Results for 'Bernard Kölver'

935 found
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  1. (1 other version)Internal and External Reasons.Bernard Williams - 1979 - In Ross Harrison, Rational action: studies in philosophy and social science. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 101-113.
  2.  85
    (1 other version)Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy.Bernard Williams - 1985 - Ethics 97 (4):821-833.
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  3. (1 other version)Persons, Character, and Morality.Bernard Williams - 1981 - In Moral Luck: Philosophical Papers 1973–1980. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  4. Problems of the Self: Philosophical Papers 1956–1972.Bernard Williams (ed.) - 1973 - Cambridge [Eng.]: Cambridge University Press.
    This is a volume of philosophical studies, centred on problems of personal identity and extending to related topics in the philosophy of mind and moral philosophy.
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  5. Deciding to believe.Bernard Williams - 1973 - In Problems of the Self: Philosophical Papers 1956–1972. Cambridge [Eng.]: Cambridge University Press. pp. 136--51.
  6. Problems of the Self.Bernard Williams - 1973 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 37 (3):551-551.
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  7. Moral Luck.Bernard Williams - 1981 - Critica 17 (51):101-105.
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  8. The conscious access hypothesis: Origins and recent evidence.Bernard J. Baars - 2002 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 6 (1):47-52.
  9. (1 other version)Truth and Truthfulness An Essay in Genealogy.Bernard Williams - 2002 - Philosophy 78 (305):411-414.
  10. The self and the future.Bernard Williams - 1970 - Philosophical Review 79 (2):161-180.
  11. Deciding to believe.Bernard Williams - 1973 - In Problems of the Self: Philosophical Papers 1956–1972. Cambridge [Eng.]: Cambridge University Press. pp. 136–51.
  12. Internal Reasons and the Obscurity of Blame.Bernard Williams - 1989 - In William J. Prior, Reason and Moral Judgment, Logos, vol. 10. Santa Clara University.
  13. Ethics, character, and authentic transformational leadership.Bernard M. Bass & Paul Steidlmeier - manuscript
     
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  14. Egoism and Altruism.Bernard A. O. Williams - 1973 - In Bernard Williams, Problems of the Self: Philosophical Papers 1956–1972. Cambridge [Eng.]: Cambridge University Press.
    A discussion of egoism and altruism as related both to ethical theory and moral psychology. Williams considers and rejects various arguments for and against the existence of egoistic motives and the rationality of someone motivated by self-interest. He ultimately attempts to give a more Humean defense of altruism, as opposed to the more Kantian defenses found in Thomas Nagel, for example.
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  15. The human prejudice.Bernard Williams - 1985 - Philosophy as a Humanistic Discipline.
     
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  16. Moral Luck. Philosophical Papers 1973-1980.Bernard Williams - 1983 - Philosophical Quarterly 33 (132):288-296.
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  17. In the theatre of consciousness: Global workspace theory, a rigorous scientific theory of consciousness.Bernard J. Baars - 1997 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 4 (4):292-309.
    Can we make progress exploring consciousness? Or is it forever beyond human reach? In science we never know the ultimate outcome of the journey. We can only take whatever steps our current knowledge affords. This paper explores today's evidence from the viewpoint of Global Workspace theory. First, we ask what kind of evidence has the most direct bearing on the question. The answer given here is ‘contrastive analysis’ -- a set of paired comparisons between similar conscious and unconscious processes. This (...)
     
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  18. Tricky Triad: Games, Play, and Sport.Bernard Suits - 1988 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 15 (1):1-9.
  19. Personal Identity and Individuation.Bernard Williams - 1957 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 57:229-252.
  20. Emotion Elicits the Social Sharing of Emotion: Theory and Empirical Review.Bernard Rimé - 2009 - Emotion Review 1 (1):60-85.
    This review demonstrates that an individualist view of emotion and regulation is untenable. First, I question the plausibility of a developmental shift away from social interdependency in emotion regulation. Second, I show that there are multiple reasons for emotional experiences in adults to elicit a process of social sharing of emotion, and I review the supporting evidence. Third, I look at effects that emotion sharing entails at the interpersonal and at the collective levels. Fourth, I examine the contribution of emotional (...)
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  21. Must a concern for the environment be centred on human beings.Bernard Williams - 1995 - In Making Sense of Humanity and Other Philosophical Papers. Cambridge University Press.
     
