yeḥezḳel ben Y. Ṿainer.
     
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  8. Sefer ʻEt "Ratson" ʻal ha-tefilah.Tsiyon Ben Ratson-Lahaṭ - 2003 - [Israel?]: [Publisher Not Identified].
     
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  9. Sefer Ketav emet: śiḥot u-maʻamarim, divre hitʻorerut ṿe-ḥizuḳ be-ʻinyene limud ha-Torah ha-ḳ., musar, hashḳafah ṿe-yirʼat Shamayim.Refaʼ Kohen & el ben Yitsḥaḳ - 2006 - Bene-Beraḳ: Refaʼel ben Yitsḥaḳ Kohen.
     
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  10. Sefer Yosher horai: berure halakhah be-mitsṿat kibud av ṿa-em.Yiśraʼ Rapaporṭ & el Yosef ben Yitsḥaḳ - 2008 - Bene Beraḳ: Yiśraʼel Yosef Rapoporṭ.
     
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  11.  10
    Ben Tsiyon Meʼir Ḥai: ha-Rav ʻUziʼel - hagut, halakhah ṿe-hisṭoryah = Rabbi Benzion Meir Hai Uziel: thinker, halakhist, leader.Tsevi Zohar, Amihai Radzyner & Elimelech Westreich (eds.) - 2020 - Ramat-Gan: Hotsaʼat Universiṭat Bar-Ilan.
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  12.  2
    Sefer Ahavat Tsiyon: le-vaʻal ha-Nodaʻ bi-Yehudah: divre musar u-derashot asher darash be-makʹ̣helet ʻam bi-ḳehilat ḳodesh Prag.Ezekiel ben Judah Landau - 2004 - Betar ʻIlit: Mekhon Mayim mi-dalyaṿ.
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  13. Descartes' Dreams.Ben-ami Scharfstein - 1969 - Philosophical Forum 1 (3):293.
     
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  14. Is intrinsic value conditional?Ben Bradley - 2002 - Philosophical Studies 107 (1):23 - 44.
    Accoding to G.E. Moore, something''s intrinsic valuedepends solely on its intrinsic nature. Recently Thomas Hurka andShelly Kagan have argued, contra Moore, that something''s intrinsic valuemay depend on its extrinsic properties. Call this view the ConditionalView of intrinsic value. In this paper I demonstrate how a Mooreancan account for purported counterexamples given by Hurka and Kagan. I thenargue that certain organic unities pose difficulties for the ConditionalView.
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  15. The truth behind conscientious objection in medicine.Nir Ben-Moshe - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (6):404-410.
    Answers to the questions of what justifies conscientious objection in medicine in general and which specific objections should be respected have proven to be elusive. In this paper, I develop a new framework for conscientious objection in medicine that is based on the idea that conscience can express true moral claims. I draw on one of the historical roots, found in Adam Smith’s impartial spectator account, of the idea that an agent’s conscience can determine the correct moral norms, even if (...)
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  16. The inference to the best explanation.Yemima Ben-Menahem - 1990 - Erkenntnis 33 (3):319-44.
    In a situation in which several explanations compete, is the one that is better qua explanation also the one we should regard as the more likely to be true? Realists usually answer in the affirmative. They then go on to argue that since realism provides the best explanation for the success of science, realism can be inferred to. Nonrealists, on the other hand, answer the above question in the negative, thereby renouncing the inference to realism. In this paper I separate (...)
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  17.  38
    The crosslinguistic acquisition of sentence structure: Computational modeling and grammaticality judgments from adult and child speakers of English, Japanese, Hindi, Hebrew and K'iche'.Ben Ambridge, Tomoko Tatsumi, Laura Doherty, Ramya Maitreyee, Colin Bannard, Soumitra Samanta, Stewart McCauley, Inbal Arnon, Shira Zicherman, Dani Bekman, Amir Efrati, Ruth Berman, Bhuvana Narasimhan, Dipti Misra Sharma, Rukmini Bhaya Nair, Kumiko Fukumura, Seth Campbell, Clifton Pye, Pedro Mateo Pedro, Sindy Fabiola Can Pixabaj, Mario Marroquín Pelíz & Margarita Julajuj Mendoza - 2020 - Cognition 202 (C):104310.
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  18. Can we interpret Kant as a compatibilist about determinism and moral responsibility?Ben Vilhauer - 2004 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (4):719 – 730.
    In this paper, I discuss Hud Hudson's compatibilistic interpretation of Kant's theory of free will, which is based on Davidson's anomalous monism. I sketch an alternative interpretation of my own, an incompatibilistic interpretation according to which agents qua noumena are responsible for the particular causal laws which determine the actions of agents qua phenomena. Hudson's interpretation should be attractive to philosophers who value Kant's epistemology and ethics, but insist on a deflationary reading of things in themselves. It is in an (...)
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  19. Fregean Theories of Names from Fiction.Ben Caplan - 2021 - In Stephen Biggs and Heimir Geirsson (ed.), Routledge Handbook of Linguistic Reference. Routledge. pp. 384–396.
     
