Results for 'Benjamin Robert William Toovey'

967 found
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  1.  23
    (1 other version)Cross-Modal Transfer Following Auditory Task-Switching Training in Old Adults.Benjamin Robert William Toovey, Florian Kattner & Torsten Schubert - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Maintaining and coordinating multiple task-sets is difficult and leads to costs, however task-switching training can reduce these deficits. A recent study in young adults demonstrated that this training effect occurs at an amodal processing level. Old age is associated with reduced cognitive plasticity and further increases the performance costs when mixing multiple tasks. Thus, cognitive aging might be a limiting factor for inducing cross-modal training effects in a task-switching environment. We trained participants, aged 62–83 years, with an auditory task-switching paradigm (...)
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  2.  76
    The reconstitution of marxism's production paradigm: The cases of Benjamin, Althusser, and Marx.William Clare Roberts - 2010 - Philosophical Forum 41 (4):413-440.
  3. Evaluating Weaknesses of “Perceptual-Cognitive Training” and “Brain Training” Methods in Sport: An Ecological Dynamics Critique.Ian Renshaw, Keith Davids, Duarte Araújo, Ana Lucas, William M. Roberts, Daniel J. Newcombe & Benjamin Franks - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
    The recent upsurge in “brain-training and perceptual-cognitive-training", proposing to improve isolated processes such as brain function, visual perception and decision-making, has created significant interest in elite sports practitioners, seeking to create an ‘edge’ for athletes. The claims of these related 'performance-enhancing industries' can be considered together as part of a process training approach proposing enhanced cognitive and perceptual skills and brain capacity, to support performance in everyday life activities, including sport. For example, the 'process-training industry' promotes the idea that playing (...)
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  4.  14
    War After September 11.Benjamin R. Barber, Lloyd J. Dumas, Robert K. Fullinwider, William A. Galston, Paul W. Kahn, Judith Lichtenberg & David Luban - 2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    War After September 11 considers the just aims and legitimate limits of the United States' response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
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  5.  78
    Indeterminacy, ultimacy, and the world: The self-creation of religious pluralism through community and creation. [REVIEW]Benjamin James Chicka - 2010 - Sophia 49 (1):49-63.
    Common arguments for truth in religious pluralism absolutize an ultimate or lived component of religion, reducing a positive affirmation of plurality to deeper unity or exclusion. The arguments of John Hick, William Connolly, Nicholas Rescher, and S. Mark Heim fall into such a trap. By considering how an indeterminate concept of ultimacy, proposed by Robert C. Neville, fares against the problems their arguments raise, it will be shown that such a concept of ultimacy can both give rise to (...)
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  6.  43
    Philip Guston and the Crisis of the Image.Robert Zaller - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 14 (1):69-94.
    The twentieth century began with the deconstruction of the image, as it is ending with the effort to restore it. Cubism, dada, and abstract expressionism took apart what, in their various ways, pop art, magic realism, and neoexpressionism have tried to put back together. Tonality in music and narrative in literature have undergone similar change.1 What has been at stake in each case has been the redefinition of a center, a normative or ordering principle as such. Yeats intuited this general (...)
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  7. Theory Selection in Modal Epistemology.Robert William Fischer - 2015 - American Philosophical Quarterly 52 (4):381-395.
    Accounts of modal knowledge are many and varied. How should we choose between them? I propose that we employ inference to the best explanation, and I suggest that there are three desiderata that we should use to rank hypotheses: conservatism, simplicity, and the ability to handle disagreement. After examining these desiderata, I contend that they can’t be used to justify belief in the modal epistemology that fares best, but that they can justify our accepting it in an epistemically significant sense. (...)
     
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  8. Disgust and the Collection of Bovine Fetal Blood.Robert William Fischer - 2014 - In Elisa Aaltola & John Hadley (eds.), Animal Ethics and Philosophy: Questioning the Orthodoxy. New York: Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 151-164.
    At many slaughterhouses, if a pregnant cow is killed, then medical companies pay to harvest the fetus's blood. When you communicate the details of this process to people, many of them are disgusted. I submit that those who are repulsed thereby acquire a reason to believe that this practice is morally wrong. However, it is controversial to maintain that disgust can provide moral guidance. So, I develop a theory of disgust’s moral salience that fits with the empirical work that’s been (...)
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  9.  5
    Semantics and language analysis.Robert L. Benjamin - 1969 - Indianapolis,: Bobbs-Merrill.
