Results for 'Colin Storey'

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  1.  57
    Ethics in construction project briefing.Richard Fellows, Anita Liu & Colin Storey - 2004 - Science and Engineering Ethics 10 (2):289-301.
    The research reported in this paper set out to investigate ethics in the initial stages of construction projects. Briefing is the first real contact stage between the commissioner (client/employer) of a project — at this stage a potential project — and those involved in project realization — the designers and, subsequently, the constructors. It is well known that early decisions are of greatest impact and so, the importance of the initial contacts, communications and consequent decisions are paramount. Different project participants (...)
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  2. The felt presence of other minds: Predictive processing, counterfactual predictions, and mentalising in autism.Colin J. Palmer, Anil K. Seth & Jakob Hohwy - 2015 - Consciousness and Cognition 36:376-389.
  3. Concept attribution in nonhuman animals: Theoretical and methodological problems in ascribing complex mental processes.Colin Allen & Marc D. Hauser - 1991 - Philosophy of Science 58 (2):221-240.
    The demise of behaviorism has made ethologists more willing to ascribe mental states to animals. However, a methodology that can avoid the charge of excessive anthropomorphism is needed. We describe a series of experiments that could help determine whether the behavior of nonhuman animals towards dead conspecifics is concept mediated. These experiments form the basis of a general point. The behavior of some animals is clearly guided by complex mental processes. The techniques developed by comparative psychologists and behavioral ecologists are (...)
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  4. De finetti, countable additivity, consistency and coherence.Colin Howson - 2008 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 59 (1):1-23.
    Many people believe that there is a Dutch Book argument establishing that the principle of countable additivity is a condition of coherence. De Finetti himself did not, but for reasons that are at first sight perplexing. I show that he rejected countable additivity, and hence the Dutch Book argument for it, because countable additivity conflicted with intuitive principles about the scope of authentic consistency constraints. These he often claimed were logical in nature, but he never attempted to relate this idea (...)
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  5.  19
    Levinas: An Introduction.Colin Davis - 1996 - Notre Dame, Ind.: Polity.
    In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the work of Emmanuel Levinas, widely recognized as one of the most important yet difficult philosophers of the 20th century. In this much-needed introduction, Davis unpacks the concepts at the centre of Levinas's thought - alterity, the Other, the Face, infinity - concepts which have previously presented readers with major problems of interpretation. Davis traces the development of Levinas's thought over six decades, describing the context in which he worked, (...)
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  6. Philosophical issues in neuroimaging.Colin Klein - 2010 - Philosophy Compass 5 (2):186-198.
    Functional neuroimaging (NI) technologies like Positron Emission Tomography and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) have revolutionized neuroscience, and provide crucial tools to link cognitive psychology and traditional neuroscientific models. A growing discipline of 'neurophilosophy' brings fMRI evidence to bear on traditional philosophical issues such as weakness of will, moral psychology, rational choice, social interaction, free will, and consciousness. NI has also attracted critical attention from psychologists and from philosophers of science. I review debates over the evidential status of fMRI, including (...)
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  7. Animal consciousness.Colin Allen & Mark Bekoff - 2007 - In Max Velmans & Susan Schneider (eds.), The Blackwell Companion to Consciousness. New York: Wiley-Blackwell.
  8.  14
    Early lexical influences on sublexical processing in speech perception: Evidence from electrophysiology.Colin Noe & Simon Fischer-Baum - 2020 - Cognition 197 (C):104162.
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  9. Deciphering animal pain.Colin Allen, Perry N. Fuchs, Adam Shriver & Hilary M. Wilson - 2005 - In Murat Aydede (ed.), Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study. MIT Press.
    In this paper we1 assess the potential for research on nonhuman animals to address questions about the phenomenology of painful experiences. Nociception, the basic capacity for sensing noxious stimuli, is widespread in the animal kingdom. Even rel- atively primitive animals such as leeches and sea slugs possess nociceptors, neurons that are functionally specialized for sensing noxious stimuli (Walters 1996). Vertebrate spinal cords play a sophisticated role in processing and modulating nociceptive signals, providing direct control of some motor responses to noxious (...)
     
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  10. Knowledge and Reality: Selected Essays.Colin McGinn - 1999 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Knowledge and Reality brings together a selection of Colin McGinn's philosophical essays from the 1970s to the 1990s, whose unifying theme is the relation between the mind and the world. McGinn defends a realist view, but emphasises the epistemological problems that come with it. He has written a new postscript to each essay, placing it in its philosophical context and offering his current reflections on the topic.
