Results for 'Jeff Allred'

963 found
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  1. Innocence, self-defense and killing in war.Jeff McMahan - 1994 - Journal of Political Philosophy 2 (3):193–221.
  2. Is there a problem about nonconceptual content?Jeff Speaks - 2005 - Philosophical Review 114 (3):359-98.
    In the past twenty years, issues about the relationship between perception and thought have largely been framed in terms of the question of whether the contents of perception are nonconceptual. I argue that this debate has rested on an ambiguity in `nonconceptual content' and some false presuppositions about what is required for concept possession. Once these are cleared away, I argue that none of the arguments which have been advanced about nonconceptual content do much to threaten the natural view that (...)
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  3. The basis of moral liability to defensive killing.Jeff McMahan - 2005 - Philosophical Issues 15 (1):386–405.
    There may be circumstances in which it is morally justifiable intentionally to kill a person who is morally innocent, threatens no one, rationally wishes not to die, and does not consent to be killed. Although the killing would wrong the victim, it might be justified by the necessity of averting some disaster that would otherwise occur. In other instances of permissible killing, however, the justification appeals to more than consequences. It may appeal to the claim that the person to be (...)
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  4. “Our fellow creatures”.Jeff McMahan - 2005 - The Journal of Ethics 9 (3-4):353 - 380.
    This paper defends “moral individualism” against various arguments that have been intended to show that membership in the human species or participation in our distinctively human form of life is a sufficient basis for a moral status higher than that of any animal. Among the arguments criticized are the “nature-of-the-kind argument,” which claims that it is the nature of all human beings to have certain higher psychological capacities, even if, contingently, some human beings lack them, and various versions of the (...)
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  5. (1 other version)Death and the value of life.Jeff McMahan - 1988 - Ethics 99 (1):32-61.
    Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use.
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  6. Causing Disabled People to Exist and Causing People to Be Disabled.Jeff McMahan - 2005 - Ethics 116 (1):77-99.
    Attempts to determine or to select what kind of person or people to bring into existence are controversial. This is particularly true of “negative selection” or “selecting against” a certain type of person—that is, the attempt to prevent a person of a certain type, or people of that type, from existing. Virtually everyone agrees that some instances of negative selection are objectionable—for example, that selection against healthy people would be wrong, particularly if this were combined with positive selection of people (...)
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  7. The metaphysics of brain death.Jeff Mcmahan - 1995 - Bioethics 9 (2):91–126.
    The dominant conception of brain death as the death of the whole brain constitutes an unstable compromise between the view that a person ceases to exist when she irreversibly loses the capacity for consciousness and the view that a human organism dies only when it ceases to function in an integrated way. I argue that no single criterion of death captures the importance we attribute both to the loss of the capacity for consciousness and to the loss of functioning of (...)
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  8. Attention and intentionalism.Jeff Speaks - 2010 - Philosophical Quarterly 60 (239):325-342.
    Many alleged counter-examples to intentionalism, the thesis that the phenomenology of perceptual experiences of a given sense modality supervenes on the contents of experiences of that modality, can be avoided by adopting a liberal view of the sorts of properties that can be represented in perceptual experience. I argue that there is a class of counter-examples to intentionalism, based on shifts in attention, which avoids this response. A necessary connection between the contents and phenomenal characters of perceptual experiences can be (...)
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  9.  18
    Perceptual processing demands influence voluntary task choice.Victor Mittelstädt, Jeff Miller & Andrea Kiesel - 2022 - Cognition 229 (C):105232.
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  10. Is mental content prior to linguistic meaning?: Stalnaker on intentionality.Jeff Speaks - 2006 - Noûs 40 (3):428-467.
    Since the 1960's, work in the analytic tradition on the nature of mental and linguistic content has converged on the views that social facts about public language meaning are derived from facts about the thoughts of individuals, and that these thoughts are constituted by properties of the internal states of agents. I give a two-part argument against this picture of intentionality: first, that if mental content is prior to public language meaning, then a view of mental content much like the (...)
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  11. Conversational implicature, thought, and communication.Jeff Speaks - 2008 - Mind and Language 23 (1):107–122.
    Some linguistic phenomena can occur in uses of language in thought, whereas others only occur in uses of language in communication. I argue that this distinction can be used as a test for whether a linguistic phenomenon can be explained via Grice’s theory of conversational implicature. I argue further, on the basis of this test, that conversational implicature cannot be used to explain quantifier domain restriction or apparent substitution failures involving coreferential names, but that it must be used to explain (...)
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  12. Killing in war: A reply to Walzer.Jeff McMahan - 2006 - Philosophia 34 (1):47-51.
