Results for 'James A. Robinson'

966 found
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  1.  10
    Eugene O'Neill and Oriental Thought: A Divided Vision.James A. Robinson - 1982
    "Off and on, of late years, I have studied the history and development of all religions with immense interest as being for me, at least, the most illuminating 'case histories' of the inner life of man."--Eugene O'Neill writing to M. C. Sparrow, 1929 While it is commonly accepted that Eu­gene O'Neill studied Oriental mystical religions and that this study may be detected in some of his less successful experimental plays (Lazarus Laughed, The Fountain, Marco Millions) there has not been an (...)
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  2. The Centrality of Belief and Reflection in Knobe-Effect Cases.Mark Alfano, James R. Beebe & Brian Robinson - 2012 - The Monist 95 (2):264-289.
    Recent work in experimental philosophy has shown that people are more likely to attribute intentionality, knowledge, and other psychological properties to someone who causes a bad side effect than to someone who causes a good one. We argue that all of these asymmetries can be explained in terms of a single underlying asymmetry involving belief attribution because the belief that one’s action would result in a certain side effect is a necessary component of each of the psychological attitudes in question. (...)
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  3.  38
    Informed consent for the study of retained tissues from postmortem examination following sudden infant death.J. G. Elliot, D. L. Ford, J. F. Beard, K. N. Fitzgerald, P. J. Robinson & A. L. James - 2008 - Journal of Medical Ethics 34 (10):742-746.
    Objective: To develop an approach for seeking informed consent to examine tissues retained from a previous study of sudden infant death syndrome as part of a study on asthma, and to document responses and participation rate.Design: Pilot open-ended approach to 10 volunteer SIDS parents, followed by staged approach to seek consent from the target SIDS families for the asthma study.Participants: Parents of SIDS infants known to SIDS and Kids Victoria and parents of SIDS infants from the 1991–2 SIDS in Victoria (...)
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  4.  30
    A consideration of policy implications: a panel discussion.Vicki Croke, Colin McGinn, Joy Mench, J. Anthony Movshon, John G. Robinson, James A. Serpell, Kenneth J. Shapiro & Nicholas Wade - forthcoming - Social Research: An International Quarterly.
  5. Inventing the Scientific Revolution.James A. Secord - 2023 - Isis 114 (1):50-76.
    As a master narrative for understanding the emergence of the modern world, the concept of a seventeenth-century scientific revolution has been central to the history of science. It is generally believed that this key analytical framework was created in Europe and became widely used for the first time during the Cold War through the writings of Herbert Butterfield and Alexander Koyré. This view, however, is mistaken. The scientific revolution is largely a product of debates about social reconstruction in the United (...)
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  6.  25
    Directed forgetting and feedback in written instruction.James M. Webb, William A. Stock, Raymond W. Kulhavy, Robert C. Haygood, D. N. D. Zulu & Daniel H. Robinson - 1990 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 28 (6):543-546.
  7.  27
    Innovation in a crisis: rethinking conferences and scholarship in a pandemic and climate emergency.Sam Robinson, Megan Baumhammer, Lea Beiermann, Daniel Belteki, Amy C. Chambers, Kelcey Gibbons, Edward Guimont, Kathryn Heffner, Emma-Louise Hill, Jemma Houghton, Daniella Mccahey, Sarah Qidwai, Charlotte Sleigh, Nicola Sugden & James Sumner - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Science 53 (4):575-590.
    It is a cliché of self-help advice that there are no problems, only opportunities. The rationale and actions of the BSHS in creating its Global Digital History of Science Festival may be a rare genuine confirmation of this mantra. The global COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 meant that the society's usual annual conference – like everyone else's – had to be cancelled. Once the society decided to go digital, we had a hundred days to organize and deliver our first online festival. (...)
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  8.  14
    Coda.Elizabeth A. Robinson, Juliet Floyd & James E. Katz - 2015 - In J. E. Katz & J. Floyd (eds.), Philosophy of Emerging Media: Understanding, Appreciation and Application. New York, US: Oxford University Press.
