Results for 'Daniel Jonah Goldhagen'

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  1. Modell Bundesrepublic: National History, Democracy, and Internationalization in Germany.Daniel Jonah Goldhagen - 1997 - Common Knowledge 6:10-18.
     
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  2.  47
    (1 other version)Challenging Rational Explanations of Genocidal Killing and Altruism Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, , 656 pp., $16.00 paper, 640 pp., $29.50 cloth. Revolution and Genocide: On the Origins of the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust, Robert Melson , 386 pp., $16.95 paper. The Heart of Altruism: Perceptions of a Common Humanity, Kristen Renwick Monroe , 320 pp., $29.95 cloth. Raoul Wallenberg, revised edition, Harvey Rosenfeld 290 pp., $19.95 paper. [REVIEW]Jolene Jesse - 1997 - Ethics and International Affairs 11:302-307.
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  3.  27
    History writing, numbness, and the restoration of dignity.Carolyn J. Dean - 2004 - History of the Human Sciences 17 (2-3):57-96.
    This article investigates how historians have sought to foster empathic identification with victims in various narratives on the genocide of European Jewry. It takes historians’ extreme reactions to Daniel Jonah Goldhagen’s Hitler’s Willing Executionersas a point of departure, and argues that most historical narratives fail to address how graphic writing about atrocities generates identification with both perpetrators and victims. The essay then analyses how some historians have sought, successfully or not, to overcome this problem.
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  4. Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah.Daniel J. Simundson & Julia M. O'Brien - 2005
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  5.  28
    Some Sociological Contemplations on Daniel J. Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners.Michael Brennan - 2001 - Theory, Culture and Society 18 (4):83-109.
    In this article I examine recent debates surrounding the publication of Daniel J. Goldhagen's controversial book Hitler's Willing Executioners. I do so against the `backdrop' of contention regarding the (historical) centrality of the Nazi Holocaust and the role played by Holocaust Studies - a burgeoning area of academic special interest, involving mainly historians, but also sociologists, theologians and philosophers. In particular I consider the charged disputation(s) which have flowed from Norman G. Finkelstein's critique of Hitler's Willing Executioners and (...)
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  6.  89
    Structure and agency in the holocaust: Daniel J. goldhagen and his critics.A. D. Moses - 1998 - History and Theory 37 (2):194–219.
    A striking aspect of the so-called "Goldhagen debate" has been the bifurcated reception Hitler's Willing Executioners has received: the enthusiastic welcome of journalists and the public was as warm as the impatient dismissal of most historians was cool. This article seeks to transcend the current impasse by analyzing the underlying issues of Holocaust research at stake here. It argues that a "deep structure" necessarily characterizes the historiography of the Holocaust, comprising a tension between its positioning in "universalism" and "particularism" (...)
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  7.  52
    The logic of the goldhagen debate.Richard Kamber - 2000 - Res Publica 6 (2):155-177.
    Since Daniel J. Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaustattempts to show that the Holocaust is explicable and can be understood largely in terms of a single cause, “eliminationist anti-Semitism”, it is not surprising that the book has generated an international debate. What is surprising is the magnitude and emotional intensity of the debate. This article argues that the deepest flaws in it Hitler's Willing Executioners,as well as the chasm of disagreement between Goldhagen's detractors and (...)
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  8. ""On the Public Use of History: Why a" Democracy Prize" for Daniel Goldhagen?Jürgen Habermas & M. Pensky - 1997 - Common Knowledge 6:1-9.
  9. Four Strange Books of the Bible: Jonah, Daniel, Koheleth, Esther.Elias Bickerman - 1967
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  10. Perpetrator motivation: Som E reflections on the browning/ goldhagen debate.Nick Zangwill - 2003 - In Eve Garrard & Geoffrey Scarre (eds.), Moral Philosophy and the Holocaust. Routledge.
    §1.1 What m otivated the perpetrators of the holocaust? Christopher Browning and Daniel Goldhagen differ in their analysis of Reserve Police Battalion 101 (Browning 1992, Goldhagen 1996). The battalion consisted of around 500 ‘ordinary’ Germ ans who, during the period 1942-44, killed around 40,000 Jews and who deported as m any to the death cam ps. Browning and Goldhagen differ over the m otivation wit h which the m en killed. I want to com m ent (...)
