Results for 'Lloyd Motz'

940 found
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  1.  7
    The World of the Atom by Henry A. Boorse; Lloyd Motz[REVIEW]Robert Kargon - 1967 - Isis 58:122-123.
  2.  60
    Books on the BombAtomic Bomb Scientists: Memoirs, 1939-1945Joseph J. ErmencThe End of the World That Was: Six Lives in the Atomic AgePeter GoldmanManhattan: The Army and the Atomic BombVincent C. JonesDay of the Bomb: Countdown to HiroshimaDan KurzmanThe General and the Bomb: A Biography of General Leslie R. Groves, Director of the Manhattan ProjectWilliam LawrenTime Bomb: Fermi, Heisenberg, and the Race for the Atomic BombMalcolm C. MacPhersonThe Making of the Atomic AgeAlwyn McKayThe Road to Trinity: A Personal Account of How America's Nuclear Policies Were MadeK. D. NicholsThe Making of the Atomic BombRichard RhodesStallion GateMartin Cruz SmithThe Atomic Scientists: A Biographical HistoryHenry A. Boorse Lloyd Motz Jefferson Hane WeaverForging the Atomic Shield: Excerpts from the Office Diary of Gordon E. DeanGordon E. Dean Roger M. AndersThe Nuclear Oracles: A Political History of the General Advisory Committee of the Atomic Energy Commission, 1947-1977Richard T. SylvesBetter a Shi. [REVIEW]Robert Seidel - 1990 - Isis 81 (3):519-537.
  3.  26
    The Man of Reason: "Male" and "Female" in Western Philosophy.Genevieve Lloyd, Joan Kelly & Judith Hicks Stiehm - 1986 - Ethics 96 (3):652-654.
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  4.  22
    Adversaries and Authorities: Investigations into Ancient Greek and Chinese Science.G. E. R. Lloyd & Geoffrey Ernest Richard Lloyd - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    Did science and philosophy develop differently in ancient Greece and ancient China? If so, can we say why? This book consists of a series of detailed studies of cosmology, natural philosophy, mathematics and medicine that suggest the answer to the first question is yes. To answer the second, the author relates the science produced in each ancient civilization first to the values of the society in question and then to the institutions within which the scientists and philosophers worked.
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  5.  69
    Criteria for Holobionts from Community Genetics.Elisabeth A. Lloyd & Michael J. Wade - 2019 - Biological Theory 14 (3):151-170.
    We address the controversy in the literature concerning the definition of holobionts and the apparent constraints on their evolution using concepts from community population genetics. The genetics of holobionts, consisting of a host and diverse microbial symbionts, has been neglected in many discussions of the topic, and, where it has been discussed, a gene-centric, species-centric view, based in genomic conflict, has been predominant. Because coevolution takes place between traits or genes in two or more species and not, strictly speaking, between (...)
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  6. The Nature of Darwin’s Support for the Theory of Natural Selection.Elisabeth A. Lloyd - 1983 - Philosophy of Science 50 (1):112-129.
    When natural selection theory was presented, much active philosophical debate, in which Darwin himself participated, centered on its hypothetical nature, its explanatory power, and Darwin's methodology. Upon first examination, Darwin's support of his theory seems to consist of a set of claims pertaining to various aspects of explanatory success. I analyze the support of his method and theory given in the Origin of Species and private correspondence, and conclude that an interpretation focusing on the explanatory strengths of natural selection theory (...)
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  7. #MeToo & the role of Outright Belief.Alexandra Lloyd - 2022 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 25 (2):181-197.
    In this paper, I provide an account of the wrong that is done to women when everyday people fail to believe allegations of sexual assault made by women. I argue that an everyday person wrongs both the accuser and women causally distant from the accuser when they fail to believe the accuser’s allegation. First, I argue that there are responses that we, as everyday members of society, owe to victims of sexual assault. A condition enabling everyday people to respond in (...)
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  8. A semantic approach to the structure of population genetics.Elisabeth A. Lloyd - 1984 - Philosophy of Science 51 (2):242-264.
    A precise formulation of the structure of modern evolutionary theory has proved elusive. In this paper, I introduce and develop a formal approach to the structure of population genetics, evolutionary theory's most developed sub-theory. Under the semantic approach, used as a framework in this paper, presenting a theory consists in presenting a related family of models. I offer general guidelines and examples for the classification of population genetics models; the defining features of the models are taken to be their state (...)
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  9. Contra-classical logics.Lloyd Humberstone - 2000 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 78 (4):438 – 474.
    Only propositional logics are at issue here. Such a logic is contra-classical in a superficial sense if it is not a sublogic of classical logic, and in a deeper sense, if there is no way of translating its connectives, the result of which translation gives a sublogic of classical logic. After some motivating examples, we investigate the incidence of contra-classicality (in the deeper sense) in various logical frameworks. In Sections 3 and 4 we will encounter, originally as an example of (...)
