Results for 'Dillon Struwig'

574 found
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  1.  28
    A “critical inquisition into the constitution of the intellectual faculties”: Kantian transcendental analysis and transcendental reflection in S.T. Coleridge's Logic.Dillon Struwig - 2023 - Intellectual History Review 33 (2):287-309.
    This essay examines Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Logic and its interpretation of Kant's “science of transcendental analysis” as a theory of the cognitive faculties and their “inherent forms” or “several functional powers”. I explain why Coleridge characterises transcendental analysis as an “investigation into the constitution and constituent forms” of the faculties, and consider the reasons behind his schematic division of such inquiry into “transcendental [ … ] Æsthetic, Logic, and Noetic”. I argue that Coleridge's claims about the forms, operations, and contents (...)
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  2.  22
    Traditions of Platonism: Essays in Honour of John Dillon.John M. Dillon - 1999 - Ashgate.
    The breadth and depth of the Platonic tradition, from Antiquity through to the early Middle Ages, is evidenced by the studies gathered in this volume, written by an international team of contributors in honour of John Dillon. The first papers, on Plato, include a discussion of the problem of evil and of the theme of love n the Symposium. There follows a section of the Middle-Platonists, dealing with how this tradition adapted and developed themes such as the world-soul as (...)
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  3. Merleau-Ponty's ontology.Martin C. Dillon - 1997 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    Originally published in 1988, M. C. Dillon's classic study of Merleau-Ponty is now available in a revised second edition containing a new preface and a new ...
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  4.  69
    Interview with Professor John M. Dillon.John M. Dillon & Suzanne Stern-Gillet - 2018 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 12 (2):197-202.
  5.  60
    The Heirs of Plato: A Study of the Old Academy.John M. Dillon - 2003 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
    The Heirs of Plato is the first full study of the various directions in philosophy taken by Plato's followers in the first seventy years after his death in 347 BC - the period generally known as 'The Old Academy', unjustly neglected by historians of philosophy. Lucid and accessible, John Dillon's book provides an introductory chapter on the school itself, and a summary of Plato's philosophical heritage, before looking at each of the school heads and other chief characters, exploring both (...)
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  6. Respect and Care: Toward Moral Integration.Robin S. Dillon - 1992 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 22 (1):105 - 132.
    In her provocative discussion of the challenge posed to the traditional impartialist, justice-focused conception of morality by the new-wave care perspective in ethics, Annette Baier calls for ‘a “marriage” of the old male and newly articulated female... moral wisdom,’ to produce a new ‘cooperative’ moral theory that ‘harmonize[s] justice and care.’ I want in this paper to play matchmaker, proposing one possible conjugal bonding: a union of two apparently dissimilar modes of what Nel Noddings calls ‘meeting the other morally,’ a (...)
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  7. Dignity, Character, and Self-Respect.Robin S. Dillon (ed.) - 1994 - Routledge.
    This is the first anthology to bring together a selection of the most important contemporary philosophical essays on the nature and moral significance of self-respect. Representing a diversity of views, the essays illustrate the complexity of self-respect and explore its connections to such topics as personhood, dignity, rights, character, autonomy, integrity, identity, shame, justice, oppression and empowerment. The book demonstrates that self-respect is a formidable concern which goes to the very heart of both moral theory and moral life. Contributors: Bernard (...)
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  8.  91
    Alcinous: The Handbook of Platonism.John Dillon (ed.) - 1993 - New York: Clarendon Press.
    John Dillon presents an English translation of Alcinous' Handbook of Platonism, accompanied by an introduction and a philosophical commentary which explain the ideas in the work and show their intellectual and historical context. The Handbook purports to be an introduction to the doctrines of Plato, but in fact gives us an excellent survey of Platonist thought in the second century AD.
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  9. [no title].M. C. Dillon (ed.) - 1991 - Suny Pr.
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  10. Self-respect: Moral, emotional, political.Robin S. Dillon - 1997 - Ethics 107 (2):226-249.
  11.  51
    The heirs of Plato: a study of the Old Academy, 347-274 B.C.John M. Dillon - 2003 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The Heirs of Plato is the first book exclusively devoted to an in-depth study of the various directions in philosophy taken by Plato's followers in the first seventy years or so following his death in 347 BC--the period generally known as 'The Old Academy'. Speusippus, Xenocrates, and Polemon, the three successive heads of the Academy in this period, though personally devoted to the memory of Plato, were independent philosophers in their own right, and felt free to develop his heritage in (...)
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  12. [no title].John Dillon - 1989 - Cambridge University Press.
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  13. Alcinous: The Handbook of Platonism.John Dillon - 1999 - Mind 108 (431):575-579.
    John Dillon presents an English translation of Alcinous' Handbook of Platonism, accompanied by an introduction and a philosophical commentary which explain the ideas in the work and show their intellectual and historical context. The Handbook purports to be an introduction to the doctrines of Plato, but in fact gives us an excellent survey of Platonist thought in the second century AD.
     