    A revisiting and distillation of themes, questions, and results of the book’s chapters, with a description of possible alternative pathways through the volume. Open problems and suggestions for further research are also offered, laying out a vision of the field as a whole, and calling for future research, especially into topics relating to qualitative vs. quantitative uses of big data, the concept of “media”, issues in the history of philosophy and digital humanities, normative questions concerning social justice, race, gender, and (...)
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  9. A Critical Text of the Sayings Gospel Q.James M. Robinson - 1992 - Revue D'Histoire Et de Philosophie Religieuses 72 (1):15-22.
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  10.  53
    ls Whitehead’s ‘Actual Entity’ a Contradiction in Terms?Robinson B. James - 1972 - Process Studies 2 (2):112-125.
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  11.  60
    New books. [REVIEW]James Ward Smith, A. C. Ewing, Richard Robinson, Peter Stubbs & J. O. Wisdom - 1947 - Mind 56 (224):393-405.
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  12.  9
    A Handbook of Greek Archaeology.David M. Robinson, Harold North Fowler & James Rignall Wheeler - 1910 - American Journal of Philology 31 (3):331.
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  13.  26
    Secrets of Qohelet: Toward an Exegetical History of a Biblical Text during the Middle Ages.James Theodore Robinson - 2022 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 30 (1):90-113.
    During the middle ages and early modern period, dozens of Jewish commentaries were written on Qohelet, in Arabic and Hebrew, and representing a very full range of methods and approaches, from Karaite to Rabbanite, grammatical to pietistic, Neoplatonic, Aristotelian, and anti-Aristotelian, even kabbalistic. The purpose of this article – dedicated to the memory of Kalman Bland – is to present some experiments related to the telling of the history of medieval Jewish exegesis of Qohelet in hermeneutical context.
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  14. Maimonides, Samuel Ibn Tibbon, and the construction of a Jewish tradition of philosophy.James T. Robinson - 2007 - In Jay Michael Harris (ed.), Maimonides after 800 years: essays on Maimonides and his influence. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  15.  16
    1. Moreh ha-nevukhim: The First Hebrew Translation of the Guide of the Perplexed.James T. Robinson - 2019 - In Josef Stern, James T. Robinson & Yonathan Shemesh (eds.), Maimonides' "Guide of the Perplexed" in Translation: A History From the Thirteenth Century to the Twentieth. London: University of Chicago Press. pp. 35-54.
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  16.  16
    The Dismantling and Reassembling of the Categories of New Testament Scholarship.James M. Robinson - 1971 - Interpretation 25 (1):63-77.
    New Testament scholarship faces a crisis in the categories with which it perceives its material. A new set of concepts for descriptive analysis which are more appropriate to the dynamic nature of the texts must be developed.
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  17. Reification and hegemony : the politics of culture in the writings of Georg Lukács and Antonio Gramsci, 1918-1938.James Robinson - unknown
    This study is a comparison of the development of the theories of reification and hegemony in the writings and political activities of Georg Lukacs and Antonio Gramsci during the years from 1918 to 1938. In demonstrating that reification and hegemony were formulated in response to the unsuccessful revolutionary movements in Hungary and Italy of 1919-1920, it becomes evident that the respective theories of Lukacs and Gramsci were meant to constitute critiques of bourgeois cultural domination. Thus, their problematic extends to analyses (...)
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  18.  32
    The Mediœval Mind: A History of the Development of Thought and Emotion in the Middle Ages. [REVIEW]James Harvey Robinson - 1912 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 9 (3):76-79.
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  19. The Concept of Order in Plato's Philosophy.James V. Robinson - 1987 - Dissertation, University of Waterloo (Canada)
    For Plato order was a normative concept and a metaconcept with regard to the soul, the city-state, the universe and the Forms. In this thesis I use Plato's conception of order as a perspective from which to study these four things. By so doing, I not only establish the role of order in Plato's thought, but present certain aspects of his thought in a new light and solve some old problems in a new way.
     
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  20. Edward A. Robinson 1910-1972.James H. Reid - 1972 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 65 (7):213.
