Results for 'Jason Brandt'

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  1.  7
    Ethical considerations in genetic testing: an empirical study of presymptomatic diagnosis of Huntington's disease.Jason Brandt - 1994 - In K. W. M. Fulford, Grant Gillett & Janet Martin Soskice (eds.), Medicine and Moral Reasoning. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 41--59.
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  2. Ethical theory.Richard B. Brandt - 1959 - Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
  3.  29
    Marion and Derrida on the Gift and Desire: Debating the Generosity of Things.Jason Alvis - 2016 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This chapter seeks clarification into how Marion understands “desire,” especially in The Erotic Phenomenon. Philosophies of “objectivity” have lost sight of love and its uniquely supporting evidences, and desire plays a number of roles in restoring to love the “dignity of a concept,” in its contribution to forming selfhood and “individualization,” and in its establishing the paradoxical bases of the erotic reduction and “eroticization.” Since he claims in La Rigueur des Choses that “The Erotic Phenomenon logically completes the phenomenology of (...)
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  4. At the Bar of Conscience: A Kantian Argument for Slavery Reparations.Jason R. Fisette - 2022 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 48 (5):674-702.
    Arguments for slavery reparations have fallen out of favor even as reparations for other forms of racial injustice are taken more seriously. This retreat is unsurprising, as arguments for slavery reparations often rely on two normatively irregular claims: that reparations are owed to the dead (as opposed to, say, their living heirs), and that the present generation inherits an as yet unrequited guilt from past generations. Outside of some strands of Black thought and activism on slavery reparations, these claims are (...)
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  5.  62
    Against the Moral Powers Test of basic liberty.Jason Brennan - 2020 - European Journal of Philosophy 28 (2):492-505.
    In Rawlsian political philosophy, “basic liberties” are rights subject to a high degree of protection, such that they cannot easily be overridden for concerns of stability, efficiency, or social justice. For Rawls, something qualifies as a basic liberty if and only if bears the right relationship to our “two moral powers”: a capacity to form a sense of the good life and a capacity for a sense of justice. However, which rights are basic liberties is subject to frequent ideological debate, (...)
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  6.  34
    When First We Practice to Deceive.Jason T. Eberl & Erica K. Salter - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (5):15-17.
    We argue against Christopher Meyers’s call for clinical ethicists to participate in deceiving patients, surrogate decision-makers, or family members. While we acknowledge that some forms of deception may be ethically appropriate in highly circumscribed situations, the type of case Meyers describes as involving justifiable deception differs in at least two important ways. First, Meyers fails to distinguish acts of deception based on the critical feature of who is being deceived—patient, surrogate, or family member—and the overarching duty to respect the autonomy (...)
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  7.  54
    (1 other version)On the (In)Significance of Moral Disagreement for Moral Knowledge 1.Jason Decker & Daniel Groll - 2009 - Oxford Studies in Metaethics 8.
    This chapter considers an epistemological argument from disagreement which concludes that many of most people’s moral beliefs do not amount to knowledge. Various ways of understanding the argument are considered and it is argued that each relies on an epistemic principle that is under-motivated, overgeneralizes, and is indeed self-incriminating. These problems, it is suggested, infect many conciliationist theses in the epistemology of disagreement. Knowledge, it is argued, can withstand not only acknowledged peer disagreement, but also disagreement with the acknowledged experts. (...)
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  8.  26
    Can Online Academic Integrity Instruction Affect University Students’ Perceptions of and Engagement in Academic Dishonesty? Results From a Natural Experiment in New Zealand.Jason Michael Stephens, Penelope Winifred St John Watson, Mohamed Alansari, Grace Lee & Steven Martin Turnbull - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:569133.
    The problem of academic dishonesty is as old as it is widespread – dating back millennia and perpetrated by the majority of students. Attempts to promote academic integrity, by comparison, are relatively new and rare – stretching back only a few hundred years and implemented by a small fraction of schools and universities. However, the past decade has seen an increase in efforts among universities to promote academic integrity among students, particularly through the use of online courses or tutorials. Previous (...)