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  20. The value of endangered species.Ben Bradley - 2001 - Journal of Value Inquiry 35 (1):43-58.
    I argue against several extant views (Rolston, etc) about the value of endangered species. I argue that the best way to defend a non-anthropocentric view about the value of endangered species is to appeal to the intrinsic value of biological diversity.
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  21. Pragmatism in Environmental Ethics.Ben A. Minteer & Robert E. Manning - 1999 - Environmental Ethics 21 (2):191-207.
    A growing number of contributors to environmental philosophy are beginning to rethink the field’s mission and practice. Noting that the emphasis of protracted conceptual battles over axiology may not get us very far in solving environmental problems, many environmental ethicists have begun to advocate a more pragmatic, pluralistic, and policy-based approach in philosophical discussions abouthuman-nature relationships. In this paper, we argue for the legitimacy of this approach, stressing that public deliberation and debate over alternative environmental ethics is necessary for a (...)
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  22.  22
    Causation in science.Yemima Ben-Menahem - 2018 - Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
    This book explores the role of causal constraints in science, shifting our attention from causal relations between individual events--the focus of most philosophical treatments of causation--to a broad family of concepts and principles generating constraints on possible change. Yemima Ben-Menahem looks at determinism, locality, stability, symmetry principles, conservation laws, and the principle of least action-causal constraints that serve to distinguish events and processes that our best scientific theories mandate or allow from those they rule out. Ben-Menahem's approach reveals that causation (...)
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  23. Millian descriptivism.Ben Caplan - 2007 - Philosophical Studies 133 (2):181-198.
    In this paper, I argue against Millian Descriptivism: that is, the view that, although sentences that contain names express singular propositions, when they use those sentences speakers communicate descriptive propositions. More precisely, I argue that Millian Descriptivism fares no better (or worse) than Fregean Descriptivism: that is, the view that sentences express descriptive propositions. This is bad news for Millian Descriptivists who think that Fregean Descriptivism is dead.
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  24.  95
    Scope dominance with monotone quantifiers over finite domains.Gilad Ben-Avi & Yoad Winter - 2004 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 13 (4):385-402.
    We characterize pairs of monotone generalized quantifiers Q1 and Q2 over finite domains that give rise to an entailment relation between their two relative scope construals. This relation between quantifiers, which is referred to as scope dominance, is used for identifying entailment relations between the two scopal interpretations of simple sentences of the form NP1–V–NP2. Simple numerical or set-theoretical considerations that follow from our main result are used for characterizing such relations. The variety of examples in which they hold are (...)
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  25.  54
    The manosphere goes to school: Problematizing incel surveillance through affective boyhood.Ben Adams, Amanda Keddie & Garth Stahl - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (3):366-378.
    Educators continue to struggle with how masculinities are performed and regulated in spaces of learning. In a time of rapid social change, there is a renewed impetus for gender justice reform in schooling, though these approaches themselves remain a shifting picture. Adding a new layer of complexity, we are now witness to educational policy recommendations around surveillance which are designed to counteract boys’ and young men’s vulnerabilities to be radicalised into the misogynies of the ‘manosphere’. These recommendations exist despite limited (...)