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  14. Self‐forgiveness and self‐respect.Robin S. Dillon - 2001 - Ethics 112 (1):53-83.
  15. How to Lose Your Self-Respect.Robin S. Dillon - 1992 - American Philosophical Quarterly 29 (2):125 - 139.
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  16. (1 other version)Respect.Robin S. Dillon - 2006 - In Donald M. Borchert, The Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2nd edition. vol. 3. Thomson Gale.
     
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  17.  41
    Potentialities.Brian Dillon, Giorgio Agamben & Daniel Heller-Roazen - 2001 - Substance 30 (1/2):254.
  18. Toward a Feminist Conception of Self-Respect.Robin S. Dillon - 1992 - Hypatia 7 (1):52-69.
    The concept of self - respect is often invoked in feminist theorizing. But both women's too-common experiences of struggling to have self - respect and the results of feminist critiques of related moral concepts suggest the need for feminist critique and reconceptualization of self - respect. I argue that a familiar conception of self - respect is masculinist, thus less accessible to women and less than conducive to liberation. Emancipatory theory and practice require a suitably feminist conception of self - (...)
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  19. Self-Respect and Self-Esteem.Robin S. Dillon - 2021 - In Hugh LaFollette, International Encyclopedia of Ethics. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
     
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  20.  7
    Biopolitics of Security: A Political Analytic of Finitude.Michael Dillon - 2015 - Routledge.
    This book is a volume of essays on the Biopolitics of Security in the 21st Century, by Professor Mick Dillon. It is at first of its kind in that no other study currently available covers the same field of research with the same degree of innovation. There is clearly growing attention to biopolitics in general, and the biopolitics of security in particular, beyond international relations and into the social sciences more generally. This volume will provide a genealogy of the (...)
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  21. Politics of Security: Towards a Political Phiosophy of Continental Thought.Michael Dillon - 1996 - Routledge.
    In this critique of security studies, with insights into the thinking of Heidegger, Foucault, Derrida, Levinas and Arendt, Michael Dillon contributes to the rethinking of some of the fundamentals of international politics developing what might be called a political philosophy of continental thought. Drawing on the work of Martin Heidegger, Politics of Security establishes the relationship between Heidegger's readical hermeneutical phenomenology and politics and the fundamental link between politics, the tragic and the ethical. It breaks new ground by providing (...)
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  22.  10
    The Roots of Platonism : The Origins and Chief Features of a Philosophical Tradition.John Dillon - 2018 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    How does a school of thought, in the area of philosophy, or indeed of religion, from roots that may be initially open-ended and largely informal, come to take on the features that later mark it out as distinctive, and even exclusive? That is the theme which is explored in this book in respect of the philosophical movement known as Platonism, stemming as it does from the essentially open-ended and informal atmosphere of Plato's Academy. John Dillon focuses on a number (...)
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  23. “Self-Respect, Arrogance, and Power: A Feminist Perspective,”.Robin S. Dillon - 2021 - In Richard Dean and Oliver Sensen, Respect for Persons.
    In many cultures arrogance is regarded as a serious vice and a cause of numerous social ills. Although its badness is typically thought to lie in its harmful consequences for other persons and things, I draw on Kant to argue that what makes it a vice is first and foremost the failure to respect oneself. But arrogance is not only a problem inside individuals. Drawing on feminist insights I argue that it is a systemic problem constructed in and reinforcing unjust (...)
     