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  9.  16
    Is baseline pupil size related to cognitive ability? Yes (under proper lighting conditions).Jason S. Tsukahara & Randall W. Engle - 2021 - Cognition 211 (C):104643.
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  10.  32
    Rechtsphilosophie der Aufklärung: Symposium Wolfenbüttel 1981.Reinhard Brandt (ed.) - 1982 - De Gruyter.
    Rechtsphilosophie der Aufklärung: Symposium Wolfenbüttel 1981.
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  11.  63
    Schelling Now: Contemporary Readings.Jason M. Wirth (ed.) - 2004 - Indiana University Press.
    These 14 essays bring Schelling in tune with such luminaries as Heidegger, Derrida, Bataille, Foucault, Deleuze, Levinas, and Irigaray and situate him squarely in the centre of current themes.
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  12. Four Tensions Between Marion and Derrida: Very Close and Extremely Distant.Jason Alvis - 2016 - In Marion and Derrida on the Gift and Desire: Debating the Generosity of Things. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  13. Marion on Love and Givenness: Desiring to Give What One Lacks.Jason Alvis - 2016 - In Marion and Derrida on the Gift and Desire: Debating the Generosity of Things. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  14.  53
    Making sense of Heidegger’s ‘phenomenology of the inconspicuous’ or inapparent.Jason W. Alvis - 2017 - Continental Philosophy Review 51 (2):211-238.
    In Heidegger’s last seminar, which was in Zähringen in 1973, he introduces what he called a “phenomenology of the inconspicuous”. Despite scholars’ occasional references to this “approach” over the last 40 years, this approach of Heidegger’s has gone largely under investigated in secondary literature. This article introduces three different, although not necessarily conflicting ways in which these sparse references to inconspicuousness can be interpreted: The a priori of appearance can never be brought to manifestation, and the unscheinbar is interwoven with (...)
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  15. Marion’s The Adonné or “The Given:” Between Passion and Passivity.Jason Alvis - 2016 - In Marion and Derrida on the Gift and Desire: Debating the Generosity of Things. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  16.  4
    The inconspicuous God: Heidegger, French phenomenology and the theological turn.Jason W. Alvis - 2018 - Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
    Inconspicuous turns: Heidegger and the "inapparent" theological turn -- Inconspicuous revelation: Marion, Heidegger, and an antinomic phenomenality -- Inconspicuous phenomenology: on Heidegger's unscheinbarkeit or inapparent -- Inconspicuous lifeworld of religion: Henry's "life," Heidegger's "world" -- Inconspicuous liturgy: Lacoste, Heidegger, and the space of godhood -- Inconspicuous adoration: Nancy, Heidegger, and a praise of the ordinary -- Inconspicuous evidence: Janicaud, religious experience, and a methodological atheism -- Inconspicuous faith: Chretien, Heidegger, and forgetting -- Inconspicuous God: Levinas, Heidegger, and the idolatry of (...)
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  17. The Manifolds of Desire and Love in Marion’s The Erotic Phenomenon.Jason Alvis & Jason W. Alvis - 2016 - In Marion and Derrida on the Gift and Desire: Debating the Generosity of Things. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  18.  8
    Aristotle's Theory of Contrariety.Jason Xenakis - 1958 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 19 (2):265-265.
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  19. The significance of differences of ethical opinion for ethical rationalism.Richard B. Brandt - 1943 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 4 (4):469-495.
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  20.  30
    Who is Schelling’s Bruno?Jason M. Wirth - 2020 - Rivista di Estetica 74:181-190.
    Schelling argued that early modern science had discarded the ancient teaching of matter – the world soul (die Weltseele or anima mundi, the unity of soul and body, eternity and time, absolute possibility and existence) – «into the common grave they dug for nature and have brought about the death of all science». In order to put science on a more philosophical tract, Schelling retrieved the work of Giordano Bruno as part of his «handful» of thinkers who in a contemporary (...)