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  21.  11
    Philosophical origins of the economic valuation of life.James C. Robinson - unknown
    Cost-benefit analysis--applying economic reasoning to increasingly complex health policy decisions--continues to be a source of vehement disagreement among its practitioners. re than merely technical issues in measurement and accounting are involved; basic social values embedded in different intellectual traditions are coming into conflict. The "human capital" and "willingness-to-pay" approaches can each aid policy formulation, but neither can substitute for open political process.
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  22.  50
    Pain, Impairment, and Disability in the AMA Guides.James P. Robinson, Dennis C. Turk & John D. Loeser - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (2):315-326.
    Back injuries have a bad reputation. The workman looks upon them with apprehension, the insurance company with doubt, the medical examiner with suspicion, the lawyer with uncertainty. The medical examiner is faced with the difficulty of estimating the true value of the subjective symptoms in the comparative absence of physical signs. His suspicion is born of the frequent disparity between these two. This prophetic statement made almost 100 years ago highlights an ongoing problem - how people who are incapacitated by (...)
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  23.  30
    Maimonides' "Guide of the Perplexed" in Translation: A History From the Thirteenth Century to the Twentieth.Josef Stern, James T. Robinson & Yonathan Shemesh (eds.) - 2019 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Moses Maimonides’s Guide of the Perplexed is the greatest philosophical text in the history of Jewish thought and a major work of the Middle Ages. For almost all of its history, however, the Guide has been read and commented upon in translation—in Hebrew, Latin, Spanish, French, English, and other modern languages—rather than in its original Judeo-Arabic. This volume is the first to tell the story of the translations and translators of Maimonides’ Guide and its impact in translation on philosophy from (...)
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  24.  32
    Philosophical origins of the social rate of discount in cost-benefit analysis.James C. Robinson - unknown
    The social rate of discount--that is, the way decision makers today evaluate future consequences of collective activity--raises difficult issues of intergenerational justice. When benefits are discounted at the present rate the United States government requires, serious efforts to promote public health over the long term will fail cost-benefit tests. No consensus exists among theorists to establish fair rates; philosophers support discounting with economic arguments that economists reject, while economists no less paradoxically support the concept using philosophical arguments that philosophers disavow. (...)
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  25.  28
    The cultures of Maimonideanism: new approaches to the history of Jewish thought.James T. Robinson (ed.) - 2009 - Boston: Brill.
    Drawing on the tools of social, cultural and intellectual history, and using Maimonideanism as the interpretative lens, this volume offers a fresh approach to ...
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  26.  73
    The Nature of the Soul in Republic X.James V. Robinson - 1991 - Journal of Philosophical Research 16:213-222.
    There has been much discussion as to what, in Republic X, Plato took to be the true nature of the soul. My justification for extending the discussion is the continued popularity of the view that the true soul is incomposite. What I add to the discussion is a different perspective, one which sheds new light on the problem. Commentators have paid little or no attention to the role that order plays in this issue. By giving order its due, it becomes (...)
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  27.  57
    Bob Solomon and William James: A Rapprochement.Jenefer M. Robinson - 2010 - Emotion Review 2 (1):53-60.
    Bob Solomon used to inveigh against William James’ theory of emotions, but he eventually arrived at a rapprochement with James and James’s recent successors. In particular, James suggested that emotions are initiated by the “automatic, instinctive” appraisals that register important information in the body and are recorded by body-mapping brain areas. In recent work Solomon describes the judgments he thinks constitute emotions as felt bodily appraisals in similar fashion.
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  28.  31
    History of American Political Thought.John Agresto, John E. Alvis, Donald R. Brand, Paul O. Carrese, Laurence D. Cooper, Murray Dry, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Thomas S. Engeman, Christopher Flannery, Steven Forde, David Fott, David F. Forte, Matthew J. Franck, Bryan-Paul Frost, David Foster, Peter B. Josephson, Steven Kautz, John Koritansky, Peter Augustine Lawler, Howard L. Lubert, Harvey C. Mansfield, Jonathan Marks, Sean Mattie, James McClellan, Lucas E. Morel, Peter C. Meyers, Ronald J. Pestritto, Lance Robinson, Michael J. Rosano, Ralph A. Rossum, Richard S. Ruderman, Richard Samuelson, David Lewis Schaefer, Peter Schotten, Peter W. Schramm, Kimberly C. Shankman, James R. Stoner, Natalie Taylor, Aristide Tessitore, William Thomas, Daryl McGowan Tress, David Tucker, Eduardo A. Velásquez, Karl-Friedrich Walling, Bradley C. S. Watson, Melissa S. Williams, Delba Winthrop, Jean M. Yarbrough & Michael Zuckert - 2003 - Lexington Books.