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  22. Imagination and the self.Bernard Williams - 1973 - In Problems of the Self: Philosophical Papers 1956–1972. Cambridge [Eng.]: Cambridge University Press. pp. 26-45.
  23. Words On Play.Bernard Suits - 1977 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 4 (1):117-131.
  24. Brain, conscious experience, and the observing self.Bernard J. Baars, Thomas Zoega Ramsoy & Steven Laureys - 2003 - Trends in Neurosciences 26 (12):671-5.
    Conscious perception, like the sight of a coffee cup, seems to involve the brain identifying a stimulus. But conscious input activates more brain regions than are needed to identify coffee cups and faces. It spreads beyond sensory cortex to frontoparietal association areas, which do not serve stimulus identification as such. What is the role of those regions? Parietal cortex support the ‘first person perspective’ on the visual world, unconsciously framing the visual object stream. Some prefrontal areas select and interpret conscious (...)
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  25. 1. Toleration: An Impossible Virtue?Bernard Williams - 1996 - In David Heyd, Toleration: An Elusive Virtue. Princeton University Press. pp. 18-27.
  26. The end of ubuntu.Bernard Matolino & Wenceslaus Kwindingwi - 2013 - South African Journal of Philosophy 32 (2):197-205.
    Since the advent of democracy in South Africa, there has been a concerted effort at reviving the notion of ubuntu. Variously conceived, it is seen as the authentic African ethical concept, a way of life, an authentic mode of being African, an individual ideal, the appropriate public spirit, a definition of life itself and the preferred manner of conducting public and private business. Thus, among other public displays of the spirit of ubuntu, the government of the day has deliberately chosen (...)
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  27.  61
    The Sense of the Past: Essays in the History of Philosophy.Bernard Williams - 2006 - Princeton: Princeton University Press. Edited by Myles Burnyeat.
    These twenty-five essays span from ancient philosophy to Wittgenstein and express Williams’s conviction that studying the history of philosophy is an essential part of philosophy. Williams distinguishes a historical approach , which is focused on the context of a historical text and aims at the question of why some theory came up, from doing “history of philosophy,” aiming at a contribution to current philosophical debates by denying transhistorical identity and making use of the “alienation effect.”.
  28. Saint-Just's illusion.Bernard Williams - 1995 - In Making Sense of Humanity: And Other Philosophical Papers 1982–1993. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 135--152.
     
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  29. From Freedom to Liberty: The Construction of a Political Value.Bernard Williams - 2001 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 30 (1):3-26.
  30. Which Slopes are Slippery?Bernard Williams - 1995 - In Making Sense of Humanity: And Other Philosophical Papers 1982–1993. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  31. 5. The Makropulos Case: Reflections on the Tedium of Immortality.Bernard Williams - 1993 - In John Martin Fischer, The Metaphysics of death. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. pp. 71-92.
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  32. (3 other versions)Justice as a Virtue.Bernard Williams - 1980 - In Amélie Rorty, Essays on Aristotle's Ethics. University of California Press. pp. 189--200.
     