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  11.  8
    Tales of posthumanity: the bible and contemporary popular culture.George Aichele - 2014 - Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press.
    Images and concepts of the 'posthuman' go back at least as far as the famous 'madman parable' in F. Nietzsche's The Gay Science, and their 'roots' go back much further still. In turn, the image or theme of the posthuman has played an increasingly important role in recent literature, film, and television, where the notion of humanity as a 'larval being' (G. Deleuze) that transforms itself or is being transformed into something else, for better or worse, has become increasingly common. (...)
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  12.  75
    Understanding the moral phenomenology of the third Reich.Geoffrey Scarre - 1998 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 1 (4):423-445.
    This paper discusses the issue of German moral responsibility for the Holocaust in the light of the thesis of Daniel Goldhagen and others that inherited negative stereotypes of Jews and Jewishness were prime causal factors contributing to the genocide. It is argued that in so far as the Germans of the Third Reich were dupes of an ''hallucinatory ideology,'' they strikingly exemplify the ''paradox of moral luck'' outlined by Thomas Nagel, that people are not morally responsible for what (...)
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  13. True believers : The intentional strategy and why it works.Daniel C. Dennett - 1981 - In Anthony Francis Heath (ed.), Scientific explanation: papers based on Herbert Spencer lectures given in the University of Oxford. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 150--167.
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  14.  86
    The psychological basis of historical explanation: Reenactment, simulation, and the fusion of horizons.Karsten R. Stueber - 2002 - History and Theory 41 (1):25–42.
    In this article I will challenge a received orthodoxy in the philosophy of social science by showing that Collingwood was right in insisting that reenactment is epistemically central for historical explanations of individual agency. Situating Collingwood within the context of the debate between simulation theory and what has come to be called “theory theory” in contemporary philosophy of mind and psychology, I will develop two systematic arguments that attempt to show the essential importance of reenactment for our understanding of rational (...)
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  15.  79
    Free Will, Determinism and the “Problem” of Structure and Agency in the Social Sciences.Nigel Pleasants - 2019 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 49 (1):3-30.
    The so-called “problem” of structure and agency is clearly related to the philosophical problem of free will and determinism, yet the central philosophical issues are not well understood by theorists of structure and agency in the social sciences. In this article I draw a map of the available stances on the metaphysics of free will and determinism. With the aid of this map the problem of structure and agency will be seen to dissolve. The problem of structure and agency is (...)
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  16.  71
    Ordinary Men: Genocide, Determinism, Agency, and Moral Culpability.Nigel Pleasants - 2017 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 48 (1):3-32.
    In the space of their 16-month posting to Poland, the 500 men of Police Battalion 101 genocidally massacred 38,000 Jews by rifle and pistol fire. Although they were acting as members of a formal security force, these men knew that they could avoid participation in killing operations with impunity, and a substantial minority did so. Why, then, did so many participate in the genocidal killing when they knew they did not have to? Landmark historical studies by Christopher Browning and (...) Goldhagen proffer contrasting explanatory answers to this troublesome question. This article focuses on a criticism that has often been leveled at the internal coherence of Goldhagen’s controversial explanatory theory. Goldhagen’s explanation is that the men freely, willingly, and responsibly participated in the genocidal killing because of their beliefs about Jews—beliefs that they were causally determined to hold. Critics charge that this is incoherent: How could perpetrators have been passive recipients of determinist... (shrink)
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  17.  43
    The concept of learning from the study of the Holocaust.Nigel Pleasants - 2004 - History of the Human Sciences 17 (2-3):187-210.
    In his much-discussed Hitler’s Willing Executioners, Daniel Goldhagen claims to bring ‘the critical eye of the anthropologist’ to the task of understanding the motivational state of Holocaust perpetrators. This aspect of his methodology has not received much critical attention. In this article I seek to fill that gap. I do so through consideration of Peter Winch’s reflections on the concept of learning from anthropological study of an alien social and cultural world. Goldhagen tells us that perpetrators acted (...)
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  18.  6
    Surviving postmodernism: some ethical and not so ethical debates in the media and universities.Ron Shapiro - 1998 - London: Sangam Books.