    This book is a collection of secondary essays on America's most important philosophic thinkers—statesmen, judges, writers, educators, and activists—from the colonial period to the present. Each essay is a comprehensive introduction to the thought of a noted American on the fundamental meaning of the American regime.
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  29. Challengers of Scientism Past and Present: William James and Marilynne Robinson.James Woelfel - 2013 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 34 (2):175-187.
    Writing more than a century apart, William James and Marilynne Robinson are allies in forcefully and eloquently challenging the claims and widespread appeal of scientism or positivism: the belief that scientific knowledge provides a necessary and sufficient worldview and entails the reduction of all reality, including the world of human subjects, to physical processes. Both James and Robinson are particularly concerned with and critical of the efforts of scientistic reductionism to describe the human life-world entirely in (...)
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  30.  32
    The Narrow Corridor: States, Societies, and the Fate of Liberty, by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson. New York: Penguin Press, 2019. 558 pp. [REVIEW]Wayne Eastman - 2021 - Business Ethics Quarterly 31 (1):168-171.
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  31. Evolution and epiphenomenalism.William Robinson - 2007 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 14 (11):27-42.
    This paper addresses the question whether evolutionary principles are compatible with epiphenomenalism, and argues for an affirmative answer. A general summary of epiphenomenalism is provided, along with certain specifications relevant to the issues of this paper. The central argument against compatibility is stated and rebutted. A specially powerful version of the argument, due to William James (1890), is stated. The apparent power of this argument is explained as resulting from a problem about our understanding of pleasure and an equivocation (...)
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  32.  49
    James’s Evolutionary Argument.William S. Robinson - 2014 - Disputatio 6 (39):229-237.
    This paper is a commentary on Joseph Corabi’s “The Misuse and Failure of the Evolutionary Argument”, this Journal, vol. VI, No. 39; pp. 199-227. It defends William James’s formulation of the evolutionary argument against charges such as mishandling of evidence. Although there are ways of attacking James’s argument, it remains formidable, and Corabi’s suggested revision is not an improvement on James’s statement of it.
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  33.  16
    The iron Triangle: Why The Wildlife Society Needs to Take a Position on Economic Growth.Brian Czech, Eugene Allen, David Batker, Paul Beier, Herman Daly, Jon Erickson, Pamela Garrettson, Valerius Geist, John Gowdy, Lynn Greenwalt, Helen Hands, Paul Krausman, Patrick Magee, Craig Miller, Kelly Novak, Genevieve Pullis, Chris Robinson, Jack Santa-Barbara, James Teer, David Trauger & Chuck Willer - 2003 - Wildlife Society Bulletin 31 (2):574-577.
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  34.  40
    James Ax and Simon Kochen. Diophantine problems over local fields I. American journal of mathematics, vol. 87 , pp. 605–630. - James Ax and Simon Kochen. Diophantine problems over local fields II. A complete set of axioms for p-adic number theory. American journal of mathematics, vol. 87 , pp. 631–648. - James Ax and Simon Kochen. Diophantine problems over local fields III. Decidable fields. Annals of mathematics, vol. 83 , pp. 437–456. [REVIEW]Abraham Robinson - 1971 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 36 (4):683-684.
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  35.  25
    Running from William James' Bear: A Review of Preattentive Mechanisms and their Contributions to Emotional Experience. [REVIEW]Michael D. Robinson - 1998 - Cognition and Emotion 12 (5):667-696.
