Results for 'Chris Cobb'

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  1.  8
    New approaches to technology in HE management.Chris Cobb - 2012 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education:1-10.
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  2.  45
    Masao Abe.John B. Cobb - 2008 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 28:119-121.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Masao AbeJohn B. Cobb Jr.Masao Abe spent a year at the Blaisdell Institute in Claremont, 1965–1966. I was on sabbatical in Germany that year. On return I learned from many people that I had missed a great opportunity for an authentic encounter with a living Buddhist thinker who understood Christianity very well. Fortunately, he visited Claremont again, although more briefly, and this time I was able to take (...)
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  3. Deep Disagreement (Part 1): Theories of Deep Disagreement.Chris Ranalli & Thirza Lagewaard - 2022 - Philosophy Compass 17 (12):e12886.
    Some disagreements concern our most fundamental beliefs, principles, values, or worldviews, such as those about the existence of God, society and politics, or the trustworthiness of science. These are ‘deep disagreements’. But what exactly are deep disagreements? This paper critically overviews theories of deep disagreement. It does three things. First, it explains the differences between deep and other kinds of disagreement, including peer, persistent, and widespread disagreement. Second, it critically overviews two mainstream theories of deep disagreement, the Wittgensteinian account and (...)
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  4.  82
    Mohism.Chris Fraser - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  5. Divine hiddenness and the value of divine–creature relationships.Chris Tucker - 2008 - Religious Studies 44 (3):269-287.
    Apparently, relationships between God (if He exists) and His creatures would be very valuable. Appreciating this value raises the question of whether it can motivate a certain premise in John Schellenberg’s argument from divine hiddenness, a premise which claims, roughly, that if some capable, non-resistant subject fails to believe in God, then God does not exist. In this paper, I argue that the value of divine–creature relationships can justify this premise only if we have reason to believe that the counterfactuals (...)
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  6. Mathematical Idealization.Chris Pincock - 2007 - Philosophy of Science 74 (5):957-967.
    Mathematical idealizations are scientific representations that result from assumptions that are believed to be false, and where mathematics plays a crucial role. I propose a two stage account of how to rank mathematical idealizations that is largely inspired by the semantic view of scientific theories. The paper concludes by considering how this approach to idealization allows for a limited form of scientific realism. ‡I would like to thank Robert Batterman, Gabriele Contessa, Eric Hiddleston, Nicholaos Jones, and Susan Vineberg for helpful (...)
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  7. Can All Things Be Counted?Chris Scambler - 2021 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 50 (5):1079-1106.
    In this paper, I present and motivate a modal set theory consistent with the idea that there is only one size of infinity.
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  8. Heart-Fasting, Forgetting, and Using the Heart Like a Mirror: Applied Emptiness in the Zhuangzi.Chris Fraser - 2014 - In JeeLoo Liu & Douglas L. Berger (eds.), Nothingness in Asian Philosophy. New York: Routledge. pp. 197–212.
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  9.  83
    Pluralist metaphysics.Chris Daly - 1997 - Philosophical Studies 87 (2):185-206.
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  10.  46
    Attention capture without awareness in a non-spatial selection task.Chris Oriet, Mamata Pandey & Jun-Ichiro Kawahara - 2017 - Consciousness and Cognition 48:117-128.
  11.  65
    Eco-culture, development, and architecture.Chris Abel - 1993 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 6 (3):10-28.
    This article examines the prospects for an authentic regional architecture in the light of alternative development paradigms. It is argued that the failure of orthodox development strategies and the domination of western culture, including architecture, over non-Western cultures, is due to fundamental imbalances between northern and southern economic structures. By contrast, ecodevelopment, appropriate technology and regional architecture all represent significant devolutionary movements toward a global “eco-culture.” A cultural typology placing eco-culture in historical perspective is outlined. It is concluded that, to (...)
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  12.  53
    Preventing Global Warming: The United States, China, and Intellectual Property.Chris K. Ajemian & David Mchardy Reid - 2010 - Business and Society Review 115 (4):417-436.
    Concerns of intellectual property infringement in China slow the dissemination of clean technology (Cleantech) innovation that could help bring the pace of global warming under control. We use the U.S. post‐World War 2 policy decisions with respect to Japan and Europe (the Marshall Plan) to show how this problem can be addressed. To help Japan become a western style democracy and stem the tide of communism, the U.S. transferred much of its extant intellectual property to Japan with a promise to (...)