  10. Time on the Cross.Robert William Fogel & Stanley L. Engerman - 1975 - Science and Society 39 (4):474-478.
     
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  11.  27
    Marx’s Inferno: The Political Theory of Capital.William Clare Roberts - 2016 - Princeton University Press.
    Marx’s Inferno reconstructs the major arguments of Karl Marx’s Capital and inaugurates a completely new reading of a seminal classic. Rather than simply a critique of classical political economy, William Roberts argues that Capital was primarily a careful engagement with the motives and aims of the workers’ movement. Understood in this light, Capital emerges as a profound work of political theory. Placing Marx against the background of nineteenth-century socialism, Roberts shows how Capital was ingeniously modeled on Dante’s Inferno, and (...)
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  12.  39
    Short-term memory in the pigeon: Effects of repetition and spacing.William A. Roberts - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 94 (1):74.
  13. The ethics of the extended mind: Mental privacy, manipulation and agency.Robert William Clowes, Paul R. Smart & Richard Heersmink - 2024 - In Jan-Hendrik Heinrichs, Birgit Beck & Orsolya Friedrich (eds.), Neuro-ProsthEthics: Ethical Implications of Applied Situated Cognition. Berlin, Germany: J. B. Metzler. pp. 13–35.
    According to proponents of the extended mind, bio-external resources, such as a notebook or a smartphone, are candidate parts of the cognitive and mental machinery that realises cognitive states and processes. The present chapter discusses three areas of ethical concern associated with the extended mind, namely mental privacy, mental manipulation, and agency. We also examine the ethics of the extended mind from the standpoint of three general normative frameworks, namely, consequentialism, deontology, and virtue ethics.
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  14.  27
    The Aesthetics of Jose Ortega y Gasset.Robert William Jung - 1966 - Dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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  15.  55
    Experience - noun or verb?William H. Roberts - 1941 - Journal of Philosophy 38 (September):542-548.
  16.  40
    Some Queries Suggested by G. E. Moore's Beautiful and Ugly Worlds.William H. Roberts - 1941 - Journal of Philosophy 38 (23):623-627.
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  17.  22
    Reflections on a Restructuring Initiative: Conceptualization, Implementation, and Reflection on an “Episode in Contradictions”.Benjamin Robert Forsyth, Timothy Gilson & Susan Etscheidt - 2024 - Journal of Academic Ethics 22 (4):599-619.
    This paper evaluates and critiques a recent restructuring initiative for a college at a Midwestern university in the United States in which three academic departments were reduced down to two departments. The case study presents the experiences and perspectives of three faculty members– one from each of those departments–who participated in the restructuring process. The paper first introduces the current challenges and complexities in Institutions of Higher Education (IHEs) which initiate and influence restructuring efforts After laying out the context of (...)
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  18. (1 other version)Plato and the individual.Robert William Hall - 1963 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 20 (3):352-352.
     
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  19.  46
    Plato's arguments for forms.Robert William Jordan - 1983 - Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society.
  20.  6
    God, the great unknown.William Elwood Roberts - 1941 - Long Beach, Calif.: Long Beach, Calif..
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  21.  87
    Imagining Mechanisms with Diagrams.Benjamin Sheredos & William Bechtel - 2019 - In Arnon Levy & Peter Godfrey-Smith (eds.), The Scientific Imagination. New York, US: Oup Usa.
    Some proponents of mechanistic explanation downplay the significance of how-possibly explanations. We argue that developing accounts of mechanisms that could explain a phenomenon is an important aspect of scientific reasoning, one that involves imagination. Although appeals to imagination may seem to obscure the process of reasoning, we illustrate how, by examining diagrams we can gain insights into the construction of mechanistic explanations.
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  22. Aristotle’s Infallible Perception.Benjamin Robert Koons - 2019 - Apeiron 52 (4):415-443.
    In the De Anima, Aristotle claims that the five senses are infallible about their proper objects. I contend that this claim means that sight is infallible about its proper object in its most specific form, i. e. sight is infallible about red or green and not merely about color in general. This robust claim is justified by Aristotle’s teleological principle that nature does nothing in vain. Additionally, drawing on Aristotle’s comparison of perception and one’s understanding of the essences, I defend (...)
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  23.  26
    Portfolio society: On the capitalist mode of prediction.William Clare Roberts - 2016 - Contemporary Political Theory 17 (4):232-235.
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  24. (1 other version)The Problem of Choice.William Henry Roberts - 1941 - Philosophical Review 50:651.