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  21. Close-knit Cities.Jason Matteson - 2016 - Interdisciplinary Environmental Review 17 (2):73-86.
    Aristotle rightly holds that the constitution of a city is not entirely captured by its written documents or official political structures. More fundamentally, the constitution of a city is made up of its real and deep habits, customs, relations, expectations, aspirations, and ideals of the people who live there. The aim here is to articulate five values that together constitute what I will call close-knit cities: a) ecological resiliency; b) intimate proximity; c) social heterogeneity; d) fairness; e) social trust. I (...)
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  22. Belief systems and the perception of reality : an introduction.Bastiaan T. Rutjens & Mark J. Brandt - 2018 - In Bastiaan T. Rutjens & Mark J. Brandt (eds.), Belief systems and the perception of reality. New York: Taylor & Francis.
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  23.  10
    Value and obligation.Richard B. Brandt - 1961 - New York,: Harcourt, Brace & World.
    Most people interested in the problems of ethics aspire to two kinds of knowledge, one systematic, the other historical. They wish a systematic understanding of the field: knowledge of what are the various problems and their interrelations and knowledge of what has been done toward the solution of these problems. They also wish to learn what the great historical philosophers -- particularly those who have had the most important ideas about values and conduct -- have said about the subject. This (...)
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  24.  83
    A Moral License to Kill? Environmental Ethics, Animal Rights, and Hunting.Jason Hanna - 2016 - In Mylan Engel & Gary Lynn Comstock (eds.), The Moral Rights of Animals. Lanham, MD: Lexington. pp. 257-77.
    This chapter considers various arguments purporting to show that respect for animal rights is consistent with "therapeutic hunting"--that is, hunting undertaken as part of a plan to control wild animal populations. It concludes that these arguments fail. It also suggests that the implications of Regan's rights view may be more sweeping than are generally recognizes: the rights view seems to rule out not only therapeutic hunting, but also subsistence hunting.
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  25.  75
    Spinoza on the incoherence of self-destruction.Jason Waller - 2009 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 17 (3):487 – 503.
  26.  16
    ‘A pretty decent sort of bloke’: Towards the quest for an Australian Jesus.Jason A. Goroncy - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):1-10.
    From many Aboriginal elders, such as Tjangika Napaltjani, Bob Williams and Djiniyini Gondarra, to painters, such as Arthur Boyd, Pro Hart and John Forrester-Clack, from historians, such as Manning Clark, and poets, such as Maureen Watson, Francis Webb and Henry Lawson, to celebrated novelists, such as Joseph Furphy, Patrick White and Tim Winton, the figure of Jesus has occupied an endearing and idiosyncratic place in the Australian imagination. It is evidence enough that 'Australians have been anticlerical and antichurch, but rarely (...)
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  27.  12
    Spatially Conditioned Speech Timing: Evidence and Implications.Jason A. Shaw & Wei-Rong Chen - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  28.  24
    The Edge of Thinking.Jason M. Wirth - 2019 - Research in Phenomenology 49 (2):281-286.
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  29.  37
    A Mud Doctor Checking Out the Earth Underneath: Ruminations on Malick’s Days of Heaven and Loht’s Phenomenology of Film.Jason M. Wirth - 2024 - Film-Philosophy 28 (1):98-112.
    This is a philosophical rumination on Shawn Loht’s important extension of “film as philosophy” into a Heideggerian phenomenological account of the philosophical response that cinema can engender. After considering the importance of these kinds of approaches, I turn to Loht’s phenomenological engagement with Terrence Malick’s early masterpiece, Days of Heaven (1978). After sympathetically reviewing his “interpretation”, I expand upon its delineation of “earth and world” to include the “fallenness” of the world as well as the possibility of a metanōetic awakening (...)
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  30.  15
    Universität zwischen Selbst- und Fremdbestimmung: Kants "Streit der Fakultäten" Mit einem Anhang zu Heideggers "Rektoratsrede".Reinhard Brandt - 2003 - Akademie Verlag.