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  10.  41
    (1 other version)The limits of cognitive liberalism.Dan Lloyd - 1986 - Behaviorism 14 (1):1-14.
    The central characteristic of cognitive explanations of behavior is the appeal to inner representations. I examine the grounds which justify representational explanations, seeking the minimum conditions which organisms must meet to be candidates for such explanations. I first discuss Fodor's proposal that representationality be attributed to systems which respond to nonnomic properties, arguing that the distinction between the nomic and nonnomic in perception is fatally ambiguous. Then I turn to an illustrative review of the behavior and neurobiology of Hermissenda crassicornis, (...)
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  11.  90
    Saving the Appearances.G. E. R. Lloyd - 1978 - Classical Quarterly 28 (01):202-.
    ‘Saving the appearances’, , is a slogan that, in its time, stood or was made to stand for many different methodological positions in many different branches of ancient natural science. It is not my aim, in this paper, to attempt to tackle the subject as a whole. I shall concentrate on just one inquiry, astronomy. Nor, with astronomy, can I do justice to all the complexities of what was certainly one of the central methodological issues, if not the central issue, (...)
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  12.  46
    (1 other version)The Epicurus Reader: Selected Writings and Testimonia.Lloyd P. Gerson - 1994 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction The ancient biography of Epicurus The extant letters Ancient collections of maxims Doxographical reports The testimony of Cicero The testimony of Lucretius The polemic of Plutarch Short fragments and testimonia from known works: * From On Nature * From the Puzzles * From On the Goal * From the Symposium * From Against Theophrastus * Fragments of Epicurus' letters Short fragments and testimonia from uncertain works: * Logic and epistemology * Physics and theology * Ethics Index.
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  13. (1 other version)Magic, Reason and Experience.G. E. R. Lloyd - 1981 - Philosophy 56 (217):433-435.
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  14. Functional MRI and the study of human consciousness.Dan Lloyd - 2002 - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 14 (6):818-831.
    & Functional brain imaging offers new opportunities for the begin with single-subject (preprocessed) scan series, and study of that most pervasive of cognitive conditions, human consider the patterns of all voxels as potential multivariate consciousness. Since consciousness is attendant to so much encodings of phenomenal information. Twenty-seven subjects of human cognitive life, its study requires secondary analysis from the four studies were analyzed with multivariate of multiple experimental datasets. Here, four preprocessed methods, revealing analogues of phenomenal structures, datasets from the (...)
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  15.  53
    Authorization and Moral Responsibility in the Philosophy of Hobbes.S. A. Lloyd - 2016 - Hobbes Studies 29 (2):169-188.
  16. A structural approach to defining units of selection.Elisabeth A. Lloyd - 1989 - Philosophy of Science 56 (3):395-418.
    The conflation of two fundamentally distinct issues has generated serious confusion in the philosophical and biological literature concerning the units of selection. The question of how a unit of selection of defined, theoretically, is rarely distinguished from the question of how to determine the empirical accuracy of claims--either specific or general--concerning which unit(s) is undergoing selection processes. In this paper, I begin by refining a definition of the unit of selection, first presented in the philosophical literature by William Wimsatt, which (...)
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  17.  24
    Knowing Persons: A Study in Plato.Lloyd Gerson - 2004 - Philosophical Quarterly 54 (216):463-465.
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  18. (2 other versions)Aristotle: The Growth and Structure of His Thought.G. E. R. LLOYD - 1968 - Philosophy 44 (168):163-164.
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  19.  93
    The Development of Aristotle's Theory of the Classification of Animals.G. E. R. Lloyd - 1961 - Phronesis 6 (1):59-81.
  20. Aristotle on Mind and the Senses.G. E. R. Lloyd & G. E. L. Owen - 1979 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 41 (2):319-319.
  21. (1 other version)Science, Folklore and Ideology. Studies in the Life Sciences in Ancient Greece.G. E. R. Lloyd - 1984 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 174 (4):447-451.
  22.  33
    Aristotle.A. C. Lloyd - 1961 - Philosophical Books 2 (4):1-2.
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  23.  92
    Thinking about Models in Evolutionary Theory.Elisabeth A. Lloyd - 1986 - Philosophica 37.
  24.  43
    Socrates' Absolutist Prohibition of Wrongdoing.Lloyd P. Gerson - 1997 - Apeiron 30 (4):1 - 11.
  25.  73
    A qualitative analysis of sensory phenomena induced by perceptual deprivation.Donna M. Lloyd, Elizabeth Lewis, Jacob Payne & Lindsay Wilson - 2012 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 11 (1):95-112.
