Results for 'Marie O’Hara'

969 found
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  1.  6
    The Logic of Human Personality: An Onto-Logical Account.Mary Louise R. O'Hara - 1997 - Atlantic Highlands, NJ, USA: Humanity Books.
    The Logic of Human Personality shows how the ancient definition of person remains useful today, and explains how it happened to fall into disuse. The method of using the categories of Aristotle is illustrated by showing how action, relation, and time as well as the fundamental category of substance, can help us understand what it is to be a person. The Logic of Human Personality agrues, against Mill and others who have found Aristotle's categories unsatisfactory, that in fact they are (...)
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  2.  8
    (1 other version)The Person and the Body: Roman Rhetors and Greek Naturalists.Mary L. O'Hara - 1975 - Apeiron 9 (1).
  3.  20
    Some Marxist Theories of Human Personality.Mary L. O’Hara - 1979 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 53:115-123.
  4.  30
    The Vanishing Person.Mary L. O’Hara - 1995 - International Studies in Philosophy 27 (2):101-107.
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  5. Some Marxist Theories of Personality.Mary L. O'hara - 1979 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 53:115.
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  6.  59
    Education and Personal Relationships.Bernadette Macmahon, Margaret O’Brien & Marie O’Hara - 1974 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 23:260-262.
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  7.  13
    Thinking Through Art: Aesthetic Agency and Global Modernity.Daniel T. O'Hara & Alan Singer - 1998 - Duke University Press.
    In the eighteenth century the category of the aesthetic sought to bridge the gap between the prevalent dualities of Cartesian thought: art and science, history and science, prejudice and truth. This special issue of _boundary 2_ addresses current debates about the status of art in the context of global modernity. The range of arguments represented here cover a broad historical scope—from Cartesianism to present-day global modernity—of cultural discourse on the aesthetic to bring a focus to contemporary discussions of the corollary (...)
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  8. The Person and the Body: Roman Rhetors and Greek Naturalists.Mary L. O' Hara - 1977 - Apeiron 11 (1):43.
  9. Telling the tree: narrative representation and the study of evolutionary history.Robert J. O'Hara - 1992 - Biology and Philosophy 7 (2): 135–160.
    Accounts of the evolutionary past have as much in common with works of narrative history as they do with works of science. Awareness of the narrative character of evolutionary writing leads to the discovery of a host of fascinating and hitherto unrecognized problems in the representation of evolutionary history, problems associated with the writing of narrative. These problems include selective attention, narrative perspective, foregrounding and backgrounding, differential resolution, and the establishment of a canon of important events. The narrative aspects of (...)
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  10. Ōhara Yūgaku zenshū.Yūgaku Ōhara - 1943
     
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  11.  5
    (1 other version)Transcendent Teacher Learner Relationships: The Way of the Shamanic Teacher.Hunter O'Hara - 2020 - Brill | Sense.
    _Transcendent Teacher Learner Relationships: The Way of the Shamanic Teacher _ explores the nature of the transcendent teacher learner relationship and precisely how such relationships of warmth, safety, mutual care, mutual respect and mutual trust are developed and maintained.
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  12.  39
    Trees of History in Systematics, Historical Linguistics, and Stemmatics: A Working Interdisciplinary Bibliography.Robert J. O'Hara - 2006 - SSRN Electronic Journal 2540351.
    138 titles across a wide range of scholarly publications illustrate the conceptual affinities that connect the palaetiological sciences of biological systematics, historical linguistics, and stemmatics. These three fields all have as their central objective the reconstruction of evolutionary "trees of history" that depict phylogenetic patterns of descent with modification among species, languages, and manuscripts. All three fields flourished in the nineteenth century, underwent parallel periods of quiescence in the early twentieth century, and in recent decades have seen widespread parallel revivals. (...)
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  13.  31
    Experiments in Reading.Daniel T. O'Hara - 2009 - New Nietzsche Studies 8 (1-2):151-160.
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  14.  22
    Humanism and Education.Charles M. O'Hara - 1931 - Modern Schoolman 9 (1):10-13.
  15.  40
    Conservatism: Burke, Nozick, Bush, Blair?Kieron O'Hara - 2006 - Contemporary Political Theory 5 (3):354-358.
