Results for 'Leigh S. Brownhill'

962 found
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  1.  73
    First-order logic: an introduction.Leigh S. Cauman - 1998 - New York: Walter de Gruyter.
    Introduction This is an elementary logic book designed for people who have no technical familiarity with modern logic but who have been reasoning, ...
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  2.  54
    On Conditional Proof in Elementary Logic.Leigh S. Cauman - 2000 - Teaching Philosophy 23 (4):353-357.
    This paper urges the importance of including conditional proof as an inference rule in the teaching of elementary symbolic logic. The paper explains how to make clear to students that conditional proof is valid. This is done by a little proof that shows that hypothetical syllogism (or the chain rule) is both intuitively valid yet redundant. Teaching conditional proof not only aids in a deeper understanding of the meaning of “if” but also provides a strong reminder to the student that (...)
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  3.  32
    Logic and Language.A First Course in Modern Logic.Philosophy and Argument.Leigh S. Cauman, Bernard F. Huppe, Jack Kaminsky, Edith W. Schipper, Edward Schuh & Henry W. Johnstone - 1960 - Journal of Philosophy 57 (15):507.
  4.  34
    Albert E. Blumberg. Logic: A first course. Alfred A. Knopf, New York1976, xiv + 462 pp. [REVIEW]Leigh S. Cauman - 1979 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 44 (2):281.
  5.  25
    H. G. Bohnert. Logic: its use and basis. University Press of America, Washington, D.C., 1977, vi + 383 pp. [REVIEW]Leigh S. Cauman - 1980 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 45 (3):633.
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  6.  39
    The Parji Language, A Dravidian Language of Bastar.Leigh Lisker, T. Burrow & S. Bhattacharya - 1957 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 77 (2):154.
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  7.  24
    Chaos as opportunity.Dima Jamali, Ralf Barkemeyer, Jennifer S. A. Leigh & Georges Samara - 2020 - Business Ethics: A European Review 30 (1):1-3.
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  8.  28
    Want to get your paper published? Please follow this virtuous guidance!Dima Jamali, Jennifer S. A. Leigh, Ralf Barkemeyer & Georges Samara - 2020 - Business Ethics: A European Review 29 (2):245-247.
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  9.  36
    BE:ER is beyond suppression.Dima Jamali, Ralf Barkemeyer, Jennifer S. A. Leigh & Georges Samara - 2020 - Business Ethics: A European Review 29 (4).
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  10.  23
    A Reader's Guide to "Circus" and "Codex".James Leigh - 1977 - Substance 6 (17):27.
  11.  30
    Holloway's Marxism.Leigh Binford - 2005 - Historical Materialism 13 (4):251-263.
  12.  23
    How to be Political: Smith’s Primer for Pilgrim Citizens.Jennifer Leigh - 2019 - Studies in Christian Ethics 32 (1):108-112.
    This paper sets James K. A. Smith’s Awaiting the King against the background of the previous volumes in Smith’s Cultural Liturgies trilogy, and outlines this book’s argument for readers not familiar with it, bringing out the influence of St Augustine and Oliver O’Donovan. It draws attention to Smith’s responses within the book to earlier critics and, in turn, points towards two lines of critique of it.
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  13.  9
    Information loss in knowledge compilation: A comparison of Boolean envelopes.Peter Schachte, Harald Søndergaard, Leigh Whiting & Kevin Henshall - 2010 - Artificial Intelligence 174 (9-10):585-596.
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  14.  65
    God and Human Freedom.Leigh C. Vicens & Simon Kittle - 2019 - Cambridge University Press.
    This Element considers the relationship between the traditional view of God as all-powerful, all-knowing and wholly good on the one hand, and the idea of human free will on the other. It focuses on the potential threats to human free will arising from two divine attributes: God's exhaustive foreknowledge and God's providential control of creation.
  15.  17
    Blocking incidental frustration during bargaining.Maria Esperanza S. Vargas, Anna-Leigh Brown, Cassandra M. Durkee & Hoeun Sim - 2019 - Cognition and Emotion 33 (2):146-156.