    Der Streit der Fakultäten (von 1798) stellt den Antagonismus der drei oberen Fakultäten (Theologie, Jurisprudenz, Medizin) und der unteren Philosophischen Fakultät dar. Die Streitfragen sind Probleme der praktischen, nicht der theoretischen Vernunft; die in ihrer Wahrheitssuche freie Philosophie konfrontiert die oberen Interessen-Fakultäten, die unter der inhaltlichen Direktive der Regierung spätere Beamte ausbilden, erstens mit der autonomen Moral (gegen den äußerlichen Buchglauben der Theologen), zweitens mit der autonomen Republik der Französischen Revolution (gegen die Fremdbestimmung durch die von den Juristen unterstützten Despoten) (...)
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  31. The visual system and levels of perception: Properties of neuromental organization.Petra Stoerig & Stephan Brandt - 1993 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 14 (2).
    To see whether the mental and the neural have common attributes that could resolve some of the traditional dichotomies, we review neuroscientific data on the visual system. The results show that neuronal and perceptual function share a parallel and hierarchical architecture which is manifest not only in the anatomy and physiology of the visual system, but also in normal perception and in the deficits caused by lesions in different parts of the system. Based on the description of parallel hierarchical levels (...)
     
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  32.  74
    The Return of the Repressed: Schelling, Kierkegaard, and Nachtraglichkeit in the Legacy of German Idealism.Jason M. Wirth - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (1):134-147.
  33.  13
    The Flavors of Monks' Poetry: On a Witty Disparagement and Its Influences.Jason Protass - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 141 (1):125.
    This essay focuses on a humorous metaphor that appears prominently in critiques of Buddhist monks’ poetry, from the eleventh century onward. Alluding to the monastic vegetarian diet, critics leveled that monks’ poetry had “a whiff of vegetables”, “the flavor of cabbage and bamboo shoots”, or “the taste of pickled stuffing”. The double meaning of qi 氣 is literally flavor or smell and by extension also refers to an individual’s literary style and character. Members of the literati largely agreed that such (...)
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  34.  87
    Spinoza in Germany: Political and Religious Thought across the Long Nineteenth Century.Jason Maurice Yonover & Kristin Gjesdal (eds.) - 2024 - Oxford University Press.
    This collection of fifteen newly commissioned essays has a dual purpose. Through an emphasis on the reception of Spinoza in German nineteenth-century thought, the volume seeks to shed new light on his work. Likewise, the focus on Spinoza’s influence in the long nineteenth century illuminates novel aspects of the philosophical lineage from idealism to Marxism, psychoanalysis, and beyond. The contributions are at the cutting edge of research on modern German philosophy, not only when it comes to canonical figures like Herder, (...)
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  35.  28
    Spilled milk and burned toast: extrinsic pressure and sporting excellence.Christopher Johnson & Jason Taylor - 2021 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 48 (2):202-218.
    ABSTRACT This paper explores the dynamics of extrinsic pressure in sport and its relation to athletic excellence. We argue that psychological pressure exerted by activities extrinsic to sport can be relevant to success or failure in it, such that how one manages extrinsic pressures can transmit to failure to perform in sport and thus be a determinant to victory, with no reason to think failure mitigated by the non-sporting nature of one’s other behaviour. To make this argument we offer a (...)
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  36. Solidarität.Alfred Nau & Willy Brandt (eds.) - 1971 - (Bonn-Bad Godesberg): Verl. Neue Gesellschaft.
     
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  37. Moving Beyond Post-Holocaust Theology: Critical Theory as a New Paradigm.Rabbi Jason Rodich - 2023 - In Stanley M. Davids & Leah Hochman (eds.), Re-forming Judaism: moments of disruption in Jewish thought. New York: Central Conference of American Rabbis.
     
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  38. Conscience (rule) utilitarianism and the criminal law.R. B. Brandt - 1995 - Law and Philosophy 14 (1):65 - 89.
