Results for 'Bussière-Caraes Lwenn'

542 found
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  1.  19
    Non-assertoric speech acts: Introduction to the topical collection.Lwenn Bussière-Caraes, Luca Incurvati, Giorgio Sbardolini & Julian J. Schloeder - 2024 - Synthese 204 (5):1-4.
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  2. Communicating with colourings.Lwenn Bussière-Caraes - 2022 - In Piotr Stalmaszczyk & Martin Hinton (eds.), Philosophical Approaches to Language and Communication (vol 2). Peter Lang. pp. 151-170.
    A speaker can express the same thought, true under the same conditions, while using different expressions and grammatical constructions. According to Frege, these are differences in colourings. Colourings may convey additional contents; in that, they resemble Gricean conventional implicatures. Sander (2019) argues that Gricean implicatures do not subsume the category of colourings, as some colourings do not communicate their content. I show that this argument relies on a notion of communication focused on the speaker's intentions. But a notion of communicative (...)
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  3.  46
    Time to get a new mountain? The role of function in children's conceptions of natural kinds.Cara DiYanni & Deborah Kelemen - 2005 - Cognition 97 (3):327-335.
  4. A Lockean Theory of Territory.Cara Nine - 2008 - Political Studies 60 (2):252-268.
     
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  5.  47
    Sharing Territories: Overlapping Self-Determination and Resource Rights.Cara Nine - 2022 - Oxford University Press.
    In Sharing Territories, Cara Nine defends a river model of territorial rights. On a river model, groups are assumed to be interdependent and overlapping. Drawing on natural law philosophy, Nine's theory argues for the establishment of foundational territories around geographical areas like rivers.
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  6. The Medicated Self: Implications of Prozac on Selfhood, Embodiment, and Identity.Cara Rabin - 2006 - Penn Bioethics Journal 2 (1).
     
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  7.  50
    Littérature et histoire du christianisme ancien.Marie-Pierre Bussières, Serge Cazelais, Dominique Côté, Eric Crégheur, Lucian Dînca, Michael Kaler, Jean Labrecque, Louis Painchaud & Jennifer Wees - 2002 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 58 (3):613-639.
  8.  79
    Communitarianism and the Ethics of Communicable Disease: Some Preliminary Thoughts.Cara M. Cheyette - 2011 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 39 (4):678-689.
    Communicable diseases, especially those that are readily contagious, are on the rise as evidenced by the emergence of viruses like severe acute respiratory syndrome, the global resurgence of resistant forms of ancient mycobacteria such as extensively drug resistant tuberculosis, and the 2009 swine flu outbreak in Mexico. Moreover, each of us, no matter who we are or where we live, is just as likely to transmit contagious diseases to others as we are to contract such diseases from others. As cogently (...)
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  9.  12
    An Ethos of Wander Time: Staying with the Trouble to Make Sense During Crises.Cara E. Furman - 2023 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 42 (1):17-32.
    Amidst a steady clamor about “learning loss” during the pandemic, a minority of educators have cautioned we must, in the words of Donna Haraway, “stay with the trouble,” giving children space to grieve, explore, and make sense of a new reality. In this paper I interrogate what it means to stay with trouble and specifically call for what I refer to as wander time to stay with trouble in schools. With the phrase wander time, I reference the 40 years the (...)
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  10. On the Metaphysics of Belief.Cara Spencer - 1998 - Dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    There is a traditional picture of belief, according to which someone's having a belief is that person's standing in a certain relation to an abstract object, a proposition. My dissertation examines the metaphysical demands that two problems for this picture of belief make on these abstract objects. The first problem comes to us from Frege's "On Sense and Reference," and the second concerns a certain sort of one's beliefs about oneself, which I call "indexical beliefs." ;Frege notes that someone can (...)
     
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  11.  99
    The Wrong of Displacement: The Home as Extended Mind.Cara Nine - 2018 - Journal of Political Philosophy 26 (2):240-257.
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  12. Ecological Refugees, States Borders, and the Lockean Proviso.Cara Nine - 2010 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 27 (4):359-375.