    The current study examined the effects of an intervention aimed at blocking the transfer of frustration from a previous experience (i.e. recall task) to a subsequent and unrelated task (i.e. ultimatum bargaining task). Participants who went through the intervention were more likely to accept unfair offers in the ultimatum bargaining task than those who did not go through the intervention. These results show that participants who were blocked from transferring their feelings of frustration from the recall task to the subsequent (...)
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  16.  8
    The philosophy of Rabbi Shalom Ber Schneersohn: language, gender and mysticism.Reuven Leigh - 2023 - London: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Reuven Leigh provides the first in-depth introduction to the pioneering philosophy of Rabbi Shalom Schneersohn. Bringing him into dialogue with key continental philosophers Emmanuel Levinas, Jacques Derrida and Julia Kristeva, this book reveals how Schneersohn's views anticipated many prominent themes in 20th-century thought. Shalom Schneersohn (1860-1920) was the fifth Rebbe of the Habad-Lubavitch dynasty. He was a traditional, kabbalistic thinker and yet, beyond mysticism, he wrote extensively on speech, gender and the body. So why is he not better known? (...)
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  17.  27
    Today’s “Sexmission”: Bioethics and the Quest for Greater Understanding of Sexual and Gender Diversity.Leigh E. Rich & Michael A. Ashby - 2012 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 9 (3):229-233.
  18.  18
    The Theory of Being and the Argument for Forms in Plato’s Sophist.Fiona Leigh - 2024 - Phronesis 69 (4):402-438.
    This paper argues for two claims. First, that in the Sophist a metaphysical theory of being is constructed from the ground up, largely on the basis of a claim treated as an axiomatic principle, the ‘dunamis proposal’ (247d–e), which, I will argue, ought to be understood as Plato’s own definition of being. Second, once its core is in place, the theory is put to use to provide dialectical arguments against proponents of alternative metaphysical theories for the existence of various entities (...)
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  19. Ultimate issues in apocalyptic literature with special reference to Walker Percy's Love in the Ruins and the Thanatos syndrome.David J. Leigh - 2001 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 24 (3):181-208.
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  20.  23
    Hon, Tze-ki, Revolution as Restoration: Guocui Xuebao and China’s Path to Modernity, 1905–1911: Leiden: Brill, 2013, xiv + 136 pages.Leigh K. Jenco - 2016 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 15 (4):643-647.
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  21.  24
    John Locke's Rhetoric: Response to the Nominal Quandaries of Legitimate Communities.Leigh H. Holmes - 1996 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 29 (1):33 - 50.
    Using rhetorical analysis as a bridge, the essay attempts to reconcile the scientific Locke with Locke the social philosopher of rights who worked a persuasion against the fruits of social passivity and the status quo; the latter are represented by ingrained institutions like legal nonage and monarchy. The consistency between the two Lockes is language as it forwards understanding in a legitimating consensus. Ironically, iteration and nominalisms bind Locke's social contract; yet the linguistic reduction inherent in nominalisms precludes the production (...)
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  22.  28
    Climbing Jacob's Ladder: Crisis, Chiliasm, and Transcendence in the Thought of Paul Nagel (†1624), a Lutheran Dissident during the Time of the Thirty Years' War.Leigh T. I. Penman - 2010 - Intellectual History Review 20 (2):201-226.
    Although now forgotten, Paul Nagel was one of the most notorious seventeenth?century critics of orthodox Lutheranism. His Prognosticon Astrologo?Cabalisticum (1618) and Stellae Prodigiosae (1619), in which he sketched a complex astrological?prophetic system, were followed by numerous books and pamphlets over the next five years in which he predicted the arrival of the Last Judgement in 1666. Although the failure of his prophecies for 1624 led to a collapse of interest in his prognostications, he turns out to have been a key (...)
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  23. Ethics and science: Educating the public.R. Brownhill & L. Merricks - 2002 - Science and Engineering Ethics 8 (1):43-57.