    Michael Walzer suggests that our common beliefs about individual responsibility and liability become largely irrelevant in the conduct of war. In conditions of war, everything is changed. Political realists have claimed that war eliminates morality; Walzer claims that war collectivizes it. I believe that conditions of war change nothing at all; they simply make it more difficult to ascertain relevant facts. This is not to say that the principles and laws that do or should govern the activity of war are (...)
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  13. Explaining the Disquotational Principle.Jeff Speaks - 2010 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 40 (2):211-238.
    Questions about the relative priorities of mind and language suffer from a double obscurity. First, it is often not clear which mental and linguistic facts are in question: we can ask about the relationship between any of the semantic or syntactic properties of public languages and the judgments, intentions, beliefs, or other propositional attitudes of speakers of those languages. Second, there is an obscurity about what 'priority' comes to here.We can approach the first problem by way of the second. Often, (...)
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  14.  31
    Group agency and the challenges of repairing historical injustice.Jeff Spinner-Halev - 2022 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 25 (3):380-394.
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  15. (1 other version)Philosophy of Mind in the Phenomenological Tradition.Philip J. Walsh & Jeff Yoshimi - 2017 - In Amy Kind (ed.), Philosophy of Mind in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries: The History of the Philosophy of Mind, Volume 6. New York: Routledge. pp. 21-51.
  16.  19
    Determinants of the grief experience of survivors.Linda J. Kristjanson & Jeff A. Sloan - forthcoming - Journal of Palliative Care.
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  17.  21
    Quantifying professionalism in peer review.Joshua A. Rash, Jeff C. Clements, Chi-Yeung Choi, Stephanie Avery-Gomm, Alyssa M. Allen Gerwing & Travis G. Gerwing - 2020 - Research Integrity and Peer Review 5 (1).
    BackgroundThe process of peer-review in academia has attracted criticism surrounding issues of bias, fairness, and professionalism; however, frequency of occurrence of such comments is unknown.MethodsWe evaluated 1491 sets of reviewer comments from the fields of “Ecology and Evolution” and “Behavioural Medicine,” of which 920 were retrieved from the online review repository Publons and 571 were obtained from six early career investigators. Comment sets were coded for the occurrence of “unprofessional comments” and “incomplete, inaccurate or unsubstantiated critiques” using an a-prior rubric (...)
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  18.  31
    On using compressibility to detect when slime mould completed computation.Andrew Adamatzky & Jeff Jones - 2016 - Complexity 21 (5):162-175.
  19.  18
    Grasping the world from a cockpit: investigating embodied neural mechanisms underlying human performance and ergonomics in aviation context.Mariateresa Sestito, Jeff Nador, John Flach & Assaf Harel - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  20.  48
    Organizational ethics and social justice in practice: Choices and challenges in a rural-urban health region.Christy Simpson & Jeff Kirby - 2004 - HEC Forum 16 (4):274-283.
  21.  17
    Section 1 Environmental Sustainability Education in Teacher Education and Policy.Adrian Skilbeck & Jeff Stickney - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 54 (4):807-807.
  22.  42
    Implications of the concept of minimal risk in research on informed choice in clinical practice.Kyoko Wada & Jeff Nisker - 2015 - Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (10):804-808.
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  23. Truth theories, translation manuals, and theories of meaning.Jeff Speaks - 2006 - Linguistics and Philosophy 29 (4):487 - 505.
    In "Truth and Meaning", Davidson suggested that a truth theory can do the work of a theory of meaning: it can give the meanings of expressions of a language, and can explain the semantic competence of speakers of the language by stating information knowledge of which would suffice for competence. From the start, this program faced certain fundamental objections. One response to these objections has been to supplement the truth theory with additional rules of inference (e.g. from T-sentences to meaning (...)
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  24. Assisted reproduction.Roxanne Mykitiuk & Jeff Nisker - 2008 - In Peter A. Singer & A. M. Viens (eds.), The Cambridge textbook of bioethics. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 112.
     
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  25.  29
    Comparison of six response-elimination techniques following VR reinforcement training in humans.John W. Pickering & Jeff S. Topping - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 3 (4):264-266.
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  26.  51
    The fragility of robust realism: A reply to Dreyfus and Spinosa.Jeff Malpas - 1999 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 42 (1):89 – 101.
    Hubert Dreyfus and Charles Spinosa's argument for 'robust' realism centres on the possibility of our having access to things as they are in themselves and so as having access to things in a way that is not dependent on our 'quotidian concerns or sensory capacities'. Dreyfus and Spinosa claim that our everyday access to things is incapable of providing access of this kind, since our everyday access is holistically enmeshed with our everyday attitudes and concerns. The argument that Dreyfus and (...)