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  24.  46
    The Biopolitical Imaginary of Species-being.Michael Dillon & Luis Lobo-Guerrero - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (1):1-23.
    This article revises Foucault's account of biopolitics in the light of the impact of the molecular and digital revolutions on `the politics of life itself'. The confluence of the molecular and digital revolutions informationalizes life, providing an account of what it is to be a living thing in terms of complex adaptive and continuously emergent, informationally constituted, systems. Also revisiting Foucault's The Order of Things and its interrogation of the modern analytics of finitude, the article argues that our contemporary politics (...)
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  25.  48
    Poststructuralism, Complexity and Poetics.Michael Dillon - 2000 - Theory, Culture and Society 17 (5):1-26.
    Poststructuralism and complexity are plural and diverse modes of thought that share a common subscription to the `anteriority of radical relationality'. They nonetheless subscribe to a different ethic of life because they address the anteriority of radical relationality in different ways. Complexity remains strategic in its bid to become a power-knowledge of the laws of becoming. It derives that strategic ethic from its scientific interest in the implicate order of non-linearity that is said to subvert Newtonian science. Poststructuralism is poetic. (...)
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  26.  84
    Iamblichi Chalcidensis in Platonis dialogos commentariorum fragmenta.John M. Dillon - 1973 - Leiden,: Brill. Edited by Iamblichus.
    The fragments of Iamblichus' commentaries on Plato's dialogues (Sophist, Phaedo, Phaedrus and Timaeus). Greek text with English translation and notes.
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  27. Iamblichi Chalcidensis In Platonis Dialogos Commentariorum fragmenta.John M. Dillon - 1973 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 35 (3):633-634.
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  28. Kant on Arrogance and Self-Respect.Robin S. Dillon - 2004 - In Cheshire Calhoun, Setting the moral compass: essays by women philosophers. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 191-216.
    Arrogance is traditionally regarded as among the worst of human vices. Kant’s discussion of one kind of arrogance as a violation of the categorical moral duty to respect other persons gives familiar support for this view. However, I argue that what Kant says about the ways in which another kind of arrogance is opposed to different kinds of self-respect reveals how profoundly vicious arrogance can be. As a failure of self-respect, arrogance is the Ur-Vice that corrupts moral agency and rational (...)
     
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  29. (1 other version)Apriority in Kant and Merleau-ponty.M. C. Dillon - 1987 - Kant Studien 78 (1-4):403-423.
    If the a priori is the proper subject matter of transcendental philosophy, then the problems of the a priori are also problems for transcendental philosophy. the idea that defines transcendental philosophy is the idea that there are stable general structures which are discernible in experience, provide the foundations of our knowledge of it, and collectively constitute an a priori which transcends experience and informs it. the a priori is traditionally conceived as a nexus of relations which is held to be (...)
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  30. The Heirs of Plato. A Study of the Old Academy.John Dillon - 2005 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 67 (3):568-570.
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  31. Arrogance, self-respect and personhood.Robin S. Dillon - 2007 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 14 (5-6):101-126.
    This essay aims to show that arrogance corrupts the very qualities that make persons persons. The corruption is subtle but profound, and the key to understanding it lies in understanding the connections between different kinds of arrogance, self-respect, respect for others and personhood. Making these connections clear is the second aim of this essay. It will build on Kant's claim that self-respect is central to living our human lives as persons and that arrogance is, at its core, the failure to (...)
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  32.  16
    Serial and strategic memory processes in goal-directed selective remembering.Dillon H. Murphy, Shawn T. Schwartz & Alan D. Castel - 2022 - Cognition 225 (C):105178.
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  33.  63
    The Eliza effect and its dangers: from demystification to gender critique.Sarah Dillon - 2020 - Journal for Cultural Research 24 (1):1-15.
    This essay provides a gender critique of the Eliza effect. It delineates the way in which the Eliza effect is operationalised in AI research even as it is ostensibly demystified, for example, in th...
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  34.  21
    How does the soul direct the body, after all? Traces of a dispute on mind-body relations in the Old Academy.John Dillon - 2009 - In Dorothea Frede & Burkhard Reis, Body and Soul in Ancient Philosophy. De Gruyter. pp. 349-358.
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  35. “Self-Respect and Humility in Kant and Hill,”.Robin S. Dillon - 2015 - In Mark Timmons and Robert Johnson, Reason, Value, and Respect: Kantian Themes from the Philosophy of Thomas E. Hill, Jr.,. pp. 42-69.
    For Kant and Hill, self-respect is a morally central and morally powerful concern. Both have also had some things to say in moral praise of humility and in condemnation of arrogance, a trait widely regarded as the vice to which the virtue of humility is the prevention and cure. Arrogance can easily be seen as a failure to respect both other people and oneself. It might be thought, however, that humility and self-respect are in tension, if not at odds with (...)
     
