Results for 'Ian Goddard'

947 found
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  1. Two souls in one body.Ian Hacking - 1991 - Critical Inquiry 17 (4):838-67.
    Bernice R. broke down so badly, when she turned nineteen, and behaved so much like a retarded child that she was committed to the Ohio State Bureau of Juvenile Research. Its director, Henry Herbert Goddard, a psychologist of some distinction, recognized that she suffered from multiple personality disorder. She underwent a course of treatment lasting nearly five years, after which “the dissociation seems to be overcome and replaced by a complete synthesis. [She] is working regularly a half day and (...)
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  2.  35
    Guest editorial: a tribute to the Very Reverend Edward Shotter.Raanan Gillon, Kenneth Boyd, Margaret Brazier, Alastair Campbell, Andrew Goddard, Wing May Kong, Sylvia Limerick, Stephen Lock & Jonathan Montgomery - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (10):629-630.
    We wish to describe and acknowledge the exceptional contributions to medical ethics, both in the UK and internationally, made by Edward Shotter1 who died at home on 3 July 2019. He was founder of the London Medical Group2 3 and instigator of similar student-led medical ethics groups throughout the UK; founder of the Institute of Medical Ethics4 and founder of the Journal of Medical Ethics. Ted Shotter transformed the study of medical ethics in the UK in the interests of patients (...)
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  3. Relativistic persistence.Ian Gibson & Oliver Pooley - 2006 - Philosophical Perspectives 20 (1):157–198.
    We have two aims in this paper. The first is to provide the reader with a critical guide to recent work on relativity and persistence by Balashov, Gilmore and others. Much of this work investigates whether endurantism can be sustained in the context of relativity. Several arguments have been advanced that aim to show that it cannot. We find these unpersuasive, and will add our own criticisms to those we review. Our second aim, which complements the first, is to demarcate (...)
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  4. Doing Away With Scientism.Ian Kidd - 2014 - Philosophy Now 102:30-31.
    Scientism has none of the virtues of science or philosophy, so let's do away with it.
     
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  5.  58
    (1 other version)Epistemology as general systems theory: An approach to the design of complex decision-making experiments.Ian I. Mitroff & Francisco Sagasti - 1973 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 3 (1):117-134.
  6.  16
    Easy problems are sometimes hard.Ian P. Gent & Toby Walsh - 1994 - Artificial Intelligence 70 (1-2):335-345.
  7. Is Scientism Epistemically Vicious?Ian James Kidd - 2018 - In Jeroen de Ridder, Rik Peels & Rene van Woudenberg (eds.), Scientism: Prospects and Problems. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 222-249.
    This chapter offers a virtue epistemological framework for making sense of the common complaint that scientism is arrogant, dogmatic, or otherwise epistemically vicious. After characterising scientism in terms of stances, I argue that their components can include epistemically vicious dispositions, with the consequence that an agent who adopts such stances can be led to manifest epistemic vices. The main focus of the chapter is the vice of closed-mindedness, but I go on to consider the idea that arrogance and dogmatism are (...)
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  8. Basic factive perceptual reasons.Ian Schnee - 2016 - Philosophical Studies 173 (4):1103-1118.
    Many epistemologists have recently defended views on which all evidence is true or perceptual reasons are facts. On such views a common account of basic perceptual reasons is that the fact that one sees that p is one’s reason for believing that p. I argue that that account is wrong; rather, in the basic case the fact that p itself is one’s reason for believing that p. I show that my proposal is better motivated, solves a fundamental objection that the (...)
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  9.  20
    Music, attachment, and uncertainty: Music as communicative interaction.Ian Cross - 2021 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44.
    Both papers – to different degrees – underplay the interactive dimensions of music, and both would have benefited from integrating the concept of attachment into their treatments of social bonding. I further suggest that their treatment of music as a discrete domain of human experience and behaviour weakens their arguments concerning its functions in human evolution.
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  10. Attention to the passage of time.Ian Phillips - 2012 - Philosophical Perspectives 26 (1):277-308.
  11. Debate on unconscious perception.Ian Phillips & Ned Block - 2016 - In Bence Nanay (ed.), Current Controversies in Philosophy of Perception. New York: Routledge. pp. 165–192.
     