    This article looks at the public debate which took place in the first half of the twentieth century and has repercussions to the present day. It was about the ethical stance of scientists, and how science should be organized. In particular, it examines the positions taken by Professor F. Soddy, F.R.S. and Nobel Laureate, who stressed the responsibility of scientists for the uses made of their research, Professor Michael Polanyi, F.R.S., who emphasised the obligation of scientists to the truth and (...)
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  24.  42
    The possibility of deep naturalism: a philosophy for ecology.Leigh Price - 2019 - Journal of Critical Realism 18 (4):352-367.
    ABSTRACTThis article presents a philosophy of science for ecology – deep naturalism – based on Roy Bhaskar’s transcendental realism. It includes a model of the emergence of ecosystems, analogous to...
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  25.  32
    Assimilation in the immediate reproduction of visually perceived figures.Jerome S. Bruner, Robert D. Busiek & A. Leigh Minturn - 1952 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 44 (3):151.
  26.  24
    Narrative, Thick Description, and Bioethics: Cases, Stories, and Simone de Beauvoir’s A Very Easy Death.Leigh Turner - 2001 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 12 (2):122-130.
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  27.  20
    Bhaskar’s philosophy as third generation systems theory, with implications for ethics and earth system stability.Leigh Price - 2023 - Journal of Critical Realism 22 (5):771-789.
    Bhaskar's philosophy supports society via a process of homeostasis to resist socioecological system disintegration by developing its values and ethics in response to endogenous and exogenous change. To the contrary, positivist (first generation) and hermeneuticist (second generation) approaches to systems theory have distorted humanity's mechanism of homeostasis because, amongst other things, they disallow the use of facts to guide values/actions. Since acting on knowledge is, ceteris paribus, a given in Bhaskar's approach, resolving socioecological system problems involves correcting the method of (...)
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  28. Communal morality: an analysis based on Michael Polanyi's concept of interpersonal knowledge.R. Brownhill - 2005 - Appraisal 5.
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  29.  14
    Age-related changes in ongoing thought relate to external context and individual cognition.Adam Turnbull, Giulia L. Poerio, Nerissa S. P. Ho, Léa M. Martinon, Leigh M. Riby, Feng V. Lin, Elizabeth Jefferies & Jonathan Smallwood - 2021 - Consciousness and Cognition 96 (C):103226.
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  30.  44
    ‘Heroines in the making’: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie as an instance of amour-propre in education.Leigh Campbell Garrison - 1990 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 10 (3):195-209.
    This paper addresses Rousseau's contribution to educational practice by illustrating the ways in which his notion of amour-propre distorts the teacher-student relationship in Muriel Spark's novel, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. Though some of Rousseau's pedagogical methods may appear impractical and problematic, his insights into the psychological distortions of amour-propre bear directly on teaching because it is such an important instance of the relationship between self and others. The protagonist, Jean Brodie, is shown to be not only an inadequate (...)
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  31.  48
    Augustine's Confessions as a Circular Journey.David J. Leigh - 1985 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 60 (1):73-88.
  32. Hume’s Two Causalities and Social Policy: Moon Rocks, Transfactuality, and the UK’s Policy on School Absenteeism.Leigh Price - 2014 - Journal of Critical Realism 13 (4):385-398.
    Hume maintained that, philosophically speaking, there is no difference between exiting a room out of the first-floor window and using the door. Nevertheless, Hume’s reason and common sense prevailed over his scepticism and he advocated that we should always use the door. However, we are currently living in a world that is more seriously committed to the Humean philosophy of empiricism than he was himself and thus the potential to act inappropriately is an ever-present potential. In this paper, I explore (...)
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  33.  11
    Ellul and the Weather.Leigh Glover & John Byrne - 2005 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 25 (1):4-16.
    Global climate change may result in a wide array of social and environmental harms, and this prospect has given rise to an international treaty, the 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. Scientific uncertainties, nation state politics, and economic resistance had to be addressed before this landmark environmental agreement could be realized. However, questions remain about the foundations and core commitments of this agreement. Ellul's characterology of technique is applied to the task of building a critique of the current international (...)