    Ecological refugees are expected to make up an increasing percentage of overall refugees in the coming decades as predicted climate change related disasters will displace millions of people. In this essay, I focus on those rights ecological refugees may claim on the basis of collective self-determination. To this end, I will focus on a few specific cases that I call cases of ‘ecological refugee states’. Tuvalu, the Maldives, and to a certain extent, Bangladesh are predicted to be ecological refugee states (...)
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  13.  63
    Global Justice and Territory.Cara Nine - 2012 - Oxford University Press.
    Historical injustice and global inequality are basic problems embedded in territorial rights. In Global Justice and Territory Cara Nine advances a general theory of territorial rights adapting a theoretical framework from natural law theory to ground all territorial claims.
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  14.  16
    Behavioral ethics in practice: why we sometimes make the wrong decisions.Cara Biasucci - 2021 - New York, NY: Routledge. Edited by Robert Prentice.
    This book is an accessible, research-based introduction to behavioral ethics. Often ethics education is incomplete because it ignores how and why people make moral decisions. But using exciting new research from fields such as behavioral psychology, cognitive science, and evolutionary biology, the study of behavioral ethics uncovers the common reasons why good people often screw up. Chapters coordinate with free online teaching resources from The University of Texas at Austin. Scientists have long studied the ways human beings make decisions, but (...)
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  15. Amants et ennemis.Annie Bussiere & Edmond Cros - forthcoming - Iris.
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  16.  67
    Littérature et histoire du christianisme ancien.Marie-Pierre Bussières, Serge Cazelais, Dominique Côté, Eric Crégheur, Lucian Dînca, Pascale Dubé, Michael Kaler, Jean Labrecque, Annie Landry, Jean-Thomas Nicole, Louis Painchaud, Paul-Hubert Poirier, Mathieu Sabourin & Annick Thibault - 2002 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 58 (2):357-394.
  17.  39
    Littérature et histoire du christiannisme ancien.Marie-Pierre Bussières, Serge Cazelais, Lucian Dîncà, Pascale Dubé, Michael Kaler, Jean Labrecque, Louis Painchaud, Timothy Pettipiece, Mathieu Sabourin & Jennifer Wees - 2003 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 59 (2):369-388.
  18.  54
    Littérature et histoire du christiannisme ancien.Marie-Pierre Bussières, Frédéric Barbe, Steve Bélanger, Serge Cazelais, Lucian Dîncã, Timothy Pettipiece, Paul-Hubert Poirier, Joël Vallières & Jennifer Wees - 2004 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 60 (2):363-378.
  19.  45
    Littérature et histoire du christianisme ancien.Marie-Pierre Bussières, Serge Cazelais, Eric Crégheur, Lucian Dîncă, Steve Johnston, Jonathan I. Von Kodar, Jean-François Létourneau, Jean-Pierre Mahé, Louis Painchaud & Paul-Hubert Poirier - 2007 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 63 (1):121-162.
  20. Keeping track of objects in conversation.Cara Spencer - 2006 - In Manuel Garcia-Carpintero & Josep Macià (eds.), Two-Dimensional Semantics. New York: Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  21.  67
    Modern Abstract Sacrifice in Robespierre's Terror and Hitler's Holocaust.Cara S. Greene - 2025 - Chiasma: A Site for Thought 9 (1):23-42.
    In “Modern Abstract Sacrifice in Robespierre’s Terror and Hitler’s Holocaust,” I use Hegel’s analysis of Robespierre’s Terror in the Phenomenology and Adorno and Horkheimer’s analysis of the Nazi Holocaust in the Dialectic of Enlightenment to identify what I term “modern abstract sacrifice” as the dominant kind of instrumental destruction that took place during these nation-building mass-sacrifices. As I show, these events relied upon a justificatory instrumental logic—a sacrificial story—even if that sacrificial story broke down or was abandoned in practice, in (...)
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  22.  34
    Land and justice.Cara Nine - 2016 - Forum for European Philosophy Blog.
    Cara Nine on how to decide where borders should be drawn.
