Results for 'Deacon Gregory Webster'

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  1.  30
    Financial Toxicity.Deacon Gregory Webster - 2018 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 18 (2):227-236.
    The financial toxicity of biotherapeutic treatments is examined. Kymriah, a new gene therapy, has a list price of $475,000 per treatment; Yescarta, from Kite Pharma, costs $373,000 per treatment. Such costs are a significant burden on patients, patients’ families, payers, health care systems, and communities. Studies have shown that financial toxicity—the effect of excessive treatment cost—diminishes patients’ quality of life, compliance, and survival. Some pharmaceutical companies promote outcomes-based pricing and other strategies to offset financial toxicity, but these approaches have not (...)
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  2. Reviews: Medicine and Health-Four Treatises. Edited, with a Preface. [REVIEW]Henry E. Sigerist, C. Lillian Temkin, George Rosen, Gregory Zilboorg & C. Webster - 1998 - Annals of Science 55 (4):447-448.
     
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  3.  65
    Lineage, Sex, and Wealth as Moderators of Kin Investment.Gregory D. Webster, Angela Bryan, Charles B. Crawford, Lisa McCarthy & Brandy H. Cohen - 2008 - Human Nature 19 (2):189-210.
    Supporting Hamilton’s inclusive fitness theory, archival analyses of inheritance patterns in wills have revealed that people invest more of their estates in kin of closer genetic relatedness. Recent classroom experiments have shown that this genetic relatedness effect is stronger for relatives of direct lineage (children, grandchildren) than for relatives of collateral lineage (siblings, nieces, nephews). In the present research, multilevel modeling of more than 1,000 British Columbian wills revealed a positive effect of genetic relatedness on proportions of estates allocated to (...)
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  4.  25
    Broadening the View of Catholic Social Teaching and the Cost of Pharmaceuticals.Gregory K. Webster - 2020 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 20 (4):709-723.
    Catholic Social Teaching, in considering economic and patient justice, calls for “participating in patient care.” Corporations often are accused of not paying their fair share, which in turn has led to demands for government regulation to lower drug prices in the United States. Meanwhile, the millions of dollars spent by pharmaceutical foundations to help lower-income patients is not seen as corporations’ taking such responsibility to assist patients. The view that CST demands lower costs for prescription pharmaceuticals from corporations that make (...)
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  5. Psychology of scientific judgment and decision making.Joanne Kane & Gregory D. Webster - 2013 - In Gregory J. Feist & Michael E. Gorman (eds.), Handbook of the psychology of science. New York: Springer Pub. Company, LLC.
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  6.  29
    Back to the Future: Overcoming Reluctance to Honor In-School DNAR Orders.John J. Paris & Gregory Webster - 2005 - American Journal of Bioethics 5 (1):67-69.
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  7. Quantitative trends in establishing a psychology of science : a review of the metasciences. [REVIEW]Gregory D. Webster - 2013 - In Gregory J. Feist & Michael E. Gorman (eds.), Handbook of the psychology of science. New York: Springer Pub. Company, LLC.
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  8. Review of Terrence Deacon's The Symbolic Species[REVIEW]Gregory M. Nixon - 1998 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 5 (5/6):746-748.
    Terrence Deacon has constructed a tome in which he unleashes his considerable learning in quest of several answers to the question, "What are we?" He is uniquely qualified to take an approach which details the origin and development of, first, language, then the brain, and, lastly, their "co-evolution".
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  9. A 'Hermeneutic Objection': Language and the inner view.Gregory M. Nixon - 1999 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (2-3):257-269.
    In the worlds of philosophy, linguistics, and communications theory, a view has developed which understands conscious experience as experience which is 'reflected' back upon itself through language. This indicates that the consciousness we experience is possible only because we have culturally invented language and subsequently evolved to accommodate it. This accords with the conclusions of Daniel Dennett (1991), but the 'hermeneutic objection' would go further and deny that the objective sciences themselves have escaped the hermeneutic circle. -/- The consciousness we (...)