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  27.  15
    Correcting Sample Size Bias in d' and A'.Patten Bradley & Hamm Jeff - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  28.  42
    On Overestimating Philosophy: Lessons from Heidegger’s Black Notebooks.Ingo Farin & Jeff Malpas - 2017 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 4 (2):183-195.
    In this paper we discuss Heidegger’s conception of philosophy in the Black Notebooks. In particular, we set out a reading of the Notebooks from the 1930s and early 1940s as exhibiting an extremist view of philosophy, and its concern with being, which accords it an absolute and exclusive priority above and beyond everything else. We argue that such overcompensation for philosophy’s declining fortune involves a willful turning away from the realities of human life, and from the multifarious symbolic and functional (...)
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  29.  47
    The motivational underpinnings of religion.Mark Jordan Landau, Jeff Greenberg & Sheldon Solomon - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (6):743-744.
    Terror management theory and research can rectify shortcomings in Atran & Norenzayan's (A&N's) analysis of religion. (1) Religious and secular worldviews are much more similar than the target article supposes; (2) a propensity for embracing supernatural beliefs is likely to have conferred an adaptive advantage over the course of evolution; and (3) the claim that supernatural agent beliefs serve a terror management function independent of worldview bolstering is not empirically supported.
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  30. Bridging social constructionism and cognitive constructivism: A psychology of human possibility and constraint.Jack Martin & Jeff Sugarman - 1996 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 17 (4):291-320.
    A theory intended to bridge social constructionist and cognitive constructivist thought is presented, and some of its implications for psychotherapy and education are considered. The theory is mostly concerned with understanding the emergence and development of the psychological from its biological and sociocultural origins. It is argued that the psychological is underdetermined by the biological and sociocultural, and possesses a shifting, dynamic ontology that emerges within a developmental context. Increasingly sophisticated capabilities of memory and imagination mediate and support the emergence (...)
     
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  31.  6
    Natural language directed inference from ontologies.Chris Mellish & Jeff Z. Pan - 2008 - Artificial Intelligence 172 (10):1285-1315.
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  32.  18
    An existential perspective on the psychological function of shamans.Simon Schindler, Jeff Greenberg & Stefan Pfattheicher - 2018 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41.
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  33.  29
    The bizarre mnemonic: The effect of retention interval and mode of presentation.Carrie L. Zoller, Jeff S. Workman & Neal E. A. Kroll - 1989 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (3):215-218.
  34.  37
    Three years after Tunisia: thoughts and perspectives on the rights to freedom of assembly and association from United Nations Special Rapporteur Maina Kiai.Maina Kiai & Jeff Vize - 2014 - Journal of Global Ethics 10 (1):114-121.
    Roughly three years after the creation of his mandate, United Nations Special Rapporteur Maina Kiai reflects on the global state of assembly and association rights. Although the mandate was created against the backdrop of shrinking space for civil society, a massive and growing global protest movement has grabbed most of the headlines since 2011. Kiai argues that the mandate has made a measurable impact – it has helped raise awareness of repressive NGO laws, provided technical assistance to governments to strengthen (...)
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  35. Constituting the mind: Kant, Davidson, and the unity of consciousness.Jeff Malpas - 1999 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 7 (1):1-30.
    Both Kant and Davidson view the existence of mental states, and so the possibility of mental content, as dependent on the obtaining of a certain unity among such states. And the unity at issue seems also to be tied, in the case of both thinkers, to a form of self-reflexivity. No appeal to self-reflexivity, however, can be adequate to explain the unity of consciousness that is necessary for the possibility of content- it merely shifts the focus of the question from (...)
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  36.  11
    Correction to: The Right to Know and the Right Not to Know Revisited.Roger Brownsword & Jeff Wale - 2019 - Asian Bioethics Review 11 (1):123-123.
    In the original publication the title reads “The Right to Know and the Right Not to Know Revisited: Part One”. The paper consisted of both Part One and Part Two hence the title has to be corrected.
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  37.  93
    Re-Entering the Chinese Room.Graham Button, Jeff Coutler & John R. E. Lee - 2000 - Minds and Machines 10 (1):149-152.
  38.  15
    Practices of reasoning: persuasion and refutation in a seventeenth-century Chinese mathematical treatise of “linear algebra”.Jiang-Ping Jeff Chen - 2020 - Science in Context 33 (1):65-93.