  36.  9
    The Story of Scottish Philosophy: A Compendium of Selections from the Writings of Nine Pre-eminent Scottish Philosophers, with Biobibliographical Essays.Daniel Sommer Robinson - 1979 - Westport, Conn.: Praeger Pub Text.
    This book collects several excerpts from the work of each of nine 18th and 19th century Scottish thinkers: Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, Adam Smith, Thomas Reid, Dugald Stewart, Thomas Brown, Sir William Hamilton, James Frederick Foster, and James McCosh. A brief account of each man's life and work accompanies the selections.
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  37.  33
    Katelynn Robinson. The Sense of Smell in the Middle Ages: A Source of Certainty. (Studies in Medieval History and Culture.) x + 228 pp., index. New York/London: Routledge, 2020. $155 (cloth); ISBN 9780367000684. E-book available. [REVIEW]James McHugh - 2021 - Isis 112 (1):182-183.
  38.  32
    Robert W. Robinson. Simplicity of recursively enumerable sets.The journal of symbolic logic, vol. 32 , pp. 162–172. - Robert W. Robinson. Two theorems on hyperhypersimple sets. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 128 , pp. 531–538. - A. H. Lachlan. On the lattice of recursively enumerable sets.Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 130 , pp. 1–37. - A. H. Lachlan. The elementary theory of recursively enumerable sets. Duke mathematical journal, vol. 35 , pp. 123–146. [REVIEW]James C. Owings - 1970 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 35 (1):153-155.
  39.  71
    Consciousness and Mental Life.Daniel N. Robinson - 2007 - Cambridge University Press.
    In recent decades, issues that reside at the center of philosophical and psychological inquiry have been absorbed into a scientific framework variously identified as "brain science," "cognitive science," and "cognitive neuroscience." Scholars have heralded this development as revolutionary, but a revolution implies an existing method has been overturned in favor of something new. What long-held theories have been abandoned or significantly modified in light of cognitive neuroscience? _Consciousness and Mental Life_ questions our present approach to the study of consciousness and (...)
  40. Epiphenomenalism.William Robinson - 2003 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Epiphenomenalism is the view that mental events are caused by physical events in the brain, but have no effects upon any physical events. Behavior is caused by muscles that contract upon receiving neural impulses, and neural impulses are generated by input from other neurons or from sense organs. On the epiphenomenalist view, mental events play no causal role in this process. Huxley (1874), who held the view, compared mental events to a steam whistle that contributes nothing to the work of (...)
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  41.  30
    Richard Robinson on Incorrigibility.James Ford - 1974 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 4 (1):199 - 200.
    Richard Robinson has argued that “no consistent and useful and desirable meaning” can be given to the philosophical terms “corrigible” and “incorrigible” so long as one espouses a bivalent theory of truth with the law of excluded middle operative. The crux of his argument is that the corrigibility-incorrigibility distinction can be shown to be redundant since, in effect, incorrigibility is materially equivalent to truth and corrigibility materially equivalent to falsehood. Robinson understands the correcting of a proposition to consist (...)
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  42.  69
    Pragmatism and the Practice of History: From Turner and Du Bois to Today.James T. Kloppenberg - 2004 - Metaphilosophy 35 (1-2):202-225.
    Pragmatism has affected American historical writing since the early twentieth century. Such contemporaries and students of Peirce, James, and Dewey as Frederick Jackson Turner, W. E. B. Du Bois, James Harvey Robinson, Charles Beard, Mary Beard, and Carl Becker drew on pragmatism when they fashioned what was called the “new history.” They wanted to topple inherited assumptions about the past and replace positivist historical methods with the pragmatists' model of a community of inquiry. Such widely read mid-twentieth-century (...)
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  43.  21
    Toward a Science of Human Nature.Daniel N. Robinson (ed.) - 1982 - Columbia University Press.
    Available for the first time in English, this is the definitive account of the practice of sexual slavery the Japanese military perpetrated during World War II by the researcher principally responsible for exposing the Japanese government's responsibility for these atrocities. The large scale imprisonment and rape of thousands of women, who were euphemistically called "comfort women" by the Japanese military, first seized public attention in 1991 when three Korean women filed suit in a Toyko District Court stating that they had (...)
