Results for 'Mark St John'

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  1.  17
    Learning and applying contextual constraints in sentence comprehension.Mark F. St John & James L. McClelland - 1990 - Artificial Intelligence 46 (1-2):217-257.
  2. Characteristics of dissociable human learning systems.David R. Shanks & Mark F. St John - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (3):367-447.
    A number of ways of taxonomizing human learning have been proposed. We examine the evidence for one such proposal, namely, that there exist independent explicit and implicit learning systems. This combines two further distinctions, (1) between learning that takes place with versus without concurrent awareness, and (2) between learning that involves the encoding of instances (or fragments) versus the induction of abstract rules or hypotheses. Implicit learning is assumed to involve unconscious rule learning. We examine the evidence for implicit learning (...)
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  3.  28
    Implicit learning: What does it all mean?David R. Shanks & Mark F. St John - 1996 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (3):557-558.
    In the original target article (Shanks & St. John 1994), one of our principal conclusions was that there is almost no evidence that learning can occur outside awareness. The continuing commentaries raise some interesting questions, especially about the definition of learning, but do not lead us to abandon our conclusion.
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  4.  36
    How should implicit learning be characterized?David R. Shanks & Mark F. St John - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (3):427-447.
  5. The exploratorium's explainer program: The long‐term impacts on teenagers of teaching science to the public.Judy Diamond, Mark St John, Beth Cleary & Darlene Librero - 1987 - Science Education 71 (5):643-656.
     
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  6. Mystery, Humility and Religious Practice in the Thought of St John of the Cross.Mark Wynn - 2012 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 4 (3):89--108.
    The ”dark night of the soul’ is a common motif in Christian spiritual writing; and the locus classicus for this motif is the work of John of the Cross, a Spanish Carmelite friar of the sixteenth century. My aim in this paper is to use John’s account of the ”night’ to consider how the themes of mystery, humility and religious practice may be subsumed, and related to one another, within a Christian conception of God and of human life (...)
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  7.  33
    The Autograph Hand of John Lydgate and a Manuscript from Bury St. Edmunds Abbey.Mark Faulkner & W. H. E. Sweet - 2012 - Speculum 87 (3):766-792.
    The prolific English poet John Lydgate has been known as the “monk of Bury” since the early fifteenth century. Both his popularity and perceptions of his literary merit have fluctuated wildly since his zenith as the famous laureate of Henry V, Henry VI and Duke Humphrey, but readers have been constant in their association of Lydgate with the Benedictine abbey from which the epithet derives. However, there has been remarkably little examination of the details of Lydgate's existence at Bury: (...)
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  8.  73
    St. Thomas’s De Trinitate, Q. 5, A. 2 Ad 3.Mark F. Johnson - 1989 - New Scholasticism 63 (1):58-65.
    My first article, back in 1989! Thanks, forever, Ralph McInerny. Here I take issue with John F.X. Knasas, a strong supporter of the existential Thomism of Etienne Gilson and Joseph Owens. Knasas's desire to sequester Thomas away from allowing the discipline of natural philosophy to arrive at a fully immaterial reality through its proper demonstrative methods seemed to me to be at odds with Thomas's text.
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  9.  8
    Revisiting BISFT Summer School 1998, The College of St Mark and St John Plymouth, ‘Women Facing the Boundaries of Difference’.Mary Grey - 2019 - Feminist Theology 27 (3):253-269.
    In her paper Expelled Again from Eden: Facing Difference through Connection, delivered in Plymouth in 1998, Mary Grey said the story of the Garden of Eden was a dilemma for Feminist Theologians. This because it both bears responsibility for the Fall of relationship between God and Man and the misogyny that has ensued through the ages but also underpinning the desire to return to a supposed golden age of matriarchy with the re-emergence of the Goddess and a related ecological and (...)
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  10.  27
    Ruskin and St. Mark's.Mary Ann Stankiewicz & John Unrau - 1986 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 20 (3):117.
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  11.  77
    John Freeman, hay fever and the origins of clinical allergy in Britain, 1900–1950.Mark Jackson - 2003 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 34 (3):473-490.