  16.  23
    Preface to an Educational Philosophy.Charles M. O'Hara - 1940 - Modern Schoolman 18 (1):20-20.
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  17.  20
    Word unitization examined using an interference paradigm.William O’Hara & Charles W. Eriksen - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 14 (2):81-84.
  18.  42
    Conservatism, Epistemology, and Value.Kieron O’Hara - 2016 - The Monist 99 (4):423-440.
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  19.  34
    Avoiding Omnidoxasticity in Logics of Belief: A Reply to MacPherson.Kieron O'Hara, Han Reichgelt & Nigel Shadbolt - 1995 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 36 (3):475-495.
    In recent work MacPherson argues that the standard method of modeling belief logically, as a necessity operator in a modal logic, is doomed to fail. The problem with normal modal logics as logics of belief is that they treat believers as "ideal" in unrealistic ways (i.e., as omnidoxastic); however, similar problems re-emerge for candidate non-normal logics. The authors argue that logics used to model belief in artificial intelligence (AI) are also flawed in this way. But for AI systems, omnidoxasticity is (...)
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  20.  14
    Evolutionary history and the species problem.Robert J. O'Hara - 1994 - American Zoologist 34 (1): 12–22.
    In the last thirty years systematics has transformed itself from a discipline concerned with classification into a discipline concerned with reconstructing the evolutionary history of life. This transformation has been driven by cladistic analysis, a set of techniques for reconstructing evolutionary trees. Long interested in the large-scale structure of evolutionary history, cladistically oriented systematists have recently begun to apply "tree thinking" to problems near the species level. ¶ In any local ("non-dimensional") situation species are usually well-defined, but across space and (...)
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  21.  23
    Lionel Trilling: The Work of Liberation.Daniel T. O'Hara - 1990 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 48 (1):103.
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  22.  42
    Population thinking and tree thinking in systematics.Robert J. O'Hara - 1997 - Zoologica Scripta 26 (4): 323–329.
    Two new modes of thinking have spread through systematics in the twentieth century. Both have deep historical roots, but they have been widely accepted only during this century. Population thinking overtook the field in the early part of the century, culminating in the full development of population systematics in the 1930s and 1940s, and the subsequent growth of the entire field of population biology. Population thinking rejects the idea that each species has a natural type (as the earlier essentialist view (...)
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  23.  45
    Mapping the space of time: temporal representation in the historical sciences.Robert J. O'Hara - 1996 - Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences 20: 7–17.
    William Whewell (1794–1866), polymathic Victorian scientist, philosopher, historian, and educator, was one of the great neologists of the nineteenth century. Although Whewell's name is little remembered today except by professional historians and philosophers of science, researchers in many scientific fields work each day in a world that Whewell named. "Miocene" and "Pliocene," "uniformitarian" and "catastrophist," "anode" and "cathode," even the word "scientist" itself—all of these were Whewell coinages. Whewell is particularly important to students of the historical sciences for another word (...)
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  24.  29
    American Exceptionalism in the Age of Globalization: The Specter of Vietnam (review).Daniel T. O’Hara - 2008 - Symploke 16 (1-2):366-368.
  25.  96
    3.3 Web Science and Reflective Practice.Kieron O'Hara & Wendy Hall - forthcoming - Common Knowledge: The Challenge of Transdisciplinarity.
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  26.  9
    Educational Outcomes of Adolescents Participating in Specialist Sport Programs in Low SES Areas of Western Australia: A Mixed Methods Study.Eibhlish O'Hara, Craig Harms, Fadi Ma'ayah & Craig Speelman - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Specialist Sport Programs are an underexamined activity that combines the best features of two different contexts for adolescent development: a sporting program and a secondary school. A mixed-methods study was conducted to determine the influence of participation in SSPs on the educational outcomes of lower secondary students in Western Australia. The results demonstrated a significant improvement in specialist students' mean grade for Mathematics over the course of a year, while their mean grade for all other subjects, and their level of (...)
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  27.  40
    Bristol Bay and Pebble Mine: Mutual Flourishing or Midas’ Touch.David L. O’Hara - 2018 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 21 (1):26-28.