    Machine generated contents note: Introduction 9 -- Postmodernism and the End of 'Humanism'? 19 -- Postmodern Ambiguities: -- Out of the Frying-Pan into the Fire 34 -- In Postmodern Disorder: -- The Confused and Confusing World of The Hand that Signed the Paper 40 -- Ethics, the Literary Imagination, and the 'Other': The Hand that Ought, or was Imagined, to have Signed the Paper 47 -- Jew and Anti-Jew in Australian Fiction 58 -- Helen Garner's The First Stone: Ethical Confusions (...)
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  19. Distinctions in Distinction.Daniel Stoljar - 2008 - In Jakob Hohwy & Jesper Kallestrup (eds.), Being Reduced: New Essays on Reduction, Explanation, and Causation. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter begins with a putative puzzle between non-reductive physicalism according to which psychological properties are distinct from, yet metaphysically necessitated by, physical properties, and Hume's dictum according to which there are no necessary connections between distinct existences. However, the puzzle dissolves once care is taken to distinguish between distinct kinds of distinction: numerical distinctness, mereological distinctness, and what the chapter calls ‘weak modal distinctness’ and ‘strong modal distinctness’. For each of these notions, it turns out that either it makes (...)
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  20. The Definition of "Luck" and the Problem of Moral Luck.Daniel Statman - 2019 - In Ian M. Church & Robert J. Hartman (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy and Psychology of Luck. New York: Routledge. pp. 195-205.
     
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  21.  29
    Later Mohist ethics and philosophical progress in ancient China.Daniel J. Stephens - 2021 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 29 (3):394-414.
    The writings of the later Mohists are generally taken to contain several updates to the consequentialist ethical view held by the Mohist school. In this paper, I defend one interpretation of those updates and how they may have served, within the Mohists’ argumentative context, to make their views more defensible. I argue that we should reject A.C. Graham’s prominent interpretation, on which the later Mohists’ argumentative strategy is to develop a conception of the a priori and to ground their ethical (...)
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  22.  33
    Narrative and Understanding Persons.Daniel D. Hutto (ed.) - 2007 - Cambridge University Press.
    The human world is replete with narratives - narratives of our making that are uniquely appreciated by us. Some thinkers have afforded special importance to our capacity to generate such narratives, seeing it as variously enabling us to: exercise our imaginations in unique ways; engender an understanding of actions performed for reasons; and provide a basis for the kind of reflection and evaluation that matters vitally to moral and self development. Perhaps most radically, some hold that narratives are essential for (...)
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  23.  72
    On the (mis)classification of paid labor: When should gig workers have employee status?Daniel Halliday - 2021 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 20 (3):229-250.
    The emergence of so-called ‘gig work’, particularly that sold through digital platforms accessed through smartphone apps, has led to disputes about the proper classification of workers: Should platform workers be classified as independent contractors (as platforms typically insist), or as employees of the platforms through which they sell labor (as workers often claim)? Such disputes have urgency due to the way in which employee status is necessary to access certain benefits such as a minimum wage, sick pay, and so on. (...)
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  24.  72
    Prospects for Transnational Citizenship and Democracy.Daniel M. Weinstock - 2001 - Ethics and International Affairs 15 (2):53-66.
    Many of the problems that would be faced in setting up transnational institutions mirror problems that have already been addressed by appropriate institutional mechanisms in the establishment of the modern nation-state.
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  25. What Do I Think You 're Doing? Action Identification and Mind Attribution'.Daniel M. Wegner - unknown
    The authors examined how a perceiver’s identification of a target person’s actions covaries with attributions of mind to the target. The authors found in Study 1 that the attribution of intentionality and cognition to a target was associated with identifying the target’s action in terms of high-level effects rather than low-level details. In Study 2, both action identification and mind attribution were greater for a liked target, and in Study 3, they were reduced for a target suffering misfortune. In Study (...)
     
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  26.  21
    Co-theory of sorted profinite groups for PAC structures.Daniel Max Hoffmann & Junguk Lee - 2023 - Journal of Mathematical Logic 23 (3).
    We achieve several results. First, we develop a variant of the theory of absolute Galois groups in the context of many sorted structures. Second, we provide a method for coding absolute Galois groups of structures, so they can be interpreted in some monster model with an additional predicate. Third, we prove the “Weak Independence Theorem” for pseudo-algebraically closed (PAC) substructures of an ambient structure with no finite cover property (nfcp) and the property [Formula: see text]. Fourth, we describe Kim-dividing in (...)