    In 1911, Drs John Freeman and Leonard Noon published an account of a novel treatment for hay fever. Their method of desensitisation consisted of injecting increasing doses of an extract of pollen subcutaneously until the hypersensitivity reaction was diminished or abolished. Over subsequent decades, desensitisation established itself as the cornerstone of clinical allergy in both England and the United States, at least until the advent of novel pharmaceutical agents in the 1950s and 1960s. Although British allergists such as Noon (...)
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  12.  61
    Collected Works of John Stuart Mill: The Earlier Letters of John Stuart Mill 1812-1848. Vol. 12-13.John Stuart Mill - 1963 - Collected Works of John Stuart Mill.
    Of John Stuart Mill's major commitments, none was more passionately pursued than equality; it marks his writings throughout his life, and serves as a uniting force in his comments on many subjects, especially lawand education. This volume presents, in scholarly form for the first time, writings that reveal his goals and methods in diverse circumstances. They begin with his precocious essay on the law of libel and include his influential Subjection of Women, his major essays on slavery, his Inaugural (...)
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  13.  61
    Financial Conflicts of Interest in Human Subjects Research: The Problem of Institutional Conflicts.Mark Barnes & Patrik S. Florencio - 2002 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 30 (3):390-402.
    In both academic literature and the media, financial conflicts of interest in human subjects research have come center-stage. The cover of a recent edition of Time magazine features a research subject in a cage with the caption human guinea pigs, signifying perhaps that human research subjects are no more protected from research abuses than are laboratory animals. That magazine issue highlights three well-publicized cases of human subjects research violations that occurred at the University of Oklahoma, the University of Pennsylvania, and (...)
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  14.  55
    Confronting Poverty and Stigmatization.John D. Jones - 2006 - Philosophy and Theology 18 (1):169-194.
    The paper develops a preliminary framework for confronting poverty within the Eastern Orthodox Christian tradition. In the first section, I draw on St. Gregory of Nazianzus’s Oration 14 to discuss what is called the stigma of poverty. Although stigmatization is not essentially linked to everyday economic poverty, poor people as such are often subjected to stigmatization. For example, disaffiliation grounded in social rejection was often a distinguishing mark between pôtchos and penês. Moreover, stigmatization in itself constitutes its own form (...)
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  15.  9
    The Concept of Poverty in St. Thomas Aquinas’s Contra Impugnantes Dei Cultum et Religionem.John D. Jones - 1995 - The Thomist 59 (3):409-439.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:THE CONCEPT OF POVERTY IN ST. THOMAS AQUINAS'S CONTRA IMPUGNANTES DE/ CULTUM ET RELIGIONEM JOHN D. ]ONES Marquette University Milwaukee, Wisconsin MEDIEVAL CONCEPTIONS of poverty have been given ongoing and serious attention by scholars during this century. The extensive literature on the nature and practice of poverty among the Franciscans bears witness to this. Serious investigation of St. Thomas Aquinas's understanding of poverty, however, is virtually nonexistent. Except (...)
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  16.  31
    A theology for europe: Universality and particularity in Christian theology.Mark D. Chapman - 1994 - Heythrop Journal 35 (2):125–139.
    Hermeneutics, the Bible and Literary Criticism. Edited by Ann Loades and Michael McLain.The Craft of Theology: From Symbol to System. By Avery Dulles.The Shape of Soreriology. By John McIntyre.Not the Cross But the Crucfied. By H.‐E. Mertens.Verbum Curo: An Encyclopedia on Jesus, the Christ. By Michael O'Carroll.The Search for the Origins of Christian Worship: Sources and Methods for the Study of the Early Liturgy. By Paul Bradshaw.Worship: Initiation and the Churches. By Leonel L. Mitchell.The Eucharistic Mystery: Revitalizing the Tradition. (...)
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  17.  31
    Resuscitation during the pandemic: Optional obligation? or supererogation?Jonathan Perkins, Mark Hamilton, Charlotte Canniff, Craig Gannon, Marianne Illsley, Paul Murray, Kate Scribbins, Martin Stockwell, Justin Wilson & Ann Gallagher - forthcoming - Sage Publications: Clinical Ethics.