    The Pebble Limited Partnership proposes to create the Pebble Mine, one of the world’s largest open-pit mines, in the Bristol Bay watershed, home to Alaska’s largest sockeye salmon fishery. De...
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  28.  39
    French Canada and the Council.J. Martin O’Hara - 1962 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 37 (3):325-329.
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  29.  14
    Gauß‘ Method for Measuring the Terrestrial Magnetic Force in Absolute Measure: Its Invention and Introduction in Geomagnetic Research.James G. O'Hara - 1984 - Centaurus 27 (2):121-147.
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  30.  53
    The Art of Reading as a Way of Life: On Nietzsche's Truth.Daniel T. O'Hara - 2009 - Northwestern University Press.
    The art of reading as a way of life: an introduction to Nietzsche's truth -- Experiments in creative reading: the Cambridge Nietzsche -- Nietzsche's passion in The gay science: an experiment in creative reading -- Nietzsche's book for all and none: the singularity of Thus spoke Zarathustra -- Ecce homo: Nietzsche's two natures -- Nietzsche's critical vortex: on the global tragedy of theoretical man.
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  31.  26
    The New Gallus and the Alternae Voces of Propertius 1.10.10.James J. O'hara - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (02):561-.
    In CQ 34 , 167–74, Janet Fairweather makes the interesting suggestion that the elegiacs by Gallus on the Qasr Ibrim papyrus should be understood as ‘a fragment of an amoebaean song-contest’. This hypothesis, as she notes, might explain why the papyrus' quatrains are set apart by spaces and by an odd type of symbol, and treat ‘separate, indeed discrepant, topics’, yet show ‘unmistakable verbal and thematic connections’. Fairweather's discussion is thorough, but overlooks one small piece of evidence for Gallan amoebaean (...)
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  32.  38
    Systematic generalization, historical fate, and the species problem.Robert J. O'Hara - 1993 - Systematic Biology 42 (3): 231–246.
    The species problem is one of the oldest controversies in natural history. Its persistence suggests that it is something more than a problem of fact or definition. Considerable light is shed on the species problem when it is viewed as a problem in the representation of the natural system (sensu Griffiths, 1974, Acta Biotheor. 23: 85–131; de Queiroz, 1998, Philos. Sci. 55: 238–259). Just as maps are representations of the earth, and are subject to what is called cartographic generalization, so (...)
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  33.  38
    Trust from the enlightenment to the digital enlightenment.Kieron O'Hara - unknown
    A conceptual analysis of trust in terms of trustworthiness is set out, where trustworthiness is the property of an agent that she does what she claims she will do, and trust is an attitude taken by an agent to another, that the former believes that the latter is trustworthy. This analysis is then used to explore issues in the deployment of trustworthy digital systems online. The ideas of a series of philosophers from the Enlightenment – Hobbes, Burke, Rousseau, Hume, Smith (...)
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  34.  21
    Response to Pandey and Torlone, with Brief Remarks on the Harvard School.James J. O'Hara - 2017 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 111 (1):47-52.
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  35.  29
    A History of Mathematics Education in EnglandGeoffrey Howson.James O'hara - 1984 - Isis 75 (3):575-575.
  36.  44
    G. K. Chesterton and the Environmental Ethic.Frank O'Hara - 1990 - The Chesterton Review 16 (3/4):239-243.
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  37.  40
    Some anecdotes about Wittgenstein.Neil O'Hara - 2023 - Philosophical Investigations 46 (4):411-413.
    This brief notice records anecdotes about Wittgenstein gathered from Br. Herbert Kaden OSB.
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  38.  25
    Measuring man's needs.Jane O'Hara-May - 1971 - Journal of the History of Biology 4 (2):249-273.
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  39.  33
    The technology of collective memory and the normativity of truth.Kieron O'Hara - unknown
    Neither our evolutionary past, nor our pre-literate culture, has prepared humanity for the use of technology to provide records of the past, records which in many context become normative for memory. The demand that memory be true, rather than useful or pleasurable, has changed our social and psychological under-standing of ourselves and our fellows. The current vogue for lifelogging, and the rapid proliferation of digital memory-supporting technologies, may accelerate this change, and create dilemmas for policymakers, designers and social thinkers.