    A rule- utilitarian appraisal of criminal law requires that the total system, including punishments, is justified only if it will expectably maximize public benefit, including its stigmatizing some behaviors as "offenses" and its prescribed punishment of these, such as imprisonment, with (possible) deterrent effects. In view of the paucity of evidence about the deterrent effect of prison sentences, some changes seem to be in order: reduction in the length of incarceration, replacement of prison by fines or restrictions on the convicted (...)
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  39.  29
    Plato's Philosophy of Mathematics.Jason Xenakis - 1956 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 17 (2):286-287.
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  40. Adam Smiths Kritik der politischen Ökonomie.Reinhard Brandt - 1976 - Philosophische Rundschau 23:264.
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  41. Chemistry and Liberal Education in Partnership.Werner W. Brandt - 2004 - Studia Philosophica 4:69.
  42.  28
    Diagrams and mental figuration: A semio-cognitive analysis.Per Aage Brandt & Ulf Cronquist - 2019 - Semiotica 2019 (229):253-272.
    We all intuitively know what a diagram is, and still it is surprisingly difficult to describe it as a semiotic function or type. In this article, we present four groups of hypotheses in view of a clarification. We hypothesize: (1) That diagrams are signs of a distinct type, unknown to classical semiotics; (2) That the elementary graphs of a diagram are all derived fromlines and pointsintopologicalmental spaces. The mind applies these diagrammatic spaces to referential spaces in many ways, but basically (...)
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  43. Die Darstellung der ΠΟΙΟΤΗΤΕΣ ΠΑΘΗΤΙΚΑΙ in der Kategorien-Schrift des Aristoteles.Reinhard Brandt - 1963 - Hermes 91 (4):499-503.
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  44.  11
    David Hume in Deutschland: Literatur zur Hume-Rezeption in Marburger Bibliotheken.Reinhard Brandt & Heiner Klemme - 1989
  45.  66
    Der Leviathan und das liberale Commonwealth. Staatsrecht und Strafrecht bei Hobbes und Locke.Reinhard Brandt - 2008 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 56 (2):205-220.
    In Hobbes' Theorie des Leviathan sind weder der Naturzustand noch der staatliche Zustand und das Strafrecht widersprüchlich. Der radikale Subjektivismus ist der archimedische Punkt, von dem aus sich die scheinbaren Widersprüche auflösen lassen. Locke kehrt zu einem Rechtsobjektivismus zurück, hat aber kein Prinzip der Begrenzung von Strafen.
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  46.  56
    Epistemic priority and coherence: Comments.Richard B. Brandt - 1964 - Journal of Philosophy 61 (19):557-559.
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  47.  10
    Filosofskai︠a︡ antropologii︠a︡ feminizma: priroda zhenshchiny = Feminist philosophy: woman's nature.Galina Andreevna Brandt - 2004 - Ekaterinburg: Gumanitarnyĭ universitet.
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  48.  37
    (1 other version)Feder und Kant.Reinhard Brandt - 1989 - Kant Studien 80 (1-4):249-264.
  49.  40
    German children's productivity with simple transitive and complement-clause constructions: Testing the effects of frequency and variability.Silke Brandt, Arie Verhagen, Elena Lieven & Michael Tomasello - 2011 - Cognitive Linguistics 22 (2):325-357.
    The development of abstract schemas and productive rules in language is affected by both token and type frequencies. High token frequencies and surface similarities help to discover formal and functional commonalities between utterances and categorize them as instances of the same schema. High type frequencies and diversity help to develop slots in these schemas, which allow the production and comprehension of novel utterances. In the current study we looked at both token and type frequencies in two related constructions in German (...)
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  50.  7
    Harald Høffding in memoriam.Frithiof Brandt, Jørgen Jørgebeen, Victor Kuhr, Edgar Rubin & Kalle Sandelin (eds.) - 1932 - København,: Gyldendal.
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