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  34. Employer’s Use of Social Networking Sites: A Socially Irresponsible Practice.Leigh A. Clark & Sherry J. Roberts - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 95 (4):507-525.
    The Internet has drastically changed how people interact, communicate, conduct business, seek jobs, find partners, and shop. Millions of people are using social networking sites to connect with others, and employers are using these sites as a source of background information on job applicants. Employers report making decisions not to hire people based on the information posted on social networking sites. Few employers have policies in place to govern when and how these online character checks should be used and how (...)
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  35. Being and Power in Plato's Sophist.Fiona Leigh - 2010 - Apeiron 43 (1):63-85.
  36. Platonic dialogue, maieutic method and critical thinking.Fiona Leigh - 2007 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 41 (3):309–323.
    In this paper I offer a reading of one of Plato's later works, the Sophist, that reveals it to be informed by principles comparable on the face of it with those that have emerged recently in the field of critical thinking. As a development of the famous Socratic method of his teacher, I argue, Plato deployed his own pedagogical method, a ‘mid‐wifely’ or ‘maieutic’ method, in the Sophist. In contrast to the Socratic method, the sole aim of this method is (...)
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  37.  32
    The eudemian ethics on the voluntary, friendship, and luck: the Sixth S.V. Keeling Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy.Fiona Leigh (ed.) - 2012 - Boston: Brill.
    The papers in this collection on Aristotle’s Eudemian Ethics by Charles, Rowe, McCabe, Whiting, and Buddensiek, offer new readings of Aristotle on the voluntary, friendship, and good fortune in the EE, by treating the EE on its own terms.
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  38.  40
    A return to common-sense: why ecology needs transcendental realism.Leigh Price - 2019 - Journal of Critical Realism 18 (1):31-44.
    Empirical realist ecologists, such as C. S. Holling, face significant methodological contradictions; for instance, they must cope with the problem that ecological models and theories of climate change, resilience and succession cannot make predictions in open systems. Generally, they respond to this problem by supplementing their empirical realism with transcendental idealism: they therefore say that their models are simply metaphorical or heuristic, that is, 'not true' in that they are not empirical. Thus, they explicitly deny an ontology for what their (...)
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  39.  12
    Update on the Use of Transcranial Electrical Brain Stimulation to Manage Acute and Chronic COVID-19 Symptoms.Giuseppina Pilloni, Marom Bikson, Bashar W. Badran, Mark S. George, Steven A. Kautz, Alexandre Hideki Okano, Abrahão Fontes Baptista & Leigh E. Charvet - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
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  40.  45
    The status and power of the good in Plato’s Republic.Fiona Leigh - 2023 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 31 (6):1269-1278.
    What is it for a judgement, action, or character state to be itself a good thing, so genuinely worth pursuing? Readers of Plato's Republic discover that that it is by standing in the right relation to the Form of the Good that other things are, or become, good. In her recent monograph, Plato's Sun-Like Good, Sarah Broadie inverts the standard interpretive strategy by focusing primarily on the role of the Good in dialectic, and drawing conclusions about its metaphysical status on (...)
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  41.  32
    Herbrand's theorem as higher order recursion.Bahareh Afshari, Stefan Hetzl & Graham E. Leigh - 2020 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 171 (6):102792.
  42.  37
    Action and Inaction in The Bhagavad Gita.Leigh Duffy - 2019 - Cultura 16 (1):7-21.
    In this paper, I address the seeming tension found in The Bhagavad Gita in our duties as described in the practice of Karma yoga. The path of Karma yoga involves renunciation and yet we also have an obligation to act righteously. How are we to simultaneously choose a path of duty and let go of what our actions along that path produce? I will argue that the seeming tension is a result of a misunderstanding of renunciation or non-attachment as well (...)