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  10.  40
    The figure of the deacon Peter in the Dialogues of Gregory the Great.John Moorhead - 2002 - Augustinianum 42 (2):469-479.
  11.  97
    The Big Book of Concepts.Gregory Murphy - 2004 - MIT Press.
    A comprehensive introduction to current research on the psychology of concept formation and use.
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  12. Persons in Patristic and Medieval Christian Theology.Scott M. Williams - 2019 - In Antonia LoLordo (ed.), Persons: a history of the concept. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Introduction: -/- It is likely that Boethius (480-524ce) inaugurates, in Latin Christian theology, the consideration of personhood as such. In the Treatise Against Eutyches and Nestorius Boethius gives a well-known definition of personhood according to genus and difference(s): a person is an individual substance of a rational nature. Personhood is predicated only of individual rational substances. This chapter situates Boethius in relation to significant Christian theologians before and after him, and the way in which his definition of personhood is a (...)
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  13.  20
    Der Mythos Gregor und die Grundlegung der musica sacra im heiligen Buch.Therese Bruggisser-Lanker - 2013 - Das Mittelalter 18 (1):87-105.
    Divine inspiration through the Holy Ghost is topical in the portraits of Gregory the Great: A dove brings him the divine words, which he writes himself or dictates to his deacon Petrus. Thus the charismatic Father of the Church became, like the Evangelists, a divinely inspired medium who transmitted the mandate of spreading the gospel and guaranteed the heavenly origin of the texts that were recited and sung in the liturgy. The preface ‘Gregorius presul’, which is to be (...)
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  14.  58
    Theism and Explanation.Gregory W. Dawes - 2009 - New York: Routledge.
    In this timely study, Dawes defends the methodological naturalism of the sciences. Though religions offer what appear to be explanations of various facts about the world, the scientist, as scientist, will not take such proposed explanations seriously. Even if no natural explanation were available, she will assume that one exists. Is this merely a sign of atheistic prejudice, as some critics suggest? Or are there good reasons to exclude from science explanations that invoke a supernatural agent? On the one hand, (...)
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  15.  33
    Comprehending Complex Concepts.Gregory L. Murphy - 1988 - Cognitive Science 12 (4):529-562.
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  16.  21
    Philosophy in the age of science and capital.Gregory Dale Adamson - 2002 - New York: Continuum.
    Based on an original synthesis of the work of Marx and Bergson, the key theorists of capitalism and creativity, the book presents an astonishing analysis of ...
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  17.  44
    Dewey's Naturalistic Mysticism.Gregory M. Aisemberg - 2008 - The Pluralist 3 (3):23 - 62.
  18.  27
    Dewey's Naturalistic Mysticism of Meaning: Finite Transcendence.Gregory Aisemberg - 2014 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 28 (2):130-153.
    In describing the mystical as a swift and progressive obliteration of empirical individuality and its history, of sensation, of time and space, and of the world’s multiplicity of forms, the otherworldly mystic grossly distorts the experience by interpretive tropes that uproot it from its animal soil of impulse and habit, of human perspective, and attribute its genesis to the intermediation of supernatural factors in order to account for its simplest rudiments. What is presupposed in otherworldly interpretations is that sense experience (...)
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  19.  21
    Stimulus control of ovulation in red-backed voles.Bruce Ferguson, Daniel G. Webster & Donald A. Dewsbury - 1984 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (4):365-367.
  20.  8
    Logic as the Question Concerning the Essence of Language.Wanda Torres Gregory & Yvonne Unna (eds.) - 2009 - State University of New York Press.
    _Aims to transform logic into a reflection on the nature of language._.
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  21. Principles of Interpretive Charity and the Semantics of Knowledge Attributions.Gregory Stoutenburg - 2016 - Acta Analytica 31 (2):153-168.
    Positions in the debate about the correct semantics of “S knows that p” are sometimes motivated in part by an appeal to interpretive charity. In particular, non-skeptical views hold that many utterances of the sentence “S knows that p” are true and some of them think the fact that their views are able to respect this is a reason why their views are more charitable than skeptical invariantism. However, little attention has been paid to why charity should be understood in (...)