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  27.  19
    Finding an emotional face in a crowd: Emotional and perceptual stimulus factors influence visual search efficiency.Daniel Lundqvist, Neil Bruce & Arne Öhman - 2015 - Cognition and Emotion 29 (4):621-633.
  28. The Consequences Of Intentionalism.Daniel Stoljar - 2007 - Erkenntnis 66 (1):247-270.
    This article explores two consequences of intentionalism. My first line of argument focuses on the impact of intentionalism on the ‚hard problem’ of phenomenal character. If intentionalism is true, the phenomenal supervenes on the intentional. Furthermore, if physicalism about the intentional is also true, the intentional supervenes on the physical. Therefore, if intentionalism and physicalism are both true, then, by transitivity of supervenience, physicalism about the phenomenal is true. I argue that this transitivity argument is not persuasive, because on any (...)
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  29.  9
    La religion des philosophes grecs: De Thalès aux Stoïciens.Daniel Babut - 2019 - Paris: Les Belles lettres. Edited by Carlos Lévy.
    Des origines à la fin du cinquième siècle. Les Présocratiques -- La période classique. Socrate ; Platon ; Aristote et l'école péripatéticienne -- Les philosophies hellénistiques. La critique de la religion populaire à l'âge hellénistique et la philosophie épicurienne de la religion ; La religion des Stoïciens.
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  30.  72
    Gender and Scientists’ Views about the Value-Free Ideal.Daniel Steel, Chad Gonnerman, Aaron M. McCright & Itai Bavli - 2018 - Perspectives on Science 26 (6):619-657.
    A small but growing body of philosophically informed survey work calls into question whether the value-free ideal is a dominant viewpoint among scientists. However, the survey instruments in used in these studies have important limitations. Previous work has also made little headway in developing hypotheses that might predict or explain differing views about the value-free ideal among scientists. In this article, we review previous survey work on this topic, describe an improved survey instrument, report results from an initial administration of (...)
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  31. The question of moral ontology.Daniel Nolan - 2014 - Philosophical Perspectives 28 (1):201-221.
    Our ordinary moral practices not only suppose that some people ought to perform some actions, and that some outcomes are morally better or worse than others, but also that there are rights, duties, goodness, and other apparently abstract moral entities. What should we make of these entities, and the talk of these entities? It is not straighforward to account for these entities in other terms. On the other hand, this paper will argue that talk of such entities is not easily (...)
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  32.  30
    Realism and Conventionalism in Later Mohist Semantics.Daniel J. Stephens - 2017 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 16 (4):521-542.
    In this essay, I argue in favor of a novel interpretation of the semantic theory that can be found in the Later Mohist writings. Recent interpretations by Chad Hansen and Chris Fraser cast the Later Mohist theory as a realist theory; this includes attributing to the Later Mohists what we can call “kind-realism,” the idea that there is some correct scheme of kind-terms that carves the world at its joints. While I agree with Hansen and Fraser that the Later Mohist (...)
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  33.  11
    Incivility Affects Actors Too: The Complex Effects of Incivility on Perpetrators’ Work and Home Behaviors.Daniel Kim, Klodiana Lanaj & Joel Koopman - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-28.
    The majority of workplace incivility research has focused on implications of such acts for victims and observers. We extend this work in meaningful ways by proposing that, due to its norm-violating nature, incivility may have important implications for perpetrators as well. Integrating social norms theory and research on guilt with the behavioral concordance model, we take an actor-centric approach to argue that enacted incivility will lead to feelings of guilt, particularly for prosocially-motivated employees. In addition, given the interpersonally burdensome _as (...)
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  34.  4
    Sur les polémiques des anciens stoïciens.Daniel Babut - 2005 - Philosophie Antique 5 (5):65-91.
    In order to clarify the Stoics’ reasons for polemicizing against the other philosophical schools, one has to examine the place and function of dialectic in the Stoic system. It emerges that, instead of the heuristic role that it plays in Academic teaching, for the Stoics dialectic has only a defensive function : it is not used to find out the truth through a critical examination of opposing arguments, but to defend against any objection a truth that is known beforehand. This (...)
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  35.  3
    Philosophy of jazz.Daniel Martin Feige - 2024 - Lanham: Lexington Books. Edited by Nathan Ross & Alessandro Bertinetto.
    Philosophy of Jazz discusses the philosophical relevance of jazz, showing that jazz and European art music have more in common than many assume.