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  26.  95
    Security, territory, population: Lectures at the collège de France (1977–1978), by Michel Foucault.Ben Golder - 2007 - Radical Philosophy Review 10 (2):157-176.
  27. Against widescopism.Ben Caplan - 2005 - Philosophical Studies 125 (2):167-190.
    Descriptivists say that every name is synonymous with some definite description, and Descriptivists who are Widescopers say that the definite description that a name is synonymous with must take wide scope with respect to modal adverbs such as “necessarily”. In this paper, I argue against Widescopism. Widescopers should be Super Widescopers: that is, they should say that the definite description that a name is synonymous with must take wide scope with respect to complementizers such as “that”. Super Widescopers should be (...)
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  28. The semantics of kind terms.Hanoch Ben-Yami - 2001 - Philosophical Studies 102 (2):155-184.
    This paper criticizes Kripke’s and Putnam’s theory of the semantics of natural kind terms (KPT) and develops an alternative theory. It first examines description theories of natural kind terms, to see what their flaws are and what can be preserved of them. It then presents the KPT and makes three main criticisms. These rely on the meaning of elementary particles’ names, on reactions to the absence of a common essential nature, and on applications of old terms to new cases. Lastly, (...)
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  29. On sense and direct reference.Ben Caplan - 2006 - Philosophy Compass 1 (2):171-185.
    Millianism and Fregeanism agree that a sentence that contains a name expresses a structured proposition but disagree about whether that proposition contains the object that the name refers to (Millianism) or rather a mode of presentation of that object (Fregeanism). Various problems – about simple sentences, propositional‐attitude ascriptions, and sentences that contain empty names – beset each view. To solve these problems, Millianism can appeal to modes of presentation, and Fregeanism can appeal to objects. But this raises a further problem: (...)
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  30.  29
    The semantics of the transitive causative construction: Evidence from a forced-choice pointing study with adults and children.Ben Ambridge, Claire H. Noble & Elena V. M. Lieven - 2014 - Cognitive Linguistics 25 (2):293-311.
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  31.  29
    Deafness and Insight: On the Seductions of the Music/Language Analogy.Ben Etherington - 2010 - Paragraph 33 (1):20-36.
    This article contends that close attention to music/language analogies allows us to perceive how language attempts to gain an understanding of its own cognitive nature. The article does so by closely reading Paul de Man's ‘The Rhetoric of Blindness’, an essay in which de Man suggests that a detailed look at the analogies between musical and linguistic structures made by Jean-Jacques Rousseau in his Essay On the Origin of Languages helps reveal how literary criticism becomes ‘blind’ to its own metaphysical (...)
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  32.  16
    Night Swimming.Ben Smith - 2017 - Colloquy 33.
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  33. Equivalent descriptions.Yemima Ben-Menahem - 1990 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 41 (2):261-279.
  34.  29
    Revising the Principle of Reinforcement.Ben A. Williams - 1983 - Behavior and Philosophy 11 (1):63.
  35. The logic of emotions.A. Ben-ze'ev - 2003 - In Anthony Hatzimoysis (ed.), Philosophy and the Emotions. Cambridge University Press. pp. 147-162.
     