    ArgumentThis article documents the reasoning in a mathematical work by Mei Wending, one of the most prolific mathematicians in seventeenth-century China. Based on an analysis of the mathematical content, we present Mei’s systematic treatment of this particular genre of problems,fangcheng, and his efforts to refute the traditional practices in works that appeared earlier. His arguments were supported by the epistemological values he utilized to establish his system and refute the flaws in the traditional approaches. Moreover, in the context of the (...)
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  39.  2
    A Selective Bibliography of Moral and Political Philosophy.Susan L. Hurley, Jeff McMahan & Madison Powers - 1987 - Oxford University Press.
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  40.  19
    The Legacy of Chet Bowers for Educational Studies and the Social Foundations of Education.Rebecca A. Martusewicz & Jeff Edmundson - 2019 - Educational Studies 55 (5):505-509.
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  41.  15
    Section 3 Philosophical Registers for Addressing Environmental Crises.Adrian Skilbeck & Jeff Stickney - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 54 (4):887-887.
  42.  2
    Dugin’s masks.Jeff Love - forthcoming - Studies in East European Thought:1-22.
    Aleksandr Dugin proclaims Martin Heidegger as the “last God” of Western philosophy and seeks to assume a similar role in an other beginning for Russian philosophy. This paper examines Dugin’s extensive interpretation of Heidegger specifically in the context of the philosopher’s task as the one who rejects all conventions, who ventures beyond beings to Being itself. The philosopher in this sense begins anew, creating a philosophy of nothingness or “chaos” that Dugin derives as much from Heidegger as from an intriguing (...)
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  43.  4
    Is Law Possible?Jeff Love - forthcoming - Studies in East European Thought:1-10.
  44. Holism, realism, and truth: how to be an anti‐relativist and not give up on heidegger – a debate with Christopher Norris.Jeff Malpas - 2004 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (3):339 – 356.
    Responding to criticisms raised by Christopher Norris, this paper defends an anti-relativist reading of the work of both Davidson and Heidegger arguing that that there are important lessons to be learnt from their example - one can thus be an anti-relativist (as well as a certain sort of realist) without giving up on Davidson or on Heidegger.
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  45. Self-knowledge and scepticism.Jeff Malpas - 1994 - Erkenntnis 40 (2):165-184.
    Donald Davidson has argued that 'most of our beliefs must be true' and that global scepticism is therefore false. Davidson's arguments to this conclusion often seem to depend on externalist considerations. Davidson's position has been criticised, however, on the grounds that he does not defeat the sceptic, but rather already assumes the falsity of scepticism through his appeal to externalism. Indeed, it has been claimed that far from defeating the sceptic Davidson introduces an even more extreme version of scepticism according (...)
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  46. Roman Ingarden's "the literary work of art": Exposition and analyses.Jeff Mitscherling - 1985 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 45 (3):351-381.
  47. Assessing some determinant effects of ethical consulting behavior: The case of personal and professional values. [REVIEW]Jeff Allen & Duane Davis - 1993 - Journal of Business Ethics 12 (6):449 - 458.
    A random sample of 207 national business consultants is employed to test the effects of individual values and professional ethics on consulting behavior. The results suggest that the individual values held by consultants are positively correlated with professional ethics, but are negatively correlated with consulting behavior. Moreover, there appears to be no significant relationship between the professional ethics of consultants and business consulting behavior. Findings and issues regarding the effectiveness of codes of ethics and implications for both the provider and (...)
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  48. The informed neuron: Issues in the use of information theory in the behavioral sciences. [REVIEW]Jeff Coulter - 1995 - Minds and Machines 5 (4):583-96.
    The concept of “information” is virtually ubiquitous in contemporary cognitive science. It is claimed to be “processed” (in cognitivist theories of perception and comprehension), “stored” (in cognitivist theories of memory and recognition), and otherwise manipulated and transformed by the human central nervous system. Fred Dretske's extensive philosophical defense of a theory of informational content (“semantic” information) based upon the Shannon-Weaver formal theory of information is subjected to critical scrutiny. A major difficulty is identified in Dretske's equivocations in the use of (...)
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  49.  78
    Living a lie: Self-deception, habit, and social roles. [REVIEW]Jeff Mitchell - 2000 - Human Studies 23 (2):145-156.
    In this paper I give an account of self-deception by situating it within the theory of human conduct advanced by American pragmatists John Dewey and George Herbert Mead. After examining and rejecting the two most prevalent explanations of self-deception - namely, Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic interpretation and Jean-Paul Sartre's phenomenological one - I provide a brief sketch of some of Dewey's and Mead's fundamental insights into the inherently social nature of mind.I argue that one of the main forms of self-deception involves (...)
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  50.  13
    Review. [REVIEW]Jeff Mitscherling - 1988 - Journal of Business Ethics 7 (8):592-592.
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