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  36.  17
    Fie upon Your Law!Daniel J. Kornstein - 1993 - Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature 5 (1):35-56.
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  37. Problem języka w fenomenologii a możliwość źródłowej prezentacji. Derridiańska krytyka w świetle tekstów Husserla.Daniel Lipka - 2007 - Fenomenologia 5:113-126.
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  38.  14
    Action in History and Social Science.Daniel Little - 2010 - In Timothy O'Connor & Constantine Sandis (eds.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Action. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 401–409.
    This chapter contains sections titled: References.
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  39.  26
    Bernard Mandeville as Moralist and Materialist.Daniel Luban - 2015 - History of European Ideas 41 (7):831-857.
    SummaryToday remembered primarily as an eighteenth-century predecessor of laissez-faire economics, Bernard Mandeville's notorious Fable of the Bees marks the intersection of two modes of thought. On the one hand, Mandeville was a ‘moralist’ heir to the French Augustinianism of the previous century, viewing sociability as a mere mask for vanity and pride. On the other, he was a ‘materialist’ forerunner of economics, concerned to demonstrate the universality of human appetites for corporeal pleasures. The tension between these two modes of thought (...)
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  40. Russell and Strawson on definite descriptions.Daniel Malvasio - 2024 - In Carlos Enrique Caorsi & Ricardo J. Navia (eds.), Philosophy of language in Uruguay: language, meaning, and philosophy. Lanham: Lexington Books.
  41.  10
    La independencia, de la esfera al plano.Daniel Gutiérrez Ardila - 2022 - Araucaria 24 (49).
    In the New Kingdom of Granada the revolutionary period is usually analyzed in isolation, as if it was an incongruity barely linked to the past or to its own future. Therefore, explanations about the very occurrence of the political transformation discard intimate causalities, privileging instead the actions of small groups as well as external influences and accidents. Thus the main challenge for future research will be to understand this epoch of great transformations as an unexpected coincidence between a dynamic evolution (...)
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  42.  20
    Debating Drama in the Early Modern University: John Case, Aristotle's Politics, and a Previously Unknown Oxford Disputation.Daniel Blank - 2022 - Journal of the History of Ideas 83 (3):387-406.
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  43.  8
    Smoking and Limitations on Liberty.Daniel Burkett - 2023 - The Prindle Post.
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  44. Afterword: a two row ethics of encounter.Daniel Coleman - 2015 - In Caitlin Janzen, Kristin Smith & Donna Jeffery (eds.), Unravelling encounters: ethics, knowledge, and resistance under neoliberalism. Toronto, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
     
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  45.  15
    Leibniz sur « l’avancement vers une plus grande culture ». Leibniz über den „Fortschritt zu höherer Kultur“.Daniel J. Cook - 2018 - Studia Leibnitiana 50 (2):163.
    G. W. Leibniz has been praised as an exemplar of tolerance on both theological and political grounds. His irenic efforts within Christendom as well as his positive attitude towards pagans like the Chinese is well documented. He thought that “the great majority of mankind” were already “civilized”. This paper highlights Leibniz’s political treatment of the “uncivilized” peoples, whom he termed “barbarians” and “savages”. Given Leibniz’s worldly outlook and prodigious reading, including writings detailing the horrors inflicted on the natives of the (...)
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  46.  7
    Perceived Questionability and the Phenomenology of Critical Disposition.Daniel Fisherman - 2013 - Philosophy of Education 69:95-103.
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  47. Diderot.Daniel Mornet - 1966 - Paris,: Hatier.
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  48.  11
    The Roman Interpreter and His Diplomatic and Military Roles.Daniel Peretz - 2006 - História 55 (4):451-470.
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  49.  9
    Seventeen. The Ethics of Boundaries.Daniel Philpott - 2001 - In David Miller & Sohail H. Hashmi (eds.), Boundaries and Justice: Diverse Ethical Perspectives. Princeton University Press. pp. 335-360.
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  50. Appetites, Matter and Metaphors: Aristotle, Physics I, 9 , and Its Renaissance Commentators.Daniel Andersson - 2016 - In Guido Giglioni, James A. T. Lancaster, Sorana Corneanu & Dana Jalobeanu (eds.), Francis Bacon on Motion and Power. Cham: Springer International Publishing.
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