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  13.  57
    Fictionalism in Metaphysics - Edited by Mark Eli Kalderon.Chris Daly - 2007 - Philosophical Books 48 (3):272-274.
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  14. Distance, anger, freedom: An account of the role of abstraction in compatibilist and incompatibilist intuitions.Chris Weigel - 2011 - Philosophical Psychology 24 (6):803 - 823.
    Experimental philosophers have disagreed about whether "the folk" are intuitively incompatibilists or compatibilists, and they have disagreed about the role of abstraction in generating such intuitions. New experimental evidence using Construal Level Theory is presented. The experiments support the views that the folk are intuitively both incompatibilists and compatibilists, and that abstract mental representations do shift intuitions, but not in a univocal way.
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  15.  41
    Community Lost: the State. Civil Society and Displaced Survivors of Hurricane Katrina.Chris Beckett - 2014 - Ethics and Social Welfare 8 (1):95-96.
  16.  23
    Utopian and Dystopian Themes in Tolkien’s Legendarium.Chris Lynch Becherer - 2022 - Utopian Studies 33 (1):187-190.
    Mark Doyle's Utopian and Dystopian Themes in Tolkien's Legendarium reads Tolkien's work through the history of utopian and dystopian thought. The aim of this new study is not to prove that Tolkien set out to write dystopian fiction or create a blueprint for a utopian society, but that utopian and dystopian societies and settings crucially inform his legendarium. By placing his study outside of its usual fantasy context, Doyle gives us a valuable societally focused and historicized contribution to both Tolkien (...)
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  17.  20
    Imprints.Chris Bertram - manuscript
    THE ATTACKS in New York and Washington on 11 September 2001 were terrible events, they were also acts of barbarism. The deaths (and the manner of the deaths) of so very many people on the ground, in the buildings, and on the airliners were atrocious. Many of those who died were of course those who responded out of feelings of duty or altruism to the initial event. In attacking New York, the Islamo-fascists of Al Qaeda attacked one of the most (...)
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  18.  12
    Scale-free architectures support representational diversity.Chris Fields & James F. Glazebrook - 2020 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 43.
    Gilead et al. propose an ontology of abstract representations based on folk-psychological conceptions of cognitive architecture. There is, however, no evidence that the experience of cognition reveals the architecture of cognition. Scale-free architectural models propose that cognition has the same computational architecture from sub-cellular to whole-organism scales. This scale-free architecture supports representations with diverse functions and levels of abstraction.
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  19.  28
    Media Literacy Lessons in a High-Tech Format.Chris Roberts - 2010 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 25 (2):163-165.
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  20.  20
    Where Two or Three Are Gathered: Christian Families as Domestic Churches; Marriage and Modernization: How Globalization Threatens Marriage and What To Do about It; Getting Marriage Right: Realistic Counsel for Saving and Strengthening Relationships.Chris Roberts - 2005 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 25 (2):220-225.
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  21.  17
    Books in Review.Chris Rocco - 2000 - Political Theory 28 (5):712-714.
  22.  11
    Herbert Marcuse: A Critical Reader.John Abromeit & W. Mark Cobb (eds.) - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    _The Legacy of Herbert Marcuse: A Critical Reader_ is a collection of brand new papers by seventeen Marcuse scholars, which provides a comprehensive reassessment of the relevance of Marcuse's critical theory at the beginning of the 21st century. Although best known for his reputation in critical theory, Herbert Marcuse's work has had impact on areas as diverse as politics, technology, aesthetics, psychoanalysis and ecology. This collection addresses the contemporary relevance of Marcuse's work in this broad variety of fields and from (...)
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  23.  38
    Short literature notices.Chris Gastmans, Gert Olthuis, Madeleine Roovers, Norbert Steinkamp, Christoph Rehmann-Sutter & Jeantine E. Lunshof - 2005 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 8 (2):261-264.
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  24.  27
    C. A. Strong and G. Santayana in Light of Archive Material.Chris Skowroñski - 2006 - Overheard in Seville 24 (24):23-27.
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  25. Liberty, Autonomy, and Kant's Civil Society.Chris W. Surprenant - 2010 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 27 (1).
    Morality, as Immanuel Kant understands it, depends on the capacity of a person to be the agent and owner of his own actions, not merely a conduit for social and psychological forces and influences over which he has little or no control. As a result, Kant’s moral philosophy focuses primarily on the topic of individual freedom and the necessary preconditions of the possibility of that freedom. In the Groundwork and second Critique, Kant’s discussion of the connection between morality and freedom (...)