    Previous studies have shown that misperceptions and illusory experiences can occur if sensory stimulation is withdrawn or becomes invariant even for short periods of time. Using a perceptual deprivation paradigm, we created a monotonous audiovisual environment and asked participants to verbally report any auditory, visual or body-related phenomena they experienced. The data (analysed using a variant of interpretative phenomenological analysis) revealed two main themes: (1) reported sensory phenomena have different spatial characteristics ranging from simple percepts to the feeling of immersion (...)
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  26.  54
    Reason, Gender, and Morality in the History of Philosophy.Genevieve Lloyd - 1983 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 50.
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  27.  49
    A criticism of social theory: An ethical perspective.Scott Lloyd - 1991 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 6 (4):199 – 209.
    The surface appeal of the Social Responsibility theory of the press emerging in the report of the Commission on Freedom of the Press in 1947 has made Social Responsibility theory broadly acceptable. Yet, I declare it inconsistent with the American social system. Three concepts are discussed - societal obligation, individual rights, and interpersonal relationships - as necessary for a new moral theory that serves valid societal goals.
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  28. Leibniz on whether the world increases in perfection.Lloyd Strickland - 2006 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 14 (1):51 – 68.
  29.  44
    Access denied.Dan Lloyd - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (2):261-262.
    The information processing that constitutes accessconsciousness is not sufficient to make a representational state conscious in any sense. Standard examples of computation without consciousness undermine A-consciousness, and Block's cases seem to derive their plausibility from a lurking phenomenal awareness. That is, people and other minded systems seem to have access-consciousness only insofar as the state accessed is a phenomenal one, or the state resulting from access is phenomenal, or both.
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  30. Theories and practices of demonstration in Galen.G. E. R. Lloyd - 1996 - In Michael Frede & Gisela Striker (eds.), Rationality in Greek thought. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  31.  42
    The End of the Seven Against Thebes.Hugh Lloyd-Jones - 1959 - Classical Quarterly 9 (1-2):80-.
    So many scholars nowadays believe that the final scenes of the Seven against Thebes as we have them have been considerably distorted and interpolated that some may not be aware that such an opinion was first expressed little more than ioo years ago. The first scholar to do so was A. Scholl, who afterwards recanted.
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  32. Knowledge and Being in the Recollection Argument.Lloyd P. Gerson - 1999 - Apeiron 32 (4):1-16.
  33.  63
    Investigations into a left-structural right-substructural sequent calculus.Lloyd Humberstone - 2007 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 16 (2):141-171.
    We study a multiple-succedent sequent calculus with both of the structural rules Left Weakening and Left Contraction but neither of their counterparts on the right, for possible application to the treatment of multiplicative disjunction against the background of intuitionistic logic. We find that, as Hirokawa dramatically showed in a 1996 paper with respect to the rules for implication, the rules for this connective render derivable some new structural rules, even though, unlike the rules for implication, these rules are what we (...)
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  34. Feminism As Method.Elisabeth A. Lloyd - 1995 - Philosophical Topics 23 (2):189-220.
  35.  81
    The role of medical and biological analogies in Aristotle's etbics.G. E. R. Lloyd - 1968 - Phronesis 13 (1):68-83.
  36.  72
    False though partly true – an experiment in logic.Lloyd Humberstone - 2003 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 32 (6):613-665.
    We explore in an experimental spirit the prospects for extending classical propositional logic with a new operator P intended to be interpreted when prefixed to a formula as saying that formula in question is at least partly true. The paradigm case of something which is, in the sense envisaged, false though still "partly" true is a conjunction one of whose conjuncts is false while the other is true. Ideally, we should like such a logic to extend classical logic - or (...)
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  37.  17
    Neoplatonic Philosophy: Introductory Readings.Lloyd Gerson & John M. Dillon - 2004 - Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Press.
    The most comprehensive collection of Neoplatonic writings available in English, this volume provides translations of the central texts of four major figures of the Neoplatonic tradition: Plotinus, Porphyry, Iamblichus, and Proclus. The general Introduction gives an overview of the period and takes a brief but revealing look at the history of ancient philosophy from the viewpoint of the Neoplatonists. Historical background--essential for understanding these powerful, difficult, and sometimes obscure thinkers--is provided in extensive footnotes, which also include cross-references to other works (...)
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  38.  79
    Climate Change Attribution.Elisabeth A. Lloyd & Naomi Oreskes - 2019 - Epistemology and Philosophy of Science 56 (1):185-201.
    A specific form of research question, for instance, “What is the probability of a certain class of weather events, given global climate change, relative to a world without?” could be answered with the use of FAR or RR (Fraction of Attributable Risk or Risk Ratio) as the most common approaches to discover and ascribe extreme weather events. Kevin Trenberth et al. (2015) and Theodore Shepherd (2016) have expressed doubts in their latest works whether it is the most appropriate explanatory tool (...)
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  39.  31
    Reasoning and Culture in a Historical Perspective.G. E. R. Lloyd - 2013 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 13 (5):437-457.