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  22. (1 other version)Using Sartre: An Analytical Introduction to Early Sartrean Themes.Gregory McCulloch - 1994 - New York: Routledge.
    _Using Sartre_ is an introduction to the philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre, but it is not an ordinary introduction. It both promotes Sartrean views and adopts a consistently analytical approach to him. Concentrating on the early philosophy, up to and including Sartre's masterwork _Being and Nothingness_, Gregory McCulloch clearly shows how much analytic philosophy misses when it neglects Sartre and the continental tradition in philosophy. In the classic spirit of analytic philosophy, this is a clear, simple and appealingly short exposition (...)
     
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  23.  55
    (1 other version)Self-respect and public reason.Gregory Whitfield - 2017 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 20 (6):677-696.
    In A Theory of Justice, John Rawls argues that self-respect is ‘perhaps the most important’ primary good and that its status as such gives crucial support to controversial ideas like the lexical priority of liberty. Given the importance of these ideas for Rawls, it should be no surprise that they have attracted much critical attention. In response to these critics, I give a defense of self-respect that grounds its importance in Rawls’s moral conception of the person. I show that this (...)
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  24. Ghoshal’s Ghost: Financialization and the End of Management Theory.Gregory A. Daneke & Alexander Sager - 2015 - Philosophy of Management 14 (1):29-45.
    Sumantra Ghoshal’s condemnation of “bad management theories” that were “destroying good management practices” has not lost any of its salience, after a decade. Management theories anchored in agency theory (and neo-classical economics generally) continue to abet the financialization of society and undermine the functioning of business. An alternative approach (drawn from a more classic institutional, new ecological, and refocused ethical approaches) is reviewed.
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  25.  18
    La carità del papa. Gregorio Magno tra storia e agiografia.Carlo Dell’Osso - 2022 - Augustinianum 62 (2):463-475.
    This article discusses the charity towards the poor that characterized the so-called cura animarum of Pope Gregory the Great. It draws its information first from the Registrum Epistularum and then from the Vita Gregorii Magni of John the Deacon. From the Registrum the author gathers information on the honesty and competence of the administrators of the ecclesiastical patrimony, and on the use of goodness and rigour in the exercise of power. From the Vita, the author highlights some hagiographic (...)
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  26.  60
    John Dewey and Moral Imagination: Pragmatism in Ethics (review).Gregory M. Fahy - 2006 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 20 (1):71-73.
  27.  24
    News of the Society.Frederick Gregory, Edith Sylla, Michael H. Shank & Keith R. Benson - 2000 - Isis 91 (1):215-225.
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  28.  50
    Parson Malthus's great-grandfather: Daniel Malthus, Royal apothecary.L. F. Gregory - 1961 - The Eugenics Review 53 (2):91.
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  29.  17
    The Animate and Mechanical Models of Reality.Joshua C. Gregory - 1927 - Humana Mente 2 (7):301-314.
    Ben Jonson, writing before 1641 in Discoveries, observed that nature intends us no courtesies. The rivers carry our boats, the winds favour our sails, and the sunlight warms our bodies, by necessary motions that contain no kindliness. This represented, or expressed, though perhaps unwittingly and certainly without scientific precision, the mechanical version of physical nature that steadily prevailed during the seventeenth century.
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  30.  45
    The Development of the Notion of Cause.Joshua C. Gregory - 1919 - The Monist 29 (4):509-519.
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  31.  11
    The Oxford Companion to the Mind.Richard L. Gregory (ed.) - 1998 - New York: Oxford University Press UK.
    We all have a mind, but how much do we know about what it is, and how it works? How do philosophers, physiologists, pyschologists and psychiatrists differ in their understanding of its processes? This second edition of the highly acclaimed Oxford Companion to the Mind attempts to answer these questions, and raises more, as it explores this most-intriguing of subjects. Includes Roger Penrose and Steven Rose on consciousness; Beryl Bainbridge on construction of fiction; Raj Persaud on depression; Richard Gregory (...)