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  11. Prescott's Conquests: Anthropophagy, Auto-da-Fe and Eternal Return.Colin Pearce - 1997 - Interpretation 24 (3):339-361.
     
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  12. Foundations of Logical Consequence.Colin R. Caret & Ole T. Hjortland (eds.) - 2015 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
    Logical consequence is the relation that obtains between premises and conclusion(s) in a valid argument. Orthodoxy has it that valid arguments are necessarily truth-preserving, but this platitude only raises a number of further questions, such as: how does the truth of premises guarantee the truth of a conclusion, and what constraints does validity impose on rational belief? This volume presents thirteen essays by some of the most important scholars in the field of philosophical logic. The essays offer ground-breaking new insights (...)
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  13. Does Unwitting Knowledge Entail Unconscious Belief?Colin Radford - 1970 - Analysis 30 (3):103 - 107.
  14.  56
    Mechanisms, resources, and background conditions.Colin Klein - 2018 - Biology and Philosophy 33 (5-6):36.
    Distinguishing mechanistic components from mere causally relevant background conditions remains a difficulty for mechanistic accounts of explanation. By distinguishing resources from mechanical parts, I argue that we can more effectively draw this boundary. Further, the distinction makes obvious that there are distinctive resource explanations which are not captured by a traditional part-based mechanistic account. While this suggests a straightforward extension of the mechanistic model, I argue that incorporating resources and resource explanations requires moving beyond the purely local account of levels (...)
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  15. Dignity as a moral concept.Colin Bird - 2013 - Social Philosophy and Policy 30 (1-2):150-176.
    Although dignity figures prominently in modern ethical discourse, and in the writings of moral and political philosophers writing today, we still lack a clear account of how the concept of dignity might be implicated in various forms of moral reasoning. This essay tries to make progress on two fronts. First, it attempts to clarify the possible roles the concept of dignity might play in moral discourse, with particular reference to Hart's distinction between positive and critical morality. Second, it offers a (...)
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  16.  17
    Not just what you did, but how: Children see distributors that count as more fair than distributors who don't.Colin Jacobs, Madison Flowers, Rosie Aboody, Maria Maier & Julian Jara-Ettinger - 2022 - Cognition 225 (C):105128.
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  17.  29
    The Relationship between Moral Philosophy and Political Philosophy in William James.Colin Koopman - 2022 - Contemporary Pragmatism 19 (1):1-10.
    This review essay is occasioned by two books on the moral and political thought of William James. Sarin Marchetti’s Ethics and Philosophical Critique in William James and Trygve Throntveit’s William James and the Quest for an Ethical Republic pose crucial questions for how we are to frame, interpret, and assess the philosophical contributions of William James more than one hundred years after his passing. In offering interpretations of James as contributing to social and political questions through his moral philosophy, both (...)
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  18.  14
    Auschwitz.Colin Richmond - 2022 - Common Knowledge 28 (1):61-65.
    This contribution to the final installment of the Common Knowledge symposium on contextualism is a reply to another contribution, Peter Burke's “Alternative Modes of Thought.” Or rather, this essay responds to the historians and social scientists whom Burke cites as arguing that only some ways of thinking are possible in any given place and time. Richmond's response is that a human context in which there is but one mode of thought in evidence, and no evident ambivalence regarding it, is a (...)
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  19. (1 other version)The Routledge companion to postmodernism.Stuart Sim (ed.) - 2005 - New York: Routledge.
    Postmodernism, its history and cultural context -- Postmodernism and philosophy / Stuart Sim -- Postmodernism and politics / Iain Hamilton Grant -- Postmodernism and feminism / Sue Thornham -- Postmodernism and lifestyles / Nigel Watson -- Postmodernism and religion / Pamela Sue Anderson -- Postmodernism and the postcolonial world / Eleanor Byrne -- Postmodernism and science and technology / Iain Hamilton Grant -- Postmodernism and architecture / Diane Morgan -- Postmodernism and art / Colin Trodd -- Postmodernism and cinema (...)
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  20.  15
    Exploiting the deep structure of constraint problems.Colin P. Williams & Tad Hogg - 1994 - Artificial Intelligence 70 (1-2):73-117.
  21.  86
    A bayesian analysis of excess content and the localisation of support.Colin Howson & Allan Franklin - 1985 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 36 (4):425-431.
  22.  54
    Radford revisiting.Colin Radford - 1988 - Philosophical Quarterly 38 (153):496-499.
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  23. The Umpire's Dilemma.Colin Radford - 1985 - Analysis 45 (2):109 - 111.
  24. Timothy Williamson’s Coin-Flipping Argument: Refuted Prior to Publication?Colin Howson - 2019 - Erkenntnis 86 (3):575-583.