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  40.  82
    Aspects of the interrelations of medicine, magic and philosophy in ancient greece.G. E. R. Lloyd - 1975 - Apeiron 9 (1):1 - 16.
  41.  25
    Curses and divine anger in early Greek epic: the Pisander Scholion.Hugh Lloyd-Jones - 2002 - Classical Quarterly 52 (1):1-14.
  42.  59
    The Helen Scene in Euripides' Troades.Michael Lloyd - 1984 - Classical Quarterly 34 (02):303-.
    Troades has often been thought to lack any coherent structure, and this has been variously attributed to its being the last play of the trilogy and to Euripides' overriding concern to impress the horrors of war upon his fellow Athenians. More recently, however, attention has been drawn to how the constant presence of Hecuba gives unity to the play and to how it is articulated by the striking entries of Cassandra, Andromache, and Helen. Cassandra and Andromache enter in mock triumph, (...)
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  43.  49
    Tycho Von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff on the Dramatic technique of Sophocles.Hugh Lloyd-Jones - 1972 - Classical Quarterly 22 (02):214-.
    No project lay nearer to the heart of Eduard Fraenkel during his last years than that of promoting a reprint of the famous book Die dramatische Technik des Sophokles, by Tycho von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, which was first published as volume xxii of Philologische Untersuchungen in 1917. Tycho Wilamowitz, the son of Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff and the grandson of Theodor Mommsen, was killed fighting against the Russians near Ivangorod on the night of 14/15 October 1914. After his death the manuscript was prepared (...)
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  44.  90
    Geach’s Categorial Grammar.Lloyd Humberstone - 2004 - Linguistics and Philosophy 28 (3):281 - 317.
    Geach’s rich paper ‘A Program for Syntax’ introduced many ideas into the arena of categorial grammar, not all of which have been given the attention they warrant in the thirty years since its first publication. Rather surprisingly, one of our findings (Section 3 below) is that the paper not only does not contain a statement of what has widely come to be known as “Geach’s Rule”, but in fact presents considerations which are inimical to the adoption of the rule in (...)
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  45.  19
    Seeing Gaza: Objectivity and Emotion.Genevieve Lloyd - forthcoming - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry:1-4.
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  46.  22
    Awakening Movement Consciousness in the Physical Landscapes of Literacy: Leaving, Reading and Being Moved by One’s Trace.Rebecca J. Lloyd - 2011 - Phenomenology and Practice 5 (2):73-92.
    Physical literacy, a concept introduced by Britain’s physical education and phenomenological scholar, Margaret Whitehead, who aligned the term with her monist view of the human condition and emphasis that we are essentially embodied beings in-the-world, is a foundational hub of recent physical education curricular revision. The adoption of the term serves a political purpose as it helps stakeholders advocate for the educational, specifically literacy, rights of the whole child. Yet, one might wonder what impact conceptual shifts of becoming “physically literate” (...)
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  47.  55
    Duty Without Obligation.S. A. Lloyd - 2017 - Hobbes Studies 30 (2):202-221.
    _ Source: _Volume 30, Issue 2, pp 202 - 221 There is ongoing scholarly debate over the role that Hobbes’s laws of nature play in grounding the moral requirement that subjects obey the government under which they live. This essay demonstrates how the laws of nature, when understood as natural duties, may directly ground a moral duty to obey one’s sovereign without positing that subjects have undertaken any covenant of subjection. Such a grounding avoids the problems that attend accounts that (...)
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  48.  45
    On Gillian Rose and Love.Vincent Lloyd - 2008 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2008 (143):47-62.
    The contemporary American philosopher David Velleman recently noted, “Love is a moral emotion precisely in the sense that its spirit is closely akin to that of morality.”1 Although their kindred spirits are manifest, it is the tension between love and morality that at first glance is striking. Love seems to be supremely personal, unique to one individual and directed at another for highly contingent and possibly mysterious reasons. Even if Kantian or Utilitarian fantasies of objective morality are dismissed, the common (...)
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  49.  32
    Kalpana Rahita Seshadri: HumAnimal: race, law, language: University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2012, 309 pp, 1 b&w photo, price: $25 , ISBN: 9780816677894.Chris Lloyd - 2016 - Feminist Legal Studies 24 (1):107-110.
  50.  11
    (1 other version)The Cambridge Companion to Plotinus.Lloyd P. Gerson (ed.) - 1996 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    Each volume of this series of companions to major philosophers contains specially commissioned essays by an international team of scholars, together with a substantial bibliography, and will serve as a reference work for students and non-specialists. One aim of the series is to dispel the intimidation such readers often feel when faced with the work of a difficult and challenging thinker. Plotinus was the greatest philosopher in the 700-year period between Aristotle and Augustine. He thought of himself as a disciple (...)
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