  44.  75
    How religious experience ‘works’: Jamesian pragmatism and its warrants.Daniel N. Robinson - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (4):357-372.
    The Varieties of Religious Experience is not a theological treatise but an inquiry into a ubiquitous feature of the human condition and thus of human nature itself. Its author makes this clear at the outset, claiming competence as a psychologist and promising no more, therefore, than an examination of those “religious propensities of man” which James takes to be “at least as interesting as any other of the facts pertaining to his mental constitution.” The “at least” is clearly ironical (...)
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  45.  28
    The Great Ideas of Philosophy.Daniel N. Robinson - 1993 - Teaching Co..
    From the Upanishads to Homer -- Philosophy, did the Greeks invent it -- Pythagoras and the divinity of number -- What is there? -- The Greek tragedians on man's fate -- Herodotus and the lamp of history -- Socrates on the examined life -- Plato's search for truth -- Can virtue be taught? -- Plato's Republic, man writ large -- Hippocrates and the science of life -- Aristotle on the knowable -- Aristotle on friendship -- Aristotle on the perfect life (...)
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  46.  14
    Abstract Life.Keith Robinson - 2022 - Nóema 13:25-44.
    In questo articolo sostengo che Deleuze, Whitehead e Bergson condividono un simile approccio riguardo all'astrazione, un approccio che fondamentalmente è "pragmatista" (in senso ampio, vicino al pragmatismo "fantastico" di James Williams). Appoggiandosi a William James, un nome per questo approccio metodologico condiviso è empirismo radicale, meglio compreso, nella mia visione, nel contesto della filosofia del processo. Benché quegli autori condividano un approccio simile, evidenzierò alcune differenze tra gli empiristi radicali nel modo in cui essi pensano alle loro astrazioni (...)
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  47.  34
    Absence of Mind: The Dispelling of Inwardness From the Modern Myth of the Self.Marilynne Robinson - 2010 - New Haven: Yale University Press.
    In this ambitious book, acclaimed writer Marilynne Robinson applies her astute intellect to some of the most vexing topics in the history of human thought—science, religion, and consciousness. Crafted with the same care and insight as her award-winning novels, _Absence of Mind_ challenges postmodern atheists who crusade against religion under the banner of science. In Robinson’s view, scientific reasoning does not denote a sense of logical infallibility, as thinkers like Richard Dawkins might suggest. Instead, in its purest form, (...)
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  48. (2 other versions)Dualism.Howard Robinson - 2002 - In Stephen P. Stich & Ted A. Warfield (eds.), Blackwell Guide to Philosophy of Mind. Blackwell. pp. 85--101.
    This entry concerns dualism in the philosophy of mind. The term ‘dualism’ has a variety of uses in the history of thought. In general, the idea is that, for some particular domain, there are two fundamental kinds or categories of things or principles. In theology, for example a ‘dualist’ is someone who believes that Good and Evil — or God and the Devil — are independent and more or less equal forces in the world. Dualism contrasts with monism, which is (...)
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  49.  16
    Scientism: the new orthodoxy.Daniel N. Robinson & Richard N. Williams (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
    Scientism: The New Orthodoxy is a comprehensive philosophical overview of the question of scientism, discussing the place of science in the humanities and religion. Clarifying and defining the key terms in play in discussions of scientism, this collection identifies the dimensions that differentiate science from scientism. Leading scholars appraise the means available to science, covering the impact of the neurosciences and the new challenges it presents for the law and the self. Illustrating the effect of scientism on the humanities, Scientism: (...)
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  50. Bob Solomon’s Legacy: Introduction.Nico H. Frijda & Jenefer M. Robinson - 2010 - Emotion Review 2 (1):3-4.
    Bob Solomon used to inveigh against William James’ theory of emotions, but he eventually arrived at a rapprochement with James and James’s recent successors. In particular, James suggested that emotions are initiated by the “automatic, instinctive” appraisals that register important information in the body and are recorded by body-mapping brain areas. In recent work Solomon describes the judgments he thinks constitute emotions as felt bodily appraisals in similar fashion.
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