    In a well-known paper, Timothy Williamson claimed to prove with a coin-flipping example that infinitesimal-valued probabilities cannot save the principle of Regularity, because on pain of inconsistency the event ‘all tosses land heads’ must be assigned probability 0, whether the probability function is hyperreal-valued or not. A premise of Williamson’s argument is that two infinitary events in that example must be assigned the same probability because they are isomorphic. It was argued by Howson that the claim of isomorphism fails, but (...)
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  25.  40
    Can logic be combined with probability? Probably.Colin Howson - 2009 - Journal of Applied Logic 7 (2):177-187.
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  26.  5
    Truth and the liar.Colin Howson - 2011 - In David DeVidi, Michael Hallett & Peter Clark (eds.), Logic, Mathematics, Philosophy, Vintage Enthusiasms: Essays in Honour of John L. Bell. Dordrecht, Netherland: Springer.
    Frege famously claimed that logic is the science of truth: “To discover truths is the task of all science; it falls to logic to discern the laws of truth”. But just like the other foundational concept of set, truth at that time was intimately associated with paradox; in the case of truth, the Liar paradox. The set-theoretical paradoxes had their teeth drawn by being recognised as reductio proofs of assumptions that had seemed too obvious to warrant stating explicitly, but were (...)
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  27.  40
    How Priming Affects Two Speeded Implicit Tests of Remembering: Naming Colors versus Reading Words.Colin M. MacLeod - 1995 - Consciousness and Cognition 5 (1-2):73-90.
    Three experiments investigated two timed implicit tests of memory—word reading and color naming. Using the study–test procedure, Experiments 1 and 2 showed that studied words caused reliable facilitation in word reading but no interference in color naming relative to unstudied words. Indeed, there was a small amount of facilitation in color naming as well. Experiment 3 further explored the color naming task by alternating shorter study and test intervals and adding control trials consisting of letter strings. Although both studied and (...)
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  28.  32
    Modifiable Futures: Science Fiction at the Bench.Colin Milburn - 2010 - Isis 101 (3):560-569.
  29. Theorizing the mechanisms of conceptual and semiotic space.Colin Wight - 2004 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 34 (2):283-299.
    In this piece the author takes issue with Mario Bunge’s claims that conceptual and semiotic systems have "compositions, environments and structures, but no mechanisms." Structures, according to Bunge, can never be mechanisms in conceptual and semiotic systems. Contra this the author argues that in social systems, social structures (which are concept-dependent and reproduced and/or transformed, at least in part, semiotically), can be mechanisms in the sense that such structures are one of the processes in a concrete system that makes itwhat (...)
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  30. On Sticking to What I Don't Believe to Be the Case.Colin Radford - 1972 - Analysis 32 (5):170 - 173.
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  31. The Asymmetry of Formal Logic.Colin Cheyne - unknown
    By an argument form I shall mean a schema consisting of a string of symbols that are place-­‐holders for either logical terms or non-­‐logical (descriptive/content) terms: substituting terms of the appropriate kind for the symbols yields an argument. A substitution instance of an argument form is an argument that arises as a result of such a substitution. By a valid argument I shall mean an argument such that it is impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion false. (...)
     
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  32.  17
    Critical Excess: Overreading in Derrida, Deleuze, Levinas, ŽIžEk and Cavell.Colin Davis - 2010 - Stanford University Press.
    This lucidly written book looks at the interpretative audacity of five major "overreaders"—Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, Emmanuel Levinas, Slavoj Žižek and Stanley Cavell—and asks what is at stake and what is to be gained by their ...
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  33.  65
    The Complex Reality of Pain, by Jennifer Corns.Colin Klein - 2021 - Mind 131 (523):986-995.
    The Complex Reality of Pain, by CornsJennifer. New York: Routledge, 2020. Pp. xi + 217.
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  34.  26
    A sparkle in the eye: Illumination cues and lightness constancy in the perception of eye contact.Colin J. Palmer, Yumiko Otsuka & Colin W. G. Clifford - 2020 - Cognition 205 (C):104419.
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  35.  92
    Response to Tumulty on Pain and Imperatives.Colin Klein - 2010 - Journal of Philosophy 107 (10):554-557.
    Maura Tumulty has raised two objections to my imperative account of pain.1 First, she argues that there is a disanalogy between pains and other imperative sensations like itch, hunger, and thirst. Suppose (with Hall) one thinks that an itch says “Scratch here!”2 Scratch the itch, and it dutifully disappears. Not so with pain. The pain of a broken ankle has the content ‘Do not put weight on that ankle!’ Yet the coddled ankle still throbs: obeying the imperative does not extinguish (...)