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  43. (1 other version)Asimov’s “three laws of robotics” and machine metaethics.Susan Leigh Anderson - 2008 - AI and Society 22 (4):477-493.
    Using Asimov’s “Bicentennial Man” as a springboard, a number of metaethical issues concerning the emerging field of machine ethics are discussed. Although the ultimate goal of machine ethics is to create autonomous ethical machines, this presents a number of challenges. A good way to begin the task of making ethics computable is to create a program that enables a machine to act an ethical advisor to human beings. This project, unlike creating an autonomous ethical machine, will not require that we (...)
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  44.  21
    The Structures of Greene's The Honorary Consul.Leigh - 1985 - Renascence 38 (1):13-24.
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  45.  26
    Responsible Management Education as Socialization: Business Students’ Values, Attitudes and Intentions.Debbie Haski-Leventhal, Mehrdokht Pournader & Jennifer S. A. Leigh - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 176 (1):17-35.
    The growing interest in sustainable development in all sectors of the economy has fostered a noteworthy shift toward responsible management education. This emerging view underscores that business schools provide students with more than just managerial knowledge as they also develop students toward responsible management. Based on socialization theory, we show how this development occurs by studying RME as a process that relates to students’ values, attitudes and behavioral intentions. With data from a large international survey of business students from 21 (...)
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  46.  33
    ‘I will know it when I taste it’: trust, food materialities and social media in Chinese alternative food networks.Leigh Martindale - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (2):365-380.
    Trust is often an assumed outcome of participation in Alternative Food Networks (AFNs) as they directly connect producers with consumers. It is based on this potential for trust “between producers and consumers” that AFNs have emerged as a significant field of food studies analysis as it also suggests a capacity for AFNs to foster associated embedded qualities, like ‘morality’, ‘social justice’, ‘ecology’ and ‘equity’. These positive benefits of AFNs, however, cannot be taken for granted as trust is not necessarily an (...)
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  47. The Copula and Semantic Continuity in Plato's Sophist.Fiona Leigh - 2008 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 34:105-121.
     
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  48.  14
    Contents of Hopes and Duties: A Linguistic Analysis.Leigh Ann Vaughn - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:314504.
    People in a prevention focus tend to view their goals as duties and obligations, whereas people in a promotion focus tend to view their goals as hopes and aspirations. The current research suggests that people’s attention goes to somewhat different experiences when they describe their hopes versus duties. Two studies randomly assigned participants (N = 953) to describe a hope versus duty. Specifically, Study 1 asked participants to describe a personal experience of pursuing a hope versus duty, and Study 2 (...)
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  49. Symposium: Are Certain Knowledge Frameworks More Congenial to the Aims of Cross-Cultural Philosophy?Leigh Jenco, Steve Fuller, David H. Kim, Thaddeus Metz & Miljana Milojevic - 2017 - Journal of World Philosophies 2 (2):99-107.
    In “Global Knowledge Frameworks and the Tasks of Cross-Cultural Philosophy,” Leigh Jenco searches for the conception of knowledge that best justifies the judgment that one can learn from non-local traditions of philosophy. Jenco considers four conceptions of knowledge, namely, in catchwords, the esoteric, Enlightenment, hermeneutic, and self- transformative conceptions of knowledge, and she defends the latter as more plausible than the former three. In this critical discussion of Jenco’s article, I provide reason to doubt the self-transformative conception, and also (...)
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  50.  19
    Chinese Political Ideologies.Leigh Jenco - 2013 - In Michael Freeden, Lyman Tower Sargent & Marc Stears (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Political Ideologies. Oxford University Press.
    This chapter examines modern Chinese political ideologies beginning in the late nineteenth century, as intellectuals began to articulate China’s place in a global order centred outside its own borders. It eschews a teleological view of China’s ideological development, in which the present communist regime is assumed to be the inevitable culmination of the past, in favour of detailing ongoing contestations about Chinese history, identity, and modernization. The chapter surveys early responses of the ‘self-strengthening’ school to nineteenth-century Western imperialism, going on (...)
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