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  32.  43
    Convergence and divergence between ecocentrism and sentientism concerning net value.Gregory Mikkelson - 2018 - Les Ateliers de l'Éthique / the Ethics Forum 13 (1):101-114.
    GREGORY MIKKELSON | : Animal and environmental ethics should converge on the following three value judgments: natural ecosystems generally involve more good than harm; predation in nature tends to yield positive net benefits; and, at least on a global scale, livestock farming is destroying more value than it is creating. But the ecocentric criteria of environmental ethics and the sentientist criteria of animal ethics may have divergent implications for capitalism’s main effect on the world: the collapse of wild nature (...)
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  33. From Paracelsus to Newton: Magic and the Making of Modern Science.Charles Webster - 1984 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 35 (2):191-193.
  34. Two Psychological Defenses of Hobbes’s Claim Against the “Fool”.Gregory J. Robson - 2015 - Hobbes Studies 28 (2):132-148.
    _ Source: _Volume 28, Issue 2, pp 132 - 148 A striking feature of Thomas Hobbes’s account of political obligation is his discussion of the Fool, who thinks it reasonable to adopt a policy of selective, self-interested covenant breaking. Surprisingly, scholars have paid little attention to the potential of a psychological defense of Hobbes’s controversial claim that the Fool behaves irrationally. In this paper, I first describe Hobbes’s account of the Fool and argue that the kind of Fool most worth (...)
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  35.  39
    Comparing levels of Machiavellianism of today's college students with college students of the 1960s.Robert L. Webster & Harry A. Harmon - 2002 - Teaching Business Ethics 6 (4):435-445.
  36. Development of Cultural Consciousness: From the Perspective of a Social Constructivist.Gregory M. Nixon - 2015 - International Journal of Education and Social Science 2 (10):119-136.
    In this condensed survey, I look to recent perspectives on evolution suggesting that cultural change likely alters the genome. Since theories of development are nested within assumptions about evolution (evo-devo), I next review some oft-cited developmental theories and other psychological theories of the 20th century to see if any match the emerging perspectives in evolutionary theory. I seek theories based neither in nature (genetics) nor nurture (the environment) but in the creative play of human communication responding to necessity. This survey (...)
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  37.  50
    The New (Old) Case for the Ethics of Business.Gregory Wolcott - 2015 - Journal of Business Ethics 132 (1):127-146.
    In this paper, I argue for the ethics of business based on the way that business activity may embody a vocation to partake in “the Good.” Following a Platonist framework for ethics and recent work on vocations by Robert M. Adams, I argue that understanding the ethics of vocations allows us to avoid the charges that business persons have to do something more for others—often couched in terms of social responsibility, sustainability, or consideration of stakeholders—in order to legitimize their careers (...)
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  38.  7
    Finishing our story: preparing for the end of life.Gregory L. Eastwood - 2019 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Death is the destiny we all share, and this will not change. Yet the way we die, which had remained the same for many generations, has changed drastically in a relatively short time for those in developed countries with access to healthcare. For generations, if people were lucky enough to reach old age, not having died in infancy or childhood, in childbirth, in war, or by accident, they would take to bed, surrounded by loved ones who cared for them, and (...)
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  39.  50
    Church Teaching as the ‘Language’ of Catholic Theology.William J. Hoye - 1987 - Heythrop Journal 28 (1):16-30.
    Book reviewed in this article: In Search of History: Historiography in the Ancient World and the Origins of Biblical History. By John Van Seters. The Hidden God: The Hiding of the Face of God in the Old Testament. By Samuel E. Balentine. Theodicy in the Old Testament. Edited by James L. Crenshaw. Ce Dieu censé aimer la Souffrance. By François Varone. Evil and Evolution, A Theodicy. By Richard W. Kropf. ‘Poet and Peasant’ and ‘Through Peasant Eyes’: A Literary‐Cultural Approach to (...)