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  36.  21
    Neuroergonomic evolution of cognitive dysfunction after concussion during driving tasks: An fNIRS Study.Divya Jain, Catherine McDonald, Eileen Storey, Olivia Podolak, Christina Master, Hasan Ayaz & Kristy Arbogast - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  37.  44
    Tracing the Profile of Animal Rights Supporters: A Preliminary Investigation.Colin Jerolmack - 2003 - Society and Animals 11 (3):245-263.
    A question about the "moral rights" of nonhuman animals in the 1993 and 1994 General Social Survey effected an understanding of some of the demographics of those supporting animal rights. This study checked results against related questions concerning attitudes toward animal testing and meat consumption. The stereotypical profile of an animal rights supporter is female, well educated, upper-middle class, middle-aged, and white. The data in this study do not support the stereotype. Instead, the young, non-black minorities, and the less educated (...)
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  38.  56
    Altruism and Christian ethics.Colin Grant - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Separated from its anchorage in religion, ethics has followed the social sciences in seeing human beings as fundamentally characterized by self-interest, so that altruism is either naively idealistic or arrogantly self-sufficient. Colin Grant contends that, as a modern secular concept, altruism is a parody on the self-giving love of Christianity, so that its dismissal represents a social levelling that loses the depths that theology makes intelligible and religion makes possible. The Christian affirmation is that God is characterized by self-giving (...)
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  39.  14
    History of Madness.Colin Gordon - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Malden Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 84–103.
    The History of Madness (HM) is Michel Foucault's first major work, his longest single work, and the work that established his reputation in France. Foucault distinguishes four distinct components or forms of consciousness of madness: (1) the critical: the normative judgment which distinguishes and sanctions madness in its difference from reason or sanity; (2) the practical: an attitude of collective demarcation and exclusion of the deviant from a group; (3) the enunciative: the act of recognizing individuals as mad and identifying (...)
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  40.  62
    On a recent argument for the impossibility of a statistical explanation of single events, and a defence of a modified form of Hempel's theory of statistical explanation.Colin Howson - 1988 - Erkenntnis 29 (1):113 - 124.
    An argument has been recently proposed by Watkins, whose objective is to show the impossibility of a statistical explanation of single events. This present paper is an attempt to show that Watkins's argument is unsuccessful, and goes on to argue for an account of statistical explanation which has much in common with Hempel's classic treatment.
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  41.  32
    A cultural evolutionary approach to modernity: What might it mean for Christian faith?Colin Patterson - 2020 - Zygon 55 (1):52-72.
    This essay introduces, for theological consideration, some recent work in the field of cultural evolutionary theory, specifically the kin‐influence hypothesis. This theory holds that, following the beginnings of industrialization and economic growth, a nation's fertility rate commences a decline, which is further abetted by the consequent and increasing imbalance in the relative influence of kin versus nonkin influences on individuals in favor of the latter. It is further proposed that this process is itself a major independent factor in the emergence (...)
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  42.  25
    Begging principles: The big issue.Colin Radford - 2001 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 18 (3):287–296.
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  43.  65
    Characterizing-Judgments and Their Causal Counterparts.Colin Radford - 1971 - Analysis 31 (3):65 - 75.
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  44.  34
    Knowledge and Evidence.Colin Radford - 1991 - Philosophical Books 32 (1):33-37.
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  45. Knowing but Not Believing.Colin Radford - 1967 - Analysis 27 (4):139 - 140.
  46.  51
    Must knowledge—or 'knowledge'—be socially constructed?Colin Radford - 1985 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 15 (1):15-33.
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  47.  50
    MacColl, Russell, the existential import of propositions, and the Null- class.Colin Radford - 1995 - Philosophical Quarterly 45 (180):316-331.
  48.  43
    Ostensive definitions, coordinative definitions, and necessary empirical statements: A reply to Arthur Pap.Colin Radford - 1964 - Mind 73 (290):270-272.
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  49.  32
    The Examined Life Re-examined.Colin Radford - 1992 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 33:1-23.
    In Part One of The Examined Life I recalled certain episodes from my childhood and youth in which, as I came to realize later, I had been exercised by a philosophical problem. By so doing I hoped not only to convey to non-professionals what philosophy is—or is like—but to show them that they too were philosophers, i.e., had been exercised by philosophical questions. In Part Two I gave some examples of how such problems may be treated by a professional, in (...)
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  50.  36
    Wittgenstein, Empiricism, and Language.Colin Radford - 2001 - International Philosophical Quarterly 41 (4):495-496.
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