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  23. Predictive genetic testing in minors for late-onset conditions: a chronological and analytical review of the ethical arguments: Figure 1.Cara Mand, Lynn Gillam, Martin B. Delatycki & Rony E. Duncan - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (9):519-524.
    Predictive genetic testing is now routinely offered to asymptomatic adults at risk for genetic disease. However, testing of minors at risk for adult-onset conditions, where no treatment or preventive intervention exists, has evoked greater controversy and inspired a debate spanning two decades. This review aims to provide a detailed longitudinal analysis and concludes by examining the debate's current status and prospects for the future. Fifty-three relevant theoretical papers published between 1990 and December 2010 were identified, and interpretative content analysis was (...)
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  24. Superseding historic injustice and territorial rights.Cara Nine - 2008 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 11 (1):79-87.
    Emotions situate actors in relationships and shape their social interactions. Culture defines both the qualities of individual identity and the constitution of social groups with distinctive values and practices. Emotions, then, are necessarily experienced and acted upon in culturally inflected forms that define not only the conventions of their articulation through individual and collective action, but also the very words that name them. This article develops theoretical arguments to support these claims and illustrates their application in a description of differing (...)
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  25. Colonialism, territory and pre-existing obligations.Cara Nine - 2023 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 26 (2):277-287.
    In ‘What’s Wrong with Colonialism,’ Lea Ypi argues that the wrong of colonialism can be expressed as procedural wrongs, not as wronging territorial rights. On her view, colonial practices went wrong in two ways: they forced residents into political associations, and the terms of the political association were not established through equal and reciprocal negotiations. I argue that because Ypi’s account successfully side-lines all but essential claims to territory, her theory ends up being vulnerable to an objection it means to (...)
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  26.  13
    (1 other version)Colloquy.Cara Buskmiller - 2016 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 16 (4):553-553.
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  27.  11
    Shelley: a Russellian Romantic.Cara Elizabeth Rice - 2009 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 29 (1).
    Russell’s enthusiasm for the romantic poet Shelley contradicts the common notion that the philosophical outlook dulls our emotions. Russell loved Shelley even though he was careful to examine the shortcomings of the young poet and of the romantic genre. Furthermore, Russell acknowledged his own weaknesses inherent to his interest in the romantics. Love through a philosophical lens is arguably superior to love through a romantic filter because the former allows for a clear perception of the object. Russell’s passion for Shelley (...)
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  28. Historical overview of ethics in neurosurgery.Cara Sedney - 2020 - In Stephen Honeybul (ed.), Ethics in neurosurgical practice. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  29. Spinal neurosurgery.Cara Sedney - 2020 - In Stephen Honeybul (ed.), Ethics in neurosurgical practice. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  30. Shared indexical belief.Cara Spencer - manuscript
    In this paper, I take issue with the familiar view that the problem of the essential indexical is a merely technical problem, which can be solved through a straightforward revision of the familiar model of belief content. (The familiar model just says that the content of belief is a proposition.) I do not object to these technical fixes, but I think they leave some questions unanswered. Specifically, they deny us an attractive account of what it is for different people to (...)
     
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  31.  19
    Ectopic Pregnancy as Previable Delivery.Cara Buskmiller - 2024 - Christian Bioethics 30 (2):120-133.
    Inside and outside of a Christian worldview, bioethicists have discussed ectopic pregnancy at some length as a maternal-fetal vital conflict. Most bioethicists agree that methotrexate and salpingostomy are low-risk, successful interventions for this life-threatening pathology, and are thus beneficent, just, and wholly acceptable. A small cohort of Christian, largely Catholic, bioethicists have reservations about methotrexate and salpingostomy, but cannot resolve their internal disputes about these because of flawed casuistry. This paper aims to settle the issue about whether methotrexate and salpingostomy (...)
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  32.  72
    Survey of physicians' approach to severe fetal anomalies.Cara C. Heuser, Alexandra G. Eller & Janice L. Byrne - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (7):391-395.