    Clinical Ethics, Ahead of Print. This paper is a response to a recent BMJ Blog: ‘The duty to treat: where do the limits lie?’ Members of the Surrey Heartlands Integrated Care Service Clinical Ethics Group reflected on arguments in the Blog in relation to resuscitation during the COVID-19 pandemic.Clinicians have had to contend with ever-changing and conflicting guidance from the Resuscitation Council UK and Public Health England regarding personal protective equipment requirements in resuscitation situations. St John Ambulance had different (...)
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  18.  5
    The Theology of Henri de Lubac: An Overview by Hans Urs Von Balthasar.Mark D. Napack - 1994 - The Thomist 58 (4):683-689.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 68J The Theology of Henri de Lubac: An Overview. By HANS URS VON BALTHASAR. Translated by Joseph Fessio, S. J., Michael M. Waldstein (Preface), and Susan Clements (Conclusion). San Fran· cisco: Ignatius Press/Communio, 1991. Pp. 127. $9.95 (paper). Except for the preface and conclusion, Hans Urs von Balthasar's The Theology of Henri de Lubac first appeared as the long essay, "Henri de Lubac-L'oeuvre organique d'une vie," in (...)
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  19.  49
    The Will as Impression.John M. Connolly - 1987 - Hume Studies 13 (2):276-305.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:276 THE WILL AS IMPRESSION Hume writes, in the Treatise: Let no one, therefore, put an invidious construction on my words, by saying simply, that I assert the necessity of human actions, and place them on the same footing with the operations of senseless matter. I do not ascribe to the will that unintelligible necessity, which is suppos'd to lie in matter. But I ascribe to matter, that intelligible (...)
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  20.  31
    A Memoir of Markets, Milestones, and Models.John W. Dienhart - 2000 - Business Ethics Quarterly 10 (1):73-82.
    I begin by recounting the market demands that created an opportunity for me to teach business ethics in the College of Business at St. Cloud State University. The AACSB and my educational institution focused amorphous social demands for better business practices into a specific demand for a philosophy Ph.D. to teach business ethics. I felt frustrated teaching business ethics because of my inexperience and the eclectic nature of the field. I, and many others, searched for something to unify the many (...)
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  21. Ethics of Identity in the Time of Big Data - Delivered at 25th Annual International Vincentian Business Ethics Conference (IVBEC), 2018, St. John’s University, New York.James Brusseau - manuscript
    According to Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, big data reality means, “The days of having a different image for your co-workers and for others are coming to an end, which is good because having multiple identities represents a lack of integrity.” Two sets of questions follow. One centers on technology and asks how big data mechanisms collapse our various selves (work-self, family-self, romantic-self) into one personality. The second question set shifts from technology to ethics by asking whether we want the kind (...)
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  22.  34
    Platonism in the Midwest. [REVIEW]John A. Mourant - 1964 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 13:247-248.
    This is a delightful and scholarly work on a little known area in the history of American philosophy. Its appeal will be to Platonists and particularly to those philosophers who have a more intimate acquaintance with the intellectual climate of the American Midwest. Writing as an American philosopher and midwesterner the author states that ‘if we are to understand our heritage... we must seek knowledge of less obvious forces and personalities which have left their unheralded but indelible mark upon (...)
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  23.  52
    St. Thomas Aquinas and the Natural Law Tradition: Contemporary Perspectives, edited by John Goyette, Mark S. Latkovic, and Richard S. Myers. [REVIEW]Grattan T. Brown - 2007 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 7 (4):841-845.
  24.  25
    The Symbolic Spirituality of St. Francis.Donald P. St John - 1979 - Franciscan Studies 39 (1):192-205.
  25.  15
    5. imperial spaces in Pekka hämäläinen's the comanche empire.Rachel St John - 2013 - History and Theory 52 (1):75-80.
    This review focuses on Pekka Hämäläinen’s characterization and analysis of the Comanche empire as a spatial category in The Comanche Empire and discusses how this work relates to broader discussions about space and power in borderlands and imperial histories. Although empires have long been central actors in borderlands histories, “empire” has not necessarily been a category of spatial organization and analysis and certainly not one used to describe spaces controlled by Native peoples. By contrast, while Hämäläinen emphasizes the imperial characteristics (...)
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  26.  23
    Putting Children at the Centre: Making policy as if children mattered.Susan St John - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (9):1004-1017.
