Results for 'Feeley-Harnik Gillian'

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  1. Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 125, 2003 Lectures.Feeley-Harnik Gillian - 2004
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  2.  8
    The geography of descent.Gillian Feeley-Harnik - 2004 - In Feeley-Harnik Gillian, Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 125, 2003 Lectures. pp. 311-364.
  3. Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 125, 2003 Lectures.P. Marshall (ed.) - 2004 - British Academy.
    Fergus Kelly: Thinking in Threes: The Triad in Early Irish Literature Brian Pullan: Charity and Usury: Jewish and Christian Lending in Renaissance and Early Modern Italy Noel Malcolm: The Crescent and the City of the Sun: Islam and the Renaissance Utopia of Tommaso Campanella H. R. Woudhuysen: The Foundations of Shakespeare's Text J. G. A. Pocock: The Re-Description of Enlightenment Andrew Hadfield: Michael Drayton and the Burden of History Eric Foner: Abraham Lincoln: The Great Emancipator? Gillian Beer: Revenants and (...)
     
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  4.  48
    Fundamentals of forking.Victor Harnik & Leo Harrington - 1984 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 26 (3):245-286.
  5.  68
    Lambek's categorical proof theory and läuchli's abstract realizability.Victor Harnik & Michael Makkai - 1992 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 57 (1):200-230.
  6.  58
    Provably total functions of intuitionistic bounded arithmetic.Victor Harnik - 1992 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 57 (2):466-477.
  7.  21
    Undoing Privilege: Unearned Advantage and Systematic Injustice in an Unequal World (Book Review).Caitlin Feeley - 2023 - Studies in Social Justice 17 (3):549-552.
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  8.  87
    A solution to the "voting dilemma" in modern democratic theory.Malcolm M. Feeley - 1974 - Ethics 84 (3):235-242.
  9. Devolving standards : California's structural failures in response to prisoner litigation.Malcolm M. Feeley & Van Swearingen - 2018 - In Thomas Frederick Burke & Jeb Barnes, Varieties of legal order: the politics of adversarial and bureaucratic legalism. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  10. The work of B.F. Skinner : effective practices within early childhood settings.Kathleen M. Feeley - 2022 - In Lynn E. Cohen & Sandra Waite-Stupiansky, Theories of early childhood education: developmental, behaviorist, and critical. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  11.  39
    Applications of vaught sentences and the covering theorem.Victor Harnik & Michael Makkai - 1976 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 41 (1):171-187.
    We use a fundamental theorem of Vaught, called the covering theorem in [V] (cf. theorem 0.1 below) as well as a generalization of it (cf. Theorem $0.1^\ast$ below) to derive several known and a few new results related to the logic $L_{\omega_1\omega}$. Among others, we prove that if every countable model in a $PC_{\omega_1\omega}$ class has only countably many automorphisms, then the class has either $\leq\aleph_0$ or exactly $2^{\aleph_0}$ nonisomorphic countable members (cf. Theorem $4.3^\ast$) and that the class of countable (...)
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  12.  51
    Approximation theorems and model theoretic forcing.Victor Harnik - 1976 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 41 (1):59-72.
  13.  56
    Ω1-like recursively saturated models of Presburger's arithmetic.Victor Harnik - 1986 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (2):421-429.
  14.  16
    Stability theory and set existence axioms.Victor Harnik - 1985 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 50 (1):123-137.
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  15.  32
    Set existence axioms for general (not necessarily countable) stability theory.Victor Harnik - 1987 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 34 (3):231-243.
  16.  29
    Refinements of Vaught's normal from theorem.Victor Harnik - 1979 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 44 (3):289-306.
  17.  47
    Game sentences, recursive saturation and definability.Victor Harnik - 1980 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 45 (1):35-46.
  18.  3
    Recht und rechtsdienst.Manuel Harnik - 1937 - Wien und Leipzig,: Verlag dr. M. Breitenstein & comp..
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  19.  28
    Medieval and Renaissance Studies; Proceedings of the Southeastern Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Summer 1965 edited by O.B, Hardison, Jr. Chapel Hill, N.C., University of North Carolina Press, 1966. 187 p. [REVIEW]James Feeley - 1967 - Moreana 4 (2):35-36.