     
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  26. Revision as heresy : posthuman writing systems and Kenneth Burke's "piety".Chris Mays - 2017 - In Chris Mays, Nathaniel A. Rivers & Kellie Sharp-Hoskins (eds.), Kenneth Burke + the posthuman. University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.
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  27. Is the doctrine of double effect irrelevant in end-of-life decision making?Peter Allmark, Mark Cobb, B. Jane Liddle & Angela Mary Tod - 2010 - Nursing Philosophy 11 (3):170-177.
    In this paper, we consider three arguments for the irrelevance of the doctrine of double effect in end-of-life decision making. The third argument is our own and, to that extent, we seek to defend it. The first argument is that end-of-life decisions do not in fact shorten lives and that therefore there is no need for the doctrine in justification of these decisions. We reject this argument; some end-of-life decisions clearly shorten lives. The second is that the doctrine of double (...)
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  28.  44
    The Collective and the Individual in Russia.Chris Chulos - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (4):513-516.
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  29.  18
    Pluhar's Perfectionism: A Critique of Her (Un) Egalitarian Ethic.Chris Crittenden - 2003 - Between the Species 13 (3):3.
    I intend to criticize Evelyn Pluhar’s allegedly egalitarian ethic, presented in her recent work Beyond Prejudice, partly by way of contrasting it with what she calls “perfectionism” and partly by demonstrating that, in fact, her ethic schizophrenically embraces a defective form of perfectionism. My analysis suggests that knotty animal-rights dilemmas are best approached not from a stance of viewing animals and humans as morally equal but rather from a framework more flexible and adaptive to the complexity of real-life scenarios. Such (...)
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  30. To be.Chris Daly - 2009 - In Robin Le Poidevin, Simons Peter, McGonigal Andrew & Ross P. Cameron (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Metaphysics. New York: Routledge.
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  31.  27
    Argumentation Schemes in Argument-as-Process and Argument-as-Product.Chris Reed & Douglas Walton - unknown
  32.  63
    Analysing population numbers of the house Sparrow in the netherlands with a matrix model and suggestions for conservation measures.Chris Klok, Remko Holtkamp, Rob van Apeldoorn, Marcel E. Visser & Lia Hemerik - 2006 - Acta Biotheoretica 54 (3):161-178.
    The House Sparrow (Passer domesticus), formerly a common bird species, has shown a rapid decline in Western Europe over recent decades. In The Netherlands, its decline is apparent from 1990 onwards. Many causes for this decline have been suggested that all decrease the vital rates, i.e. survival and reproduction, but their actual impact remains unknown. Although the House Sparrow has been dominant in The Netherlands, data on life history characteristics for this bird species are scarce: data on reproduction are non-existent, (...)
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  33. The Western Powers, South Africa and Africa: Burden Sharing, Burden Shift, and Spheres of Influence.Chris Landsberg & Francis Kornegay - 1997 - Polis 4 (2):64-79.
  34.  15
    David Carr. Experience and History: Phenomenological Perspectives on the Historical World. Reviewed by.Chris Lawn - 2015 - Philosophy in Review 35 (5):241-243.
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  35. (1 other version)Unravelling the Tangled Web: Continuity, Internalism, Uniqueness and Self-Locating Belief.Chris Meacham - 2007 - In Tamar Szabó Gendler & John Hawthorne (eds.), Oxford Studies in Epistemology: Volume 3. Oxford University Press UK.
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  36. Strong-completeness and faithfulness in belief.Chris Meek - unknown
    independence facts implied by a particular directed acyclic graph; an alternative equivalent rule has been proposed by Lauritzen et al. (1990). Geiger et al. (1990) have shown that d-separation is atomic-complete for independence statements..
     
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  37. Abortion, the golden rule, and the indeterminacy of potential persons.Chris D. Meyers - 2005 - Journal of Value Inquiry 39 (3-4):541.
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  38.  15
    Evidence Supporting Pre‐University Effects Hypotheses of Women's Underrepresentation in Philosophy.Chris Dobbs - 2017 - Hypatia 32 (4):940-945.