    Objective Standards of care regarding obstetric management of life-threatening anomalies are not defined. It is hypothesised that physicians' management of these pregnancies is variable and influenced by demographic factors. Design A questionnaire was mailed to members of the Society of Maternal–Fetal Medicine with valid US addresses assessing obstetric management of both ‘uniformly lethal’ (eg, anencephaly, renal agenesis) and ‘uniformly severe, commonly lethal’ (eg, trisomy 13 and 18) anomalies. Respondents were asked to answer as if not limited by state/institutional restrictions. Fisher's (...)
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  33.  84
    Beccaria's luxury of comfort and happiness of the greatest number.Cara Camcastle - 2008 - Utilitas 20 (1):1-20.
    Section I explores and articulates Beccaria's theory of luxury. Social classes tend to emulate the classes immediately above and below them. When a class increases the luxury that it consumes, this causes a chain reaction of increased demand for luxury by other classes. Satisfying the resulting new demand for luxury and non-luxury goods maximizes the happiness of a greater number of citizens. Following the consequentialist principle of utility theory, Beccaria concludes that luxury is beneficial. His writings are compared to those (...)
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  34.  4
    Teaching from an ethical center: practical wisdom for daily instruction.Cara E. Furman - 2024 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard Education Press.
    A methodology for using philosophy to guide teaching preparation and practice. In Teaching from an Ethical Center, Cara E. Furman proposes a process for bringing philosophical inquiry into teacher education and adopting it as a centering tool to enrich teaching practice and help teachers act justly. Under Furman's thoughtful guidance, both experienced and preservice teachers will find that engagement with philosophy can be a useful means of clarifying for themselves the educational ethics, values, and pedagogy that guide their work. Using (...)
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  35.  9
    Wonder‐Full Education: The Centrality of Wonder in Teaching and Learning Across the Curriculum.Cara Furman - 2016 - Educational Theory 66 (5):666-672.
  36.  34
    Social motivation in autism: Gaps and directions for measurement of a putative core construct.Cara M. Keifer, Gabriel S. Dichter, James C. McPartland & Matthew D. Lerner - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
    This commentary highlights the observation that social motivation is usually an imprecisely specified construct. We suggest four social motivation conceptualizations across levels of analysis and explore where the target article situates among these. We then offer theoretical and practical guidance for operationalization and measurement of social motivation to support more comprehensive future research on this complex construct in the autism literature.
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  37. Models and methods in ethics.Cara Sedney - 2020 - In Stephen Honeybul (ed.), Ethics in neurosurgical practice. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
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  38. Do conversational implicatures explain substitutivity failures?Cara Spencer - 2006 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 87 (1):126–139.
    The Russellian approach to the semantics of attitude ascriptions faces a problem in explaining the robust speaker intuitions that it does not predict. A familiar response to the problem is to claim that utterances of attitude ascriptions may differ in their Gricean conversational implicatures. I argue that the appeal to Grice is ad hoc. First, we find that speakers do not typically judge an utterance false merely because it implicates something false. The apparent cancellability of the putative implicatures is irrelevant, (...)
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  39. The Moral Arbitrariness of State Borders: Against Beitz.Cara Nine - 2008 - Contemporary Political Theory 7 (3):259-279.
    In this paper, I critically examine an important premise in theories of global distributive justice that, despite its widespread influence, has remained largely unexamined. This is the claim that state borders are morally arbitrary with respect to a just distribution of goods. I examine two common arguments for this claim, the argument that state borders are historically unjust and therefore morally arbitrary; and the argument first made by Charles Beitz that the conditions of a fair, hypothetical social contract would not (...)
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  40.  17
    Your Liberty or Your Gun? A Survey of Psychiatrist Understanding of Mental Health Prohibitors.Cara Newlon, Ian Ayres & Brian Barnett - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (S4):155-163.
    This first-of-its-kind national survey of 485 psychiatrists in nine states and the District of Columbia finds substantial evidence of clinicians being uninformed, misinformed, and misinforming patients of their gun rights regarding involuntary commitments and voluntary inpatient admissions. A significant percentage of psychiatrists did not understand that an involuntary civil commitment triggered the loss of gun rights, and the majority of psychiatrists in states with prohibitors on voluntary admissions and emergency holds were unaware that patients would lose gun rights upon voluntary (...)