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  36. (1 other version) Paul's Letter to the Romans: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary.Ben Witherington - 2004
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  37.  77
    Heidegger on desire.Ben Vedder - 1998 - Continental Philosophy Review 31 (4):353-368.
    In this article is presented a reading of Heidegger in relation to the conception of desire, and its relation to various terms he uses frequently. I argue that the genesis of desire lies in the gap between the fullness of possibility and the poverty of actualization; that inauthentic desire aims at presence, possession, actualization (always insufficient); and that authentic desire aims at the conservation of the possibility-character of being. I also pay attention to the temporality of desire; to the analogy (...)
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  38. A Moral‐Philosophical Perspective on Paedophilia and Incest.Ben Spiecker & Jan Steutel - 2000 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 32 (3):283–291.
  39. Political Activism and Research Ethics.Ben Jones - 2019 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 37 (2):233-248.
    Those who care about and engage in politics frequently fall victim to cognitive bias. Concerns that such bias impacts scholarship recently have prompted debates—notably, in philosophy and psychology—on the proper relationship between research and politics. One proposal emerging from these debates is that researchers studying politics have a professional duty to avoid political activism because it risks biasing their work. While sympathetic to the motivations behind this proposal, I suggest several reasons to reject a blanket duty to avoid activism: (1) (...)
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  40. An argument against functionalism.Hanoch Ben-Yami - 1999 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 77 (3):320-324.
    Functionalists define a given mental state as a state that is apt to be the cause of specific effects and the effect of specific causes. Two tokens of the same belief, however, often cause and are caused by very different events: what makes them beliefs of the same type? Several answers, including the one relying on the identity of actual plus counterfactual causal relations, are considered and rejected. Functionalists did not notice that they have to specify how a state which (...)
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  41.  96
    Bare Quantifiers?Hanoch Ben-Yami - 2014 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 95 (2):175-188.
    In a series of publications I have claimed that by contrast to standard formal languages, quantifiers in natural language combine with a general term to form a quantified argument, in which the general term's role is to determine the domain or plurality over which the quantifier ranges. In a recent paper Zoltán Gendler Szabó tried to provide a counterexample to this analysis and derived from it various conclusions concerning quantification in natural language, claiming it is often ‘bare’. I show that (...)
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  42.  73
    Introduction to the 2nd Synthese Special Issue: trends in philosophy of language and mind.Hanoch Ben-Yami, Robyn Carston & Markus Werning - 2018 - Synthese 195 (8).
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  43.  91
    Apparent simultaneity.Hanoch Ben-Yami - unknown
    I develop Special Relativity with backward-light-cone simultaneity, which I call, for reasons made clear in the paper, ‘Apparent Simultaneity’. In the first section I show some advantages of this approach. I then develop the kinematics in the second section. In the third section I apply the approach to the Twins Paradox: I show how it removes the paradox, and I explain why the paradox was a result of an artificial symmetry introduced to the description of the process by Einstein’s simultaneity (...)
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  44.  37
    Harm Issue Editorial.Ben Bramble - 2019 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 22 (4):793-794.
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  45.  42
    Intellectual Perfectionism about Schooling.Ben Kotzee - 2018 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 36 (3):436-456.
    In education, character education is a burgeoning field; however, it is also the target of considerable criticism. Amongst criticisms of character education, the political criticism that character education is a form of indoctrination stands out. In particular, the charge is made against character education that it breaches the principle of liberal neutrality about the good. In this article I discuss liberal approaches to character education. I outline the two most prominent liberal approaches to character education in school, liberal neutralism and (...)
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  46. Is specialization desirable in committee decision making?Ruth Ben-Yashar, Winston T. H. Koh & Shmuel Nitzan - 2012 - Theory and Decision 72 (3):341-357.
    Committee decision making is examined in this study focusing on the role assigned to the committee members. In particular, we are concerned about the comparison between committee performance under specialization and non-specialization of the decision makers. Specialization (in the context of project or public policy selection) means that the decision of each committee member is based on a narrow area, which typically results in the acquirement and use of relatively high expertise in that area. When the committee members’ expertise is (...)
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  47. Fred Feldman, pleasure and the good life: Concerning the nature, varieties, and plausibility of hedonism (oxford, clarendon press: 2004), pp. XI + 221.Ben Bradley - 2010 - Utilitas 22 (2):232-234.
  48.  7
    Polska fenomenologia przedwojenna: antologia tekstów.Dariusz Bęben & Marta Ples-Bęben (eds.) - 2013 - Katowice: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego.
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  49. Romantic love and sexual desire.Aaron Ben-Ze'ev - 1997 - Philosophia 25 (1-4):3-32.
  50.  6
    The labyrinth: an existential odyssey with Jean-Paul Sartre.Ben Argon - 2020 - New York: Abrams Comicarts. Edited by Gary Cox & Christine Daigle.
    As graduates embark on the next phase of their lives, what better way to get them accustomed to the rat race they are about to enter than by introducing them to the philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre? Cleverly told through the story of a pair of rats trapped in the labyrinth of existence, this allegory humorously conveys the key ideas of Sartre's existential philosophy in graphic-novel form - accessible for students and readers of all ages."--Back cover.
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