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  12.  96
    Technologies of the self: Habitus and capacities.Ian Burkitt - 2002 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 32 (2):219–237.
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  13. Can Illness Be Edifying?Ian James Kidd - 2012 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 55 (5):496-520.
    Abstract Havi Carel has recently argued that one can be ill and happy. An ill person can ?positively respond? to illness by cultivating ?adaptability? and ?creativity?. I propose that Carel's claim can be augmented by connecting it with virtue ethics. The positive responses which Carel describes are best understood as the cultivation of virtues, and this adds a significant moral aspect to coping with illness. I then defend this claim against two sets of objections and conclude that interpreting Carel's phenomenology (...)
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  14.  16
    Deep Institutional Innovation for Sustainability and Human Development.Ian Hughes, Edmond Byrne, Markus Glatz-Schmallegger, Clodagh Harris, William Hynes, Kieran Keohane & Brian ÓGallachóir - forthcoming - Tandf: World Futures:1-24.
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  15.  15
    (1 other version)No publisher's paradise.Ian Montagnes - 2004 - Logos 15 (3):147-153.
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  16.  29
    Expanding Critical Thinking into “Critical Being” Through Wonder and Wu‐Wei.Ian Normile - 2024 - Educational Theory 74 (1):41-65.
    Ian Normile begins this study from the premise that critical thinking is often conceptualized and practiced in problematically narrow and instrumentalized ways. Following Ronald Barnett, he suggests that the idea of critical being can help expand the theory and practice of critical thinking to better meet the needs of education and society. Essential to this effort is greater consideration of how critical thinking articulates with other aspects of being. Normile uses two examples of “non-critical” experiences that he argues can help (...)
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  17. Introductory essay.Ian Hacking - 1962 - In Thomas S. Kuhn (ed.), The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
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  18. Do Thought Experiments Have a Life of Their Own? Comments on James Brown, Nancy Nersessian and David Gooding.Ian Hacking - 1992 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1992:302 - 308.
    All three authors range themselves against John Norton's deductive analysis of thought experiments. Brown's insight, Nersessian's mental modelling, and Gooding's embodiment, arise, in each case, from a major all-purpose philosophical theory. None reaches down to the specific level of thought experiments, which are small, rare, and precious. I urge attention to Wittgenstein's remark that "the experimental character disappears when one looks at the process as a memorable picture." Thought experiments are not experiments. They are static. They become fixed, more like (...)
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  19. 8.1 The Dickensian Catholicism of G. K. Chesterton.Ian Ker - 2006 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 9 (2).
     
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  20.  19
    : A Race for the Future: Scientific Visions of Modern Russian Jewishness.Ian McGonigle - 2024 - Isis 115 (2):420-421.
  21.  65
    Fiction, Imagination, and Ethics.Ian Ravenscroft - 2012 - In Robyn Langdon & Catriona Mackenzie (eds.), Emotions, Imagination, and Moral Reasoning. Psychology Press. pp. 71.
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  22.  63
    The "Sceptical Crisis" Reconsidered: Galen, Rational Medicine and the Libertas Philosophandi.Ian Maclean - 2006 - Early Science and Medicine 11 (3):247-274.
    This paper reassesses the role of sceptical thinking in the emergence of the new science of the seventeenth century, in the context of the seminal but contestable History of Scepticism by Richard Popkin. It investigates the anti-sceptical essay by Galen De optimo modo docendi, which was retranslated in the sixteenth century by Erasmus and later published as an adjunct to the works of Sextus Empiricus, in order to highlight the currency of ideas about hyperbolic doubt, and links this to the (...)
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  23. Paul's Way of Knowing: Story, Experience, and the Spirit.Ian W. Scott - 2009
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  24.  34
    Group aspirations and democratic politics.Ian Shapiro - 1997 - Constellations 3 (3):315-325.
  25. Morální základy politiky.Ian Shapiro - 2004 - Filosoficky Casopis 52:330-332.
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  26.  16
    Edmund burke: Pre-revolutionary writings.Ian Dyck - 1996 - History of European Ideas 22 (2):168-170.
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  27.  12
    How computation changes research.Ian Foster - 2011 - In Thomas Bartscherer & Roderick Coover (eds.), Switching Codes: Thinking Through Digital Technology in the Humanities and the Arts. University of Chicago Press. pp. 15.
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  28. Philosophy of neuroscience.Ian Gold - 2003 - In L. Nadel (ed.), Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Nature Publishing Group.
  29.  97
    Negative theology, Derrida and the critique of presence: A poststructuralist reading of Meister Eckhart.Ian Almond - 1999 - Heythrop Journal 40 (2):150–165.
  30.  36
    Infinite Analysis.Ian Hacking - 1974 - Studia Leibnitiana 6 (1):126 - 130.
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  31.  8
    Literary Theory and the Academic Institution.Ian Maclean & David Robey - 1983 - Paragraph 1 (1):13-17.
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  32.  8
    The art of making choices.Ian Philip McGreal - 1953 - Dallas,: Southern Methodist University Press.
  33.  37
    Husserl’s Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity: Historical Interpretations and Contemporary Applications: Frode Kjosavik, Christian Beyer, and Christel Fricke . . Husserl’s phenomenology of intersubjectivity: Historical interpretations and contemporary applications. New York, NY: Routledge. Hard Cover . ISBN-10: 0815372973 & ISBN-13: 978-0815372974 Cost: USA $140.00.Ian Rory Owen - 2019 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 19 (1):67-71.
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  34.  7
    Christian empiricism.Ian T. Ramsey - 1974 - London,: Sheldon Press. Edited by Jerry H. Gill.
  35.  2
    Religion and science: conflict and synthesis, some philosophical reflections.Ian Thomas Ramsey - 1964 - London,: S.P.C.K..
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  36.  10
    Angeliki Tzanetou, City of Suppliants: Tragedy and the Athenian Empire.Ian Ruffell - 2015 - Klio 97 (2):751-756.
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  37.  16
    C. W. Marshall – George Kovacs , No Laughing Matter. Studies in Athenian Comedy, London . 2012.Ian A. Ruffell - 2016 - Klio 98 (2):751-754.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Klio Jahrgang: 98 Heft: 2 Seiten: 751-754.
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  38.  28
    Dean Rickles, The Ashgate Companion to Contemporary Philosophy of Physics Reviewed by.Ian James Kidd - 2010 - Philosophy in Review 30 (3):212-214.
  39. Apollo in ivy: the tragic Paean.Ian Rutherford - forthcoming - Arion 3 (1).
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  40.  44
    Strengthened paradoxes.Laurence Goldstein & Leonard Goddard - 1980 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 58 (3):211 – 221.
  41. Evolution, ethics, and the metaphysical society, 1869-1875.Ian Hesketh - 2019 - In Catherine Marshall, Bernard V. Lightman & Richard England (eds.), The Metaphysical Society (1869-1880): intellectual life in mid-Victorian England. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
     