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  25.  20
    Evolution and Human Values.Robert Wesson & Patricia A. Williams (eds.) - 1995 - Rodopi.
    Initiated by Robert Wesson, Evolution and Human Values is a collection of newly written essays designed to bring interdisciplinary insight to that area of thought where human evolution intersects with human values. The disciplines brought to bear on the subject are diverse - philosophy, psychiatry, behavioral science, biology, anthropology, psychology, biochemistry, and sociology. Yet, as organized by co-editor Patricia A. Williams, the volume falls coherently into three related sections. Entitled Evolutionary Ethics, the first section brings contemporary research to an (...)
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  26. Whose Realism? Which Legitimacy? Ideologies of Domination and Post-Rawlsian Political Theory.William Clare Roberts - 2022 - Analyse & Kritik 44 (1):41-60.
    There is something amiss about post-Rawlsian efforts to bring political theory down to earth by insisting upon the political primacy of the question of legitimacy, peace, or order. The intuition driving much realism seems to be that we must first agree to get along, and only then can we get down to the business of pursuing justice. I argue that the ideological narratives of the powerful pose a political problem for this primacy of legitimacy thesis. To prioritize the achievement of (...)
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  27. Centralism is a Dangerous Tool.William Clare Roberts - 2020 - CLR James Journal 26 (1):219-240.
    This essay seeks to bring into focus the latent political theory of CLR James’s World Revolution, 1917-1936, and to show, on this basis, how World Revolution explains certain difficult aspects of The Black Jacobins. The core of James’s theory is the thesis that social classes are organically and internally identified, and that each has a preformed and unitary interest, which can be articulated as a set of political principles. A class is called to act by the voice that expresses the (...)
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  28.  6
    Revivals: Of Antigone.William Robert - 2015 - State University of New York Press.
    _Presents new ways of thinking about the human and the humanities through a rethinking of Antigone._.
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  29.  18
    The feasibility ofin situobservations of recrystallization in the high voltage electron microscope.William Roberts & Börje Lehtinen - 1974 - Philosophical Magazine 29 (6):1431-1433.
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  30. Science and Modern Civilisation the Harveian Oration : Delivered Before the Royal College of Physicians, October 18, 1897.William Roberts - 1897 - Smith, Elder.
  31.  52
    Sympathetic nervous system and pain: Phenomenological diversity.William J. Roberts - 1997 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (3):463-464.
    This commentary on blumberg et al. addresses complications associated with diagnostic testing for sympathetic dependence of pain that can lead to inappropriate positive and negative conclusions. In addition, it is suggested that their test be conceived as a test of the effect of local vascular pressure and that the two types of sensory disorders presented may differ primarily in the degree of sensitization of central pain pathways. Detailed reports with functionally-oriented testing like that done by BLUMBERG are essential for an (...)
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  32.  52
    The domain of logic according to Saint Thomas Aquinas.Robert William Schmidt - 1966 - The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.
  33.  6
    The morality of nature.Robert Williams Gibson - 1923 - New York,: Putnam.
    This is a new release of the original 1923 edition.
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  34. (1 other version)What was primitive accumulation? Reconstructing the origin of a critical concept.William Clare Roberts - 2017 - European Journal of Political Theory 19 (4):532-552.
    The ongoing critical redeployment of primitive accumulation proceeds under two premises. First, it is argued that Marx, erroneously, confined primitive accumulation to the earliest history of capit...
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  35. The Portraiture of a Christian Gentleman, by a Barrister [Signed W.R.].William Roberts - 1829
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  36.  42
    Sketching Biological Phenomena and Mechanisms.Sheredos Benjamin & Bechtel William - 2017 - Topics in Cognitive Science 9 (4):970-985.
    In many fields of biology, both the phenomena to be explained and the mechanisms proposed to explain them are commonly presented in diagrams. Our interest is in how scientists construct such diagrams. Researchers begin with evidence, typically developed experimentally and presented in data graphs. To arrive at a robust diagram of the phenomenon or the mechanism, they must integrate a variety of data to construct a single, coherent representation. This process often begins as the researchers create a first sketch, and (...)
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  37.  25
    Trials: of Antigone and Jesus.William Robert - 2010 - New York, N.Y.: Fordham University Press.
    Impossible love -- Between nature and culture -- Surviving, forever foreign -- Cryptic crossing -- Touching transcendence, in the flesh -- The tragedy of Christianity.