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  40.  21
    The Poetics of Roman Jakobson.Gregory Jusdanis - 1984 - Semiotics:267-275.
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  41.  23
    A comparison of two methods of producing experimental extinction.Gregory A. Kimble & John W. Kendall Jr - 1953 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 45 (2):87.
  42.  34
    A new formula for behaviorism.Gregory A. Kimble - 1994 - Psychological Review 101 (2):254-258.
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  43.  22
    What are categories and concepts.Gregory Murphy - 2010 - In Denis Mareschal, Paul Quinn & Stephen E. G. Lea (eds.), The Making of Human Concepts. Oxford University Press. pp. 11--28.
  44.  29
    Samuel Hartlib and the Advancement of Learning.Charles Webster - 1971 - British Journal of Educational Studies 19 (1):95-96.
  45.  29
    What Makes Theology Theological?John Webster - 2015 - Journal of Analytic Theology 3:17-28.
    An understanding of the nature of theology comprises an account of its object, its cognitive principles, its ends and its practitioners. The object of theology is two-fold: principally God the Holy Trinity, and derivatively all things in relation to God. God is considered first absolutely, then relatively; all other things are treated relative to God, under the aspect of creatureliness. The objective cognitive principle of theology is God’s infinite knowledge, of which God communicates a fitting share to creatures; the subjective (...)
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  46. A Principles-based Model of Ethical Considerations in Military Decision Making.Gregory Reed, Mikel Petty, Nicholaos Jones, Anthony Morris, John Ballenger & Harry Delugach - 2016 - Journal of Defense Modeling and Simulation 13 (2):195-211.
    When comparing alternative courses of action, modern military decision makers often must consider both the military effectiveness and the ethical consequences of the available alternatives. The basis, design, calibration, and performance of a principles-based computational model of ethical considerations in military decision making are reported in this article. The relative ethical violation (REV) model comparatively evaluates alternative military actions based upon the degree to which they violate contextually relevant ethical principles. It is based on a set of specific ethical principles (...)
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  47.  29
    Henry More and Descartes: Some New Sources.C. Webster - 1969 - British Journal for the History of Science 4 (4):359-377.
    From the time of the publication of Henry More's first work, the collection of poems, ΨγΧΩΔΙΑ Platonica , Platonism provided the dominant theme in his philosophy. At Cambridge, More, his colleague, Ralph Cudworth, and their disciples, were responsible for a considerable revival of English Platonism, which became an important factor in late seventeenth-century natural philosophy. This movement is noted for its active and influential opposition to the mechanical world view, characterized in the writings of Hobbes and Descartes.
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  48. Cartesianism, Neo-Reidianism, and the A Priori: Reply to Pust.Gregory Stoutenburg - 2015 - Logos and Episteme 6 (2):231–235.
    Joel Pust has recently challenged the Thomas Reid-inspired argument against the reliability of the a priori defended by Alvin Plantinga, Nicholas Wolterstorff, William Alston, and Michael Bergmann. The Reidian argument alleges that the Cartesian insistence on the primacy of a priori rationality and subjective sensory experience as the foundations of epistemic justification is unwarranted because the same kind of global skeptical scenario that Cartesians recognize as challenging the legitimacy of perceptual beliefs about the external world also undermine the reliability of (...)
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  49.  55
    Dewey and Feminism: The Affective and Relationships in Dewey's Ethics.Gregory Fernando Pappas - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (2):78 - 95.
    Dewey provides an ethics that is committed to those aspects of experience that have been associated with the "feminine." In addition to an argument against the devaluation of the affective and of concrete relationships, we also find in Dewey's ethics a thoughtful appreciation of how and why these things are essential to our moral life. In this article I consider the importance of the affective and of relationships in Dewey's ethics and set out aspects of Dewey's ethics that might be (...)
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  50.  16
    The Recognition of Plant Sensitivity by English Botanists in the Seventeeth Century.Charles Webster - 1966 - Isis 57 (1):5-23.
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