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  20.  87
    David W. Kueker. Löwenheim–Skolem and interpolation theorems in infinitary languages. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 78 , pp. 211–215. - K. Jon Barwise. Mostowski's collapsing function and the closed unbounded filter. Fundamenta mathematicae, vol. 82 no. 2 , pp. 95–103. - David W. Kueker. Countable approximations and Löwenheim–Skolem theorems. Annals of mathematical logic, vol. 11 , pp. 57–103. [REVIEW]Victor Harnik - 1986 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (1):232-234.
  21.  23
    The Effect of Feedback on Attention Allocation in Category Learning: An Eye Tracking Study.Yael Arbel, Emily Feeley & Xinyi He - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  22.  32
    Clarifications on mass media campaigns promoting organ donation: a response to Rady, McGregor, & Verheijde (2012).Susan E. Morgan & Thomas Hugh Feeley - 2013 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 16 (4):865-868.
    The current paper provides readers some clarifications on the nature and goals of mass media campaigns designed to promote organ donation. These clarifications were necessitated by an earlier essay by Rady et al. (Med Health Care Philos 15:229–241, 2012) who present erroneous claims that media promotion campaigns in this health context represent propaganda that seek to misrepresent the transplantation process. Information is also provided on the nature and relative power of media campaigns in organ donation promotion.
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  23.  41
    H. Jerome Keisler. Good ideals in fields of sets. Annals of mathematics, vol. 79 , pp. 338–359. - H. Jerome Keisler. Ideals with prescribed degree of goodness. Annals of mathematics vol. 81 , pp. 112–116. [REVIEW]Victor Harnik - 1974 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 39 (2):332-333.
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  24.  26
    Shelah S.. Classification theory and the number of nonisomorphic models. Studies in logic and the foundations of mathematics, vol. 92. North-Holland Publishing Company, Amsterdam, New York, and Oxford, 1978, xvi + 544 pp. [REVIEW]Victor Harnik - 1982 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 47 (3):694-696.
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  25. Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account.Gillian Brock - 2009 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press. Edited by Catriona McKinnon.
    Gillian Brock develops a model of global justice that takes seriously the moral equality of all human beings notwithstanding their legitimate diverse identifications and affiliations. She addresses concerns about implementing global justice, showing how we can move from theory to feasible public policy that makes progress toward global justice.
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  26. Truth in virtue of meaning.Gillian Russell - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The analytic/synthetic distinction looks simple. It is a distinction between two different kinds of sentence. Synthetic sentences are true in part because of the way the world is, and in part because of what they mean. Analytic sentences - like all bachelors are unmarried and triangles have three sides - are different. They are true in virtue of meaning, so no matter what the world is like, as long as the sentence means what it does, it will be true. -/- (...)
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  27.  49
    Debating Brain Drain: May Governments Restrict Emigration?Gillian Brock & Michael I. Blake - 2014 - Oup Usa.
    Many of the most skilled and educated citizens of developing countries choose to emigrate. How may those societies respond to these facts? May they ever legitimately prevent the emigration of their citizens? Gillian Brock and Michael Blake debate these questions, and offer distinct arguments about the morality of emigration.
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  28.  18
    Justice for People on the Move: Migration in Challenging Times.Gillian Brock - 2020 - Cambridge University Press.
    By executive order, the US adopted an immigration policy that looks remarkably similar to a Muslim ban, and threatened to deport long-settled residents, such as the so-called Dreamers. Our defunct refugee system has not dealt adequately with increased refugee flows, forcing desperate people to undertake increasingly risky measures in efforts to reach safe havens. Meanwhile increased migration flows over recent years appear to have contributed to a rise in right-wing populism, apparently driving phenomena such as Brexit and Trumpism. In this (...)
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  29. Logic isn’t normative.Gillian Russell - 2020 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 63 (3-4):371-388.
    Some writers object to logical pluralism on the grounds that logic is normative. The rough idea is that the relation of logical consequence has consequences for what we ought to think and h...
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  30. Logical Nihilism: Could There Be No Logic?Gillian Russell - 2018 - Philosophical Issues 28 (1):308-324.
    Logical monists and pluralists disagree about how many correct logics there are; the monists say there is just one, the pluralists that there are more. Could it turn out that both are wrong, and that there is no logic at all?