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  38. Abstraction and Productivity: Structures of Intentionality and Action in Marx's Capital.William Clare Roberts - 2009 - In Andrew Chitty & Martin McIvor (eds.), Karl Marx and Contemporary Philosophy. Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  39.  52
    Plato's political analogy: Fallacy or analogy?Robert William Hall - 1974 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 12 (4):419.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Plato's Political Analogy: Fallacy or Analogy? ROBERT W. HALL THE INTERPRETATIONOf the familiar political analogy between the state and the soul is crucial to a proper understanding of Plato's conception of the individual and his relation to the polls. Interpretations which, consciously or not, tend to identify the justice of the individual with that of the state result either in a subordination of justice of the individual to (...)
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  40.  43
    Incomplete stimulus representations and the loss of cognitive access in cerebral achromatopsia.Robert William Kentridge - 2007 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30 (5-6):508-509.
    When processing of stimuli occurs without attention, phenomenal experience, as well as cognitive access, may be lost. Sensory representations are, however, constructed by neural machinery extending far beyond sensory receptors. In conditions such as cerebral achromatopsia incomplete sensory representations may still elicit phenomenal experience but these representations might be too aberrant to be integrated into the wider cognitive workspace.
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  41.  64
    A Revised Chronology of Plato's Dialogues.Robert William Mosimann - 2010 - Philosophical Inquiry 32 (3-4):23-60.
  42.  17
    Sing me some glinka or dargomyzhsky.Robert William Oldani - 1993 - History of European Ideas 16 (4-6):713-719.
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  43.  30
    The Principles of Practical Cost-Benefit Analysis.Robert Sugden & Alan Harold Williams - 1978 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Cost effectiveness. Economics. This is an introduction, accessible to non-economists as well as to economists, to the practice of cost benifit analysis. It begins from a discussion of financial appraisal. The distinguishing features of cost benifit analysis are then introduced progressively. Practical examples are used whenever possible to aid the exposition. Economic theory is introduced only where it is immediately relevant to practice. Nonetheless the approach is firmly grounded in economic principles and considerable space is devoted to those ideas that (...)
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  44.  59
    The Just and Happy Man of the Republic : Fact or Fallacy?Robert William Hall - 1971 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 9 (2):147-158.
  45.  1
    Studies in religious philosophy.Robert William Hall - 1968 - [New York]: American Book Co..
  46. The adventure of life.Robert William Mackenna - 1919 - New York,: Macmillan.
  47.  43
    Plato.Robert William Hall - 1981 - Boston: Routledge.
    First published in 1981 this unique study discusses the evolution of Plato's thought through the actual developments in Athenian democracy, the book also demonstrates Plato's continuing responses to changes in political theory and argues for a new understanding of Plato's goals for the state and his ultimate concern for the moral well-being of the citizens.
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  48. Warranted Catholic Belief.Benjamin Robert Koons - 2023 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 97 (1):1-28.
    Extending Alvin Plantinga’s model of warranted belief to the beliefs of groups as a whole, I argue that if the dogmatic beliefs of the Catholic Church are true, they are also warranted. Catholic dogmas are warranted because they meet the three conditions of my model: they are formed (1) by ministers functioning properly (2) in accordance with a design plan that is oriented towards truth and reliable (3) in a social environment sufficiently similar to that for which they were designed. (...)
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  49. The Naturalist's Dilemma: Logic and Ontological Naturalism.Robert William Barnard - 2000 - Dissertation, Memphis State University
    Ontological Naturalism holds that our fundamental ontology contains only those generally natural objects, properties, and relations required by our best scientific theory. Logical principles are thought of as being normative of correct inference and as involving necessary truths and relations. Necessary relations are stronger than the relations described by science; norms are traditionally thought to be separate from the descriptive project of science. Yet, ontological theories, including ontological naturalism, employ logic freely without offering an account of logical normativity and necessity. (...)
     
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  50.  22
    Fate, Experience and Tragedy in Simmel’s Dialogue with Modernity.Robert William Button - 2012 - Theory, Culture and Society 29 (7-8):53-77.
    This article explores the neglected idea of fate in Simmel’s thought. It examines the specific definition of fate present in Simmel’s writings and the relation of this definition to tragic drama. The argument operates under the assumption that tragic drama represents the ‘natural habitat’ for the exploration and expression of the fate problematic. In this context, it is argued that Simmel’s rediscovery of the relevance of fate emphasizes the modernity of tragedy. The article explores Simmel’s translation of fate from drama (...)
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