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  36. The ideas as thoughts of God.John Dillon & Daniel J. Tolan - 2020 - In Alexander J. B. Hampton & John Peter Kenney, Christian Platonism: A History. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  37.  94
    A Single-Stage Approach to Learning Phonological Categories: Insights From Inuktitut.Brian Dillon, Ewan Dunbar & William Idsardi - 2013 - Cognitive Science 37 (2):344-377.
    To acquire one’s native phonological system, language-specific phonological categories and relationships must be extracted from the input. The acquisition of the categories and relationships has each in its own right been the focus of intense research. However, it is remarkable that research on the acquisition of categories and the relations between them has proceeded, for the most part, independently of one another. We argue that this has led to the implicit view that phonological acquisition is a “two-stage” process: Phonetic categories (...)
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  38.  22
    The Association Between Selfishness, Animal-Oriented Empathy, Three Meat Reduction Motivations (Animal, Health, and Environment), Gender, and Meat Consumption.Angela Dillon-Murray, Aletha Ward & Jeffrey Soar - 2023 - Food Ethics 9 (1):1-21.
    This study examined how the level of meat consumption was related to two psychological factors, selfishness and animal-oriented empathy, and three motivations related to animal, health, and environmental issues. A sample of Australian adults between 18 and 80 (N = 497) was surveyed online via the Zoho Survey platform. Structural equation modelling was applied to the data, and the resulting models revealed that higher selfishness and lower empathy were associated with higher meat consumption for males but there was no association (...)
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  39.  74
    Merleau-Ponty and the reversibility thesis.M. C. Dillon - 1983 - Man and World 16 (4):365-388.
  40. When and why people think beliefs are “debunked” by scientific explanations of their origins.Dillon Plunkett, Lara Buchak & Tania Lombrozo - 2020 - Mind and Language 35 (1):3-28.
    How do scientific explanations for beliefs affect people's confidence that those beliefs are true? For example, do people think neuroscience-based explanations for belief in God support or challenge God's existence? In five experiments, we find that people tend to think explanations for beliefs corroborate those beliefs if the explanations invoke normally-functioning mechanisms, but not if they invoke abnormal functioning (where “normality” is a matter of proper functioning). This emerges across a variety of kinds of scientific explanations and beliefs (religious, moral, (...)
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  41.  52
    Damascius on the Ineffable.John Dillon - 1996 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 78 (2):120-129.
  42.  74
    The middle platonists: a study of platonism, 80 B.C. to A.D. 220.John M. Dillon - 1977 - London: Duckworth.
    'Middle Platonists' is a work that focuses on the period of intellectual activity which flourished from the time of the "dogmatist" Antiochus Aschalon (ca. 80 BC) to Ammonius Saccas (ca. 220 AD), the mysterious "teacher" of the great Plotinus.
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  43.  82
    The structure-sensitivity of memory access: evidence from Mandarin Chinese.Brian Dillon, Wing-Yee Chow, Matthew Wagers, Taomei Guo, Fengqin Liu & Colin Phillips - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
  44.  63
    Another Justice.Michael Dillon - 1999 - Political Theory 27 (2):155-175.
    But that from which things arise (genesis) also give rise to their passing away (phtora) according to what is necessary (kata to chreon); for things render justice (dike) and pay penalty (tisis) for their injustice (adikias), according to the ordinance of time. The Anaximander Fragment.
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  45. Respect: A Philosophical Perspective.Robin S. Dillon - 2007 - Gruppendynamik Und Organisationsberatung 2 (38):201-212.
     
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  46. Hiroshima day: A comment or two on a claim or two.John Dillon - 2012 - The Australian Humanist 108 (108):14.
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  47. Lest we forget but don't probe the details.John Dillon - 2014 - Australian Humanist, The 113:17.
    Dillon, John With the centenary of the Anzac landing at Gallipoli looming for 2015, it has occurred to me that there is an unfortunate deficiency in the customary expression of commemorative sentiments. My starting point for this consideration is my understanding that the paramount purpose of the commemorative events is to honour the wartime service of all military personnel and, in particular, those who died. Surely, all elements of commemorative events should embody and reflect this purpose?
     
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  48. The right to be equal.John Dillon - 2016 - Australian Humanist, The 124:15.
    Dillon, John Opponents of equal rights for homosexual people, particularly regarding same-sex marriage, predicate their opposition on ignorant misconceptions of human biology, and unsupportable reliance on religious precepts. Let's discuss this matter.
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  49. Tampering with the Timaeus: Ideological Emendations in Plato, with Special Reference to the Timaeus.John Dillon - 1989 - American Journal of Philology 110 (1):50-72.
  50. Critical Character Theory: Toward a Feminist Theory of ‘Vice’.Robin S. Dillon - 2012 - In Anita M. Superson & Sharon L. Crasnow, Out from the Shadows: Analytical Feminist Contributions to Traditional Philosophy. New York, US: Oxford University Press. pp. 83-114.
    Theorizing about human character to understand what it is to be a morally good person and how being morally good relates to acting rightly and living well has always been a central concern of moral philosophy. Traditional virtue theory, however, neglects two significant matters. The first is the sociopolitical dimensions of character: how character is shaped by, supports, and resists domination and subordination. While feminist ethics has begun to theorize virtue in relation to oppression, it shares with traditional virtue theory (...)
     
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