    What do we mean when we say we want to put children at the centre of policy? What are the moral justifications for this approach? Has it become harder for us to understand this concept, when in practice paid work has been at the centre? In part confusion arises because the unpaid work of caring for children is invisible until it is marketized. In turn, the underlying problem is that we have forgotten our traditions of egalitarianism and adopted a powerful (...)
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  27.  14
    Emerging Executive Functioning and Motor Development in Infants at High and Low Risk for Autism Spectrum Disorder.Tanya St John, Annette M. Estes, Stephen R. Dager, Penelope Kostopoulos, Jason J. Wolff, Juhi Pandey, Jed T. Elison, Sarah J. Paterson, Robert T. Schultz, Kelly Botteron, Heather Hazlett & Joseph Piven - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  28.  17
    Crisis Management and Ethics: Moving Beyond the Public-Relations-Person-as-Corporate-Conscience Construct.Burton St John Iii & Yvette E. Pearson - 2016 - Journal of Media Ethics 31 (1):18-34.
    Over the past 40 years, scholars and practitioners of public relations have often cast public relations workers in the role of the public relations-person-as-corporate-conscience. This work, however, maintains that this construct is so problematic that invoking it is of negligible use in addressing ethical issues that emerge during a crisis. In fact, a complex crisis, such as the Jahi McMath “brain death” case at Children’s Hospital Oakland, demonstrates the need to abandon the PRPaCC construct to better engage affected stakeholders, including (...)
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  29. The Oxford Handbook of Dionysius the Areopagite.Georgios Steiris, Pallis Dimitrios & Mark Edwards (eds.) - 2022 - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    This Handbook contains forty essays by an international team of experts on the antecedents, the content, and the reception of the Dionysian corpus, a body of writings falsely ascribed to Dionysius the Areopagite, a convert of St Paul, but actually written about 500 AD. The first section contains discussions of the genesis of the corpus, its Christian antecedents, and its Neoplatonic influences. In the second section, studies on the Syriac reception, the relation of the Syriac to the original Greek, and (...)
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  30. Law and the Moral Consensus.Norman St John-Stevas - 1968 - In Edward Shils (ed.), Life or death: ethics and options. Portland, Or.,: Reed College.
     
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  31.  20
    And on the fourteenth day … potential and identity in embryological development.Jeremy St John - 2008 - Monash Bioethics Review 27 (3):12-24.
    Australian legislation at both state and federal levels has been passed in the last two years enabling the creation and use of cloned embryos up until their fourteenth day of development. Yet for this fourteen-day threshold to carry moral weight it must be shown that an embryo may be plausibly attributed some kind of moral standing after this point that it cannot be accorded before it Moral standing may be conferred using Steven Buckle’s account of potential to become (after one (...)
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  32.  41
    Ovid, Heroides 6. 54.St John Hickey - 1966 - The Classical Review 16 (02):144-145.
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  33.  45
    Problems with theory, problems with practice: wide reflective equilibrium and bioethics.Jeremy St John - 2007 - South African Journal of Philosophy 26 (2):204-215.
    In A Theory of Justice, John Rawls devised the method of reflective equilibrium in an attempt to broker consensus between ethical approaches emphasising individual moral judgements, and those emphasising moral principles, expanding this method in the later paper; “The Independence of Moral Theory”, to produce wide reflective equilibrium. In a number of essays compiled in Justice and Justification, Norman Daniels articulated a more comprehensive version of Rawls's methodology in response to something of a similar struggle within contemporary bioethics, between (...)
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  34.  33
    The Clausewitzian Trinity in the Information Age: A Just War Approach.John Mark Mattox - 2008 - Journal of Military Ethics 7 (3):202-214.
    Clausewitz's ?remarkable trinity? has long been a touchstone for discourse on the military's strategic position relative to other essential elements of Western society. Similarly, the just war tradition has long been a touchstone for moral discourse on war. Although these touchstones represent two intellectual traditions which may appear to have little or nothing in common, the 21st-century strategist or policymaker must take into account the imperatives of both traditions. This is so because, in the Information Age, public reactions to perceived (...)
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  35.  31
    John Turtle Wood, Discoverer of the Artemision 1869.St John Ervine - 1938 - Isis 28 (2):376-384.
  36.  75
    Architectural Reflections: Studies in the Philosophy and