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  42. Can a moral society be democratic?Ian Hinckfuss - 1995 - Dialogue and Universalism 5 (5-6):97.
     
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  43.  6
    The Cambridge Companion to John Henry Newman.Ian Ker & Terrence Merrigan (eds.) - 2009 - Cambridge University Press.
    John Henry Newman was a major figure in nineteenth-century religious history. He was one of the major protagonists of the Oxford or Tractarian Movement within the Church of England whose influence continues to be felt within Anglicanism. A high-profile convert to Catholicism, he was an important commentator on Vatican I and is often called 'the Father' of the Second Vatican Council. Newman's thinking highlights and anticipates the central themes of modern theology including hermeneutics, the importance of historical-critical research, the relationship (...)
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  44.  15
    The Crossing of the Visible, by Jean-Luc Marion.Ian Leask - 2007 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 38 (3):331-333.
  45.  4
    Democratic Decline and Democratic Renewal: Political Change in Britain, Australia and New Zealand.Ian Marsh & Raymond Miller - 2012 - Cambridge University Press.
    The story of liberal democracy over the last half century has been a triumphant one in many ways, with the number of democracies increasing from a minority of states to a significant majority. Yet substantial problems afflict democratic states, and while the number of democratic countries has expanded, democratic practice has contracted. This book introduces a novel framework for evaluating the rise and decline of democratic governance. Examining three mature democratic countries – Britain, Australia and New Zealand – the authors (...)
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  46.  26
    Hume revisited: A problem with the free will defence.Ian Markham - 1991 - Modern Theology 7 (3):281-290.
  47.  20
    On the origin of the EEG alpha rhythm.Ian Oswald - 1961 - Psychological Review 68 (5):360-362.
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  48. Introduction: The Naturalistic Attitude Cannot Grasp Meaning for Consciousness.Ian Rory Owen - 2015 - In Phenomenology in Action in Psychotherapy: On Pure Psychology and its Applications in Psychotherapy and Mental Health Care. Cham: Imprint: Springer.
     
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  49. On Being Unable to Control Variables in Intersubjectivity.Ian Rory Owen - 2015 - In Phenomenology in Action in Psychotherapy: On Pure Psychology and its Applications in Psychotherapy and Mental Health Care. Cham: Imprint: Springer.
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  50.  16
    Genealogies of Difference.Ian Parker - 2007 - Contemporary Political Theory 6 (1):112-113.
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