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  33. Hylomorphism.Bernard Williams - 1986 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 4:189-99.
  34.  35
    Viii Persons, Character and Morality.Bernard Williams - 1976 - In Amélie Oksenberg Rorty, Identities of Persons. University of California Press. pp. 197-216.
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  35. Consequentialism and integrity.Bernard Williams - 1988 - In Samuel Scheffler, Consequentialism and its critics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 20--50.
  36. Practical necessity.Bernard Williams - 1982 - In Donald MacKenzie MacKinnon, Brian Hebblethwaite & Stewart R. Sutherland, The Philosophical frontiers of Christian theology: essays presented to D.M. MacKinnon. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  37. Some essential differences between consciousness and attention, perception, and working memory.Bernard J. Baars - 1997 - Consciousness and Cognition 6 (2-3):363-371.
    When “divided attention” methods were discovered in the 1950s their implications for conscious experience were not widely appreciated. Yet when people process competing streams of sensory input they show both selective processesandclear contrasts between conscious and unconscious events. This paper suggests that the term “attention” may be best applied to theselection and maintenanceof conscious contents and distinguished from consciousness itself. This is consistent with common usage. The operational criteria for selective attention, defined in this way, are entirely different from those (...)
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  38.  35
    An essay on the circulation as behavior.Bernard T. Engel - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (2):285-295.
    Most conceptual models of the organization of the cardiovascular system begin with the premise that the nervous system regulates the metabolic and nonmetabolic reflex adjustments of the circulation. These models assume that all the neurally mediated responses of the circulation are reactive, i.e., reflexes elicited by adequate stimuli. This target article suggests that the responses of the circulation are conditional in three senses. First, as Sherrington argued, reflexes are conditional in that they never operate in a vacuum but in a (...)
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  39. How brain reveals mind: Neural studies support the fundamental role of conscious experience.Bernard J. Baars - 2003 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 10 (9-10):100-114.
    In the last decade, careful studies of the living brain have opened the way for human consciousness to return to the heights it held before the behavioristic coup of 1913. This is illustrated by seven cases: the discovery of widespread brain activation during conscious perception; high levels of regional brain metabolism in the resting state of consciousness, dropping drastically in unconscious states; the brain correlates of inner speech; visual imagery; fringe consciousness; executive functions of the self; and volition. Other papers (...)
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  40. Thomas Reid and the Semiotics of Perception.Bernard E. Rollin - 1978 - The Monist 61 (2):257-270.
    Reid's response to hume has traditionally been taken as begging all of hume's questions. One can, However, Find in reid an argument against hume's phenomenalistic skepticism. Reid's appeal to common sense is an attempt to call attention to the fact that we experience objects as external to us, Not as bundles of impressions. Still, Our access to these objects does arise out of sensations, Which are mental contents. Extending berkeley's idea of the "language of nature" reid suggests that language and (...)
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  41. Life as narrative.Bernard Williams - 2007 - European Journal of Philosophy 17 (2):305-314.
  42.  64
    Free Will and Determinism.Bernard Berofsky (ed.) - 1966 - New York,: Harper & Row.
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    The Trick of the Disappearing Goal.Bernard Suits - 1989 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 16 (1):1-12.
  44. Rhetoric and Public Reasoning.Bernard Yack - 2006 - Political Theory 34 (4):417-438.
    This essay asks why Aristotle, certainly no friend to unlimited democracy, seems so much more comfortable with unconstrained rhetoric in political deliberation than current defenders of deliberative democracy. It answers this question by reconstructing and defending a distinctly Aristotelian understanding of political deliberation, one that can be pieced together out of a series of separate arguments made in the Rhetoric, the Politics, and the Nicomachean Ethics.
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  45. The myth of the civic nation.Bernard Yack - 1996 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 10 (2):193-211.
    Abstract The idea of a purely civic nationalism has attracted Western scholars, most of whom rightly disdain the myths that sustain ethnonationalist theories of political community. Civic nationalism is particularly attractive to many Americans, whose peculiar national heritage encourages the delusion that their mutual association is based solely on consciously chosen principles. But this idea misrepresents political reality as surely as the ethnonationalist myths it is designed to combat. And propagating a new political myth is an especially inappropriate way of (...)
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  46. (1 other version)Acting as the virtuous person acts.Bernard Williams - 1995 - In Robert Heinaman, Aristotle and Moral Realism. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press. pp. 13--23.
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    Relation of General Deviance to Academic Dishonesty.Bernard E. Whitley & Kevin L. Blankenship - 2000 - Ethics and Behavior 10 (1):1-12.
    This study investigated the relations of cheating on an exam and using a false excuse to avoid taking an exam as scheduled to various forms of minor deviance. College students completed measures of cheating, false excuse making, and minor deviance. A factor analysis identified clusters of deviance behaviors. Cheaters scored higher than noncheaters on measures of unreliability and risky driving behaviors, and false excuse makers scored higher than other students on measures of substance use, risky driving, illegal behaviors, and personal (...)
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  48.  18
    Imagination in human social cognition, autism, and psychotic-affective conditions.Bernard Crespi, Emma Leach, Natalie Dinsdale, Mikael Mokkonen & Peter Hurd - 2016 - Cognition 150 (C):181-199.
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  49. Who Needs Ethical Knowledge?Bernard Williams - 1993 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 35:213-222.
    An old question, still much discussed in moral philosophy, is whether there is any ethical knowledge. It is closely related, by simple etymology, to the question of cognitivism in ethics. Despite the fact that the terms ‘cognitivism’ and ‘objectivism’ seem sometimes to be used interchangeably, I take it that the question whether there can be ethical knowledge is not the same as the question whether ethical outlooks can be objective. A sufficient reason for this is that an ethical outlook might (...)
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  50. Is life a game we are playing?Bernard Suits - 1967 - Ethics 77 (3):209-213.
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