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  41. Do territorial rights include the right to exclude?Cara Nine - 2019 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 18 (4):307-322.
    Do territorial rights include the right to exclude? This claim is often assumed to be true in territorial rights theory. And if this claim is justified, a state may have a prima facie right to unil...
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  42. Is there a problem of the essential indexical?Cara Spencer - unknown
    Some time ago, John Perry argued that the content of an indexical belief, that is, a belief expressible with a sentence containing an indexical or demonstrative, cannot be a proposition. I consider several of his arguments for this view, and show that they can be extended to show that belief expressible with other non-indexical expressions such as natural kind terms and proper names presents the very same problem for the traditional picture. I then suggest that if indexical belief has any (...)
     
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  43. Unconscious vision and the platitudes of folk psychology.Cara Spencer - 2007 - Philosophical Psychology 20 (3):309 – 327.
    Since we explain behavior by ascribing intentional states to the agent, many philosophers have assumed that some guiding principle of folk psychology like [Intentional States and Actions] must be true. [Intentional States and Actions]: If A and B are different actions, then the agents performing them must differ in their intentional states at the time they are performed. Recent results in the physiology of vision present a prima facie problem for this principle. These results show that some visual information that (...)
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  44.  11
    A Handbook on Weaving and Unraveling: Reading Emile and The Solitarie s to Care for the Teacher Self.Cara Furman - 2021 - Educational Theory 71 (3):311-330.
    Educational Theory, Volume 71, Issue 3, Page 311-330, June 2021.
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  45. Archeologies of prohibition and the erotics of the uncanny.Cara Judea Alhadeff - forthcoming - Philosophy Today.
     
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  46.  30
    Cryopreserved Embryo Adoption.Cara Buskmiller - 2016 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 16 (2):225-231.
    Cryopreservation and vitrification are techniques employed in fertility clinics to preserve embryos not used in in vitro fertilization cycles. These frozen embryos carry the dignity of persons, and it has been suggested that they could be unfrozen and adopted. Experts have offered divergent opinions on the legitimacy of this practice. This essay reviews the debate and offers a phenomenological description of embryo adoption considered in itself, as well as reflections on current circumstances which the author proposes make embryo adoption not (...)
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  47.  46
    Infants with Williams syndrome detect statistical regularities in continuous speech.Cara H. Cashon, Oh-Ryeong Ha, Katharine Graf Estes, Jenny R. Saffran & Carolyn B. Mervis - 2016 - Cognition 154 (C):165-168.
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  48.  45
    The Moral Ambiguity of Job Qualifications.Cara Nine - 2002 - Philosophy of Management 2 (2):37-43.
    When people seek to overcome discrimination in employment they often appeal to the principle that ‘one should be hired on the basis of qualifications alone’. But do we know what the principle means? And would applying it solve the problems of discrimination in employment? We may take the claim to mean that certain aspects of a person such as her race, religion and attractiveness that are thought to be irrelevant to almost all jobs should not be considered in employment decisions. (...)
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  49.  25
    Failed Escape: Action and Avoidance of Responsibility in The English Patient.Cara E. Palmer - 2015 - Philosophy and Literature 39 (2):356-363.
    In Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient, Almásy favors an anonymity of identity based in private experience, and to that end hides his personal history from view. Almásy shields his personal experiences from the eyes of the individuals he encounters, as well as from the reader. This conscious act indicates that Almásy believes that the choices he makes do not matter, because who he is in relation to the world and to the greater forces of time and history is insignificant. He (...)
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  50.  25
    Web accessibility: an introduction and ethical implications.Cara Peters & David A. Bradbard - 2010 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 8 (2):206-232.
    PurposeWeb accessibility is the practice of making web sites accessible to people, such as the disabled, who are using more than just traditional web browsers to access the internet. The purpose of this paper is twofold: to overview web accessibility and to highlight the ethics of web accessibility from a managerial perspective.Design/methodology/approachTo that end, this paper reviews related literature, highlights relevant public policy, discusses web accessibility from a systems development perspective, and concludes with a discussion of web accessibility with respect (...)
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