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  40.  64
    Consensus, Difference and Sexuality: Que(e)rying the European Court of Human Rights’ Concept of‘ European Consensus’.Claerwen O’Hara - 2021 - Law and Critique 32 (1):91-114.
    This paper provides a queer critique of the European Court of Human Rights’ use of ‘European consensus’ as a method of interpretation in cases concerning sexuality rights. It argues that by routinely invoking the notion of ‘consensus’ in such cases, the Court (re)produces discourses and induces performances of sexuality and Europeanness that emphasise sameness and agreement, while simultaneously suppressing expressions of difference and dissent. As a result, this paper contends that the Court’s use of European consensus has ultimately functioned to (...)
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  41.  9
    Joseph Conrad Today.Kieron O'Hara - 2007 - Imprint Academic.
    This book argues that the novelist Joseph Conrad's work speaks directly to us in a way that none of his contemporaries can. Conrad’s scepticism, pessimism, emphasis on the importance and fragility of community, and the difficulties of escaping our history are important tools for understanding the political world in which we live. He is prepared to face a future where progress is not inevitable, where actions have unintended consequences, and where we cannot know the contexts in which we act. _Heart (...)
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  42. Ethical Response to Climate Change.Dennis Patrick O'Hara & Alan Abelsohn - 2011 - Ethics and the Environment 16 (1):25-50.
    The same attitudes that allowed a significant increase in the anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations that are causing climate change are the same attitudes that are retarding an adequate ethical response to the impact that climate change is having on both human populations and the rest of the planet. The industrialized nations of the West paid little attention during the past three centuries to the impacts that their economies and cultures were having on the environment, both locally and globally. There (...)
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  43. There is no hard problem of consciousness.Kieron O'Hara & Tom Scutt - 1996 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 3 (4):290-302.
    The paper attempts to establish the importance of addressing what Chalmers calls the ‘easy problems’ of consciousness, at the expense of the ‘hard problem’. One pragmatic argument and two philosophical arguments are presented to defend this approach to consciousness, and three major theories of consciousness are criticized in this light. Finally, it is shown that concentration on the easy problems does not lead to eliminativism with respect to consciousness.
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  44.  44
    Ockham’s Razor Today.Gerard O’Hara - 1963 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 12 (1):125-139.
  45.  51
    Gestalt Psychology. [REVIEW]Charles M. O’Hara - 1929 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 4 (2):335-337.
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  46.  42
    Education and the Class Struggle.Charles M. O.‘Hara - 1938 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 13 (2):316-321.
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  47.  9
    Plato and the Internet.Kieron O'Hara - 2002 - Cambridge, England: Totem Books.
    The latest in Icon's thought-provoking Postmodern Encounters series looks at the philosophical history of the question: what is knowledge?
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  48.  39
    Pregnancy in a severely mentally handicapped adult.J. O'Hara - 1989 - Journal of Medical Ethics 15 (4):197-199.
    What happens when we discover that a severely mentally handicapped girl, resident under our care, is heavily pregnant? What options are open to us in her management? What are the legal and ethical issues involved? How do we ensure that she receives the best possible care and protection and will the involvement of the police actually make the situation worse? Few of us have had the experience of working through such dilemmas, and little help can be found in consulting 'experts' (...)
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  49.  15
    Person in the Philosophy of Gabriel Marcel.Sister M. Kevin O'Hara - 1964 - Philosophy Today 8 (3):147-154.
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  50.  24
    Diagrammatic classifications of birds, 1819–1901: views of the natural system in 19th-century British ornithology.Robert J. O'Hara - 1988 - Acta XIX Congressus Internationalis Ornithologici: pp. 2746–2759.
    Classifications of animals and plants have long been represented by hierarchical lists of taxa, but occasional authors have drawn diagrammatic versions of their classifications in an attempt to better depict the "natural relationships" of their organisms. Ornithologists in 19th-century Britain produced and pioneered many types of classificatory diagrams, and these fall into three groups: (a) the quinarian systems of Vigors and Swainson (1820s and 1830s); (b) the "maps" of Strickland and Wallace (1840s and 1850s); and (c) the evolutionary diagrams of (...)
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