    In this short essay, I report results from a representative national dataset from the Cooperative Institutional Research Program that shows that significantly more men than women intend to major in philosophy at the high‐school and pre‐university level. This lends credence to pre‐university effects hypotheses of women's underrepresentation in philosophy and successfully replicates a smaller analysis performed by Cheshire Calhoun at Colby College in 2009. I also defend my analysis against an objection that claims that intention to major is not a (...)
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  39.  26
    Koopman, stove and Hume.Chris Mortensen - 1977 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 55 (1):74 – 75.
  40.  46
    Merge: In Honour of Robert K. Meyer.Chris Mortensen - 2010 - Australasian Journal of Logic 8:135-143.
    Methods for unifying inconsistent pairs of theories, which we call collectively MERGE, are defined and their properties outlined.
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  41.  52
    Artificial intelligence and symbols.Chris Moss - 1989 - AI and Society 3 (4):345-356.
    The introduction of massive parallelism and the renewed interest in neural networks gives a new need to evaluate the relationship of symbolic processing and artificial intelligence. The physical symbol hypothesis has encountered many difficulties coping with human concepts and common sense. Expert systems are showing more promise for the early stages of learning than for real expertise. There is a need to evaluate more fully the inherent limitations of symbol systems and the potential for programming compared with training. This can (...)
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  42.  19
    Watching Television.Chris Nagel - 1999 - Glimpse 1 (1):74-82.
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  43.  30
    Explanatory Unification and the Demystification of Ethics.Chris Naticchia - 2004 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 42 (2):237-259.
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  44.  30
    The spectral educationist.Chris Peers - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1352-1353.
  45. Christopher Pincock ([email protected]) September 4, 2006 (2782 words).Chris Pincock - unknown
    In his carefully argued and extensively researched article “The Implications of Recent Work in the History of Analytic Philosophy” (Preston 2005a) Aaron Preston has raised what should surely be the central methodological issue for Russell studies and the history of analytic philosophy more generally.[1] That is, what are the goals of the history of analytic philosophy and by what means can we best try to meet these goals? Preston’s main conclusion is that historical investigation into the origins of analytic philosophy (...)
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  46.  24
    On the finite axiomatizability of.Chris Pollett - 2018 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 64 (1-2):6-24.
    The question of whether the bounded arithmetic theories and are equal is closely connected to the complexity question of whether is equal to. In this paper, we examine the still open question of whether the prenex version of,, is equal to. We give new dependent choice‐based axiomatizations of the ‐consequences of and. Our dependent choice axiomatizations give new normal forms for the ‐consequences of and. We use these axiomatizations to give an alternative proof of the finite axiomatizability of and to (...)
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  47.  31
    Why Is Trust Important?Chris Provis - 2001 - Philosophy of Management 1 (2):33-43.
    There is now a bewildering array of literature about trust, written from a variety of disciplinary orientations.2 However, much of the literature skirts around the fact that trust is closely tied to some ethical judgements. When we discuss trust and trustworthiness, our language spans the gap between fact and value, and that is sometimes forgotten when emphasis is given to the instrumental benefits of trust and trustworthiness. It is important to remember that sometimes trust is good not as a means (...)
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  48.  19
    Global Constitutionalism and Democracy: the Case of Colombia.Chris Thornhill & Carina Rodrigues de Araújo Calabria - 2020 - Jus Cogens 2 (2):155-183.
    Focusing on the case of Colombia, this article sets out a sociological examination of constitutions marked by strong, activist judiciaries, by entrenched systems of human rights protection, and by emphatic implementation of global human rights law. Contra standard critiques of this constitutional model, it argues that such constitutions need to be seen as creating a new pattern of democracy, which is often distinctively adapted to structures in societies in which the typical patterns of legitimation and subject formation required for democratic (...)
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  49.  20
    Dementia and Value Neutrality.Chris Weigel - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy of Disability 4:52-74.
    According to Elizabeth Barnes’s minority body view, to say that a disability is value neutral is to say that it is neither automatically good nor bad, but rather can become good or bad depending on what it is combined with (including ableism and one’s aspirations, goals, and desires). Most people view dementia as intrinsically bad, that is, as something that makes one’s life go worse simply by its existence. In this paper, I argue that we are not currently able to (...)
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  50.  76
    Learning context sensitive logical inference in a neurobiological simulation.Chris Eliasmith - 2004 - In Simon D. Levy & Ross Gayler (eds.), Compositional Connectionism in Cognitive Science. AAAI Press. pp. 17--20.
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