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  31. Islamic ethics and the implications for business.Gillian Rice - 1999 - Journal of Business Ethics 18 (4):345 - 358.
    As global business operations expand, managers need more knowledge of foreign cultures, in particular, information on the ethics of doing business across borders. The purpose of this paper is twofold: to share the Islamic perspective on business ethics, little known in the west, which may stimulate further thinking and debate on the relationships between ethics and business, and to provide some knowledge of Islamic philosophy in order to help managers do business in Muslim cultures. The case of Egypt illustrates some (...)
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  32.  61
    Mourning becomes the law: philosophy and representation.Gillian Rose - 1996 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Mourning Becomes the Law, Gillian Rose takes us beyond the impasse of post-modernism or 'despairing rationalism withour reason'. Arguing that the post-modern search for a 'new ethics' and ironic philosophy are incoherent, she breathes new life into the debates concerning power and domination, transcendence and eternity. Mourning Becomes the Law is the philosophical counterpart to Gillian Rose's highly acclaimed memoir Love's Work. She extends similar clarity and insight to discussions of architecture, cinema, painting and poetry, through which (...)
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  33.  34
    Barriers to Entailment: Hume's Law and other limits on logical consequence.Gillian K. Russell - 2023 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    A barrier to entailment exists if you can't get conclusions of a certain kind from premises of another. One of the most famous barriers in philosophy is Hume's Law, which says that you can't get normative conclusions from descriptive premises, or in slogan form: you can't get an ought from an is. This barrier is highly controversial, and many famous counterexamples were proposed in the last century. But there are other barriers which function almost as philosophical platitudes: no Universal conclusions (...)
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  34. The Justification of the Basic Laws of Logic.Gillian Russell - 2015 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 44 (6):793-803.
    Take a correct sequent of formal logic, perhaps a simple logical truth, like the law of excluded middle, or something with premises, like disjunctive syllogism, but basically a claim of the form \.Γ can be empty. If you don’t like my examples, feel free to choose your own, everything I have to say should apply to those as well. Such a sequent attributes the properties of logical truth or logical consequence to a schematic sentence or argument. This paper aims to (...)
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  35. Philosophy of Science: A New Introduction.Gillian Barker & Philip Kitcher - 2013 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Offering an engaging and accessible portrait of the current state of the field, Philosophy of Science: A New Introduction shows students how to think philosophically about science and why it is both essential and fascinating to do so. Gillian Barker and Philip Kitcher reconsider the core questions in philosophy of science in light of the multitude of changes that have taken place in the decades since the publication of C.G. Hempel's classic work, Philosophy of Natural Science —both in the (...)
  36.  48
    Dialectic of nihilism: post-structuralism and law.Gillian Rose - 1984 - New York, NY: Blackwell.
    This book fundamentally challenges the radical credentials of post-structuralism. Though Derrida, Foucault and Deleuze claim to have 'deconstructed' metaphysics, their work has much in common with previous attempts to 'end' the metaphysical tradition, from Kant to Nietzshe and Heidegger, and by sociology in general. Gillian Rose shows that this anti-metaphysical writing always appears in historically specific jurisprudential terms, which themselves found and recapitulate metaphysical categories. She reconsiders post-structuralism in this light and assesses the relationship between deconstruction and the earlier (...)
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  37. Deviance and Vice: Strength as a Theoretical Virtue in the Epistemology of Logic.Gillian Russell - 2018 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 99 (3):548-563.
    This paper is about the putative theoretical virtue of strength, as it might be used in abductive arguments to the correct logic in the epistemology of logic. It argues for three theses. The first is that the well-defined property of logical strength is neither a virtue nor a vice, so that logically weaker theories are not—all other things being equal—worse or better theories than logically stronger ones. The second thesis is that logical strength does not entail the looser characteristic of (...)
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  38. How to Prove Hume’s Law.Gillian Russell - 2021 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 51 (3):603-632.
    This paper proves a precisification of Hume’s Law—the thesis that one cannot get an ought from an is—as an instance of a more general theorem which establishes several other philosophically interesting, though less controversial, barriers to logical consequence.
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  39. Fancy loose talk about knowledge.Gillian Kay Russell - 2022 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 65 (7):789-820.
    ABSTRACT This paper argues for a version of sceptical invariantism about knowledge on which the acceptability of knowledge-attributing sentences varies with the context of assessment.
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  40. Metaphysical analyticity and the epistemology of logic.Gillian K. Russell - 2013 - Philosophical Studies 171 (1):161-175.
    Recent work on analyticity distinguishes two kinds, metaphysical and epistemic. This paper argues that the distinction allows for a new view in the philosophy of logic according to which the claims of logic are metaphysically analytic and have distinctive modal profiles, even though their epistemology is holist and in many ways rather Quinean. It is argued that such a view combines some of the more attractive aspects of the Carnapian and Quinean approaches to logic, whilst avoiding some famous problems.
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  41.  16
    Hegel contra sociology.Gillian Rose - 1981 - [Atlantic Highlands] N.J.: Humanities Press.
    A radical new assessment of Hegel revealing the problems and limitations of sociological method.
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  42. Logical Pluralism.Gillian Russell - 2012 - In Ed Zalta, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, CA: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  43.  85
    Logical Consequence (Slight Return).Gillian Russell - 2024 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 98 (1):233-254.
    In this paper I ask what logical consequence is, and give an answer that is somewhat different from the usual ones. It isn’t clear why anyone would need a new approach to logical consequence, so I begin by explaining the work that I need the answer to do and why the standard conceptions aren’t adequate. Then I articulate a replacement view which is.
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  44.  41
    Hemispheric differences in serial versus parallel processing.Gillian Cohen - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 97 (3):349.
  45. One true logic?Gillian Russell - 2008 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 37 (6):593 - 611.
    This is a paper about the constituents of arguments. It argues that several different kinds of truth-bearer may be taken to compose arguments, but that none of the obvious candidates—sentences, propositions, sentence/truth-value pairs etc.—make sense of logic as it is actually practiced. The paper goes on to argue that by answering the question in different ways, we can generate different logics, thus ensuring a kind of logical pluralism that is different from that of J. Beall and Greg Restall.
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  46.  15
    Justice for People on the Move. A Précis.Gillian Brock - forthcoming - Philosophy and Public Issues - Filosofia E Questioni Pubbliche.
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  47.  56
    The behavioural constellation of deprivation: Causes and consequences.Gillian V. Pepper & Daniel Nettle - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40:1-72.
    Socioeconomic differences in behaviour are pervasive and well documented, but their causes are not yet well understood. Here, we make the case that a cluster of behaviours is associated with lower socioeconomic status, which we call “the behavioural constellation of deprivation.” We propose that the relatively limited control associated with lower SES curtails the extent to which people can expect to realise deferred rewards, leading to more present-oriented behaviour in a range of domains. We illustrate this idea using the specific (...)
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  48.  30
    The broken middle: out of our ancient society.Gillian Rose - 1992 - Cambridge, USA: Blackwell.
    The Broken Middle offers a startlingly original rethinking of the modern philosophical tradition and fundamentally rejects the anti-philosophy and anti-theory of post-modernity. Extending across the disciplines from philosophy to theology, Judaica, law, social and political theory, literary criticism, feminism and architecture, this book stakes itself on a renewed potential for sustained critique. Against the grain of much contemporary thought, this work of criticism offers the reader a way beyond the spurious alternatives of "totalization" or acknowledgement of the "other". The Broken (...)
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  49.  20
    Necessary Goods: Our Responsibilities to Meet Others Needs.Gillian Brock - 1998 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Do any needs defensibly make claims on anyone? If so, which needs and whose needs can defensibly do this? What are the grounds for our responsibilities to meet others' needs, when we have such responsibilities? The distinguished contributors to this volume consider these questions as they evaluate the moral force of needs. They approach questions of obligation and moral importance from a variety of different theoretical perspectives, including contractarian, Kantian, Aristotelian, rights-based, egalitarian, liberal, and libertarian perspectives.
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  50.  44
    The I in logic.Gillian Russell - forthcoming - Theoria.
    This paper argues for the significance of Kaplan's logic LD in two ways: first, by looking at how logic got along before we had LD, and second, by using it to bring out the similarity between David Hume's thesis that one cannot deduce claims about the future on the basis of premises only about the past, and the so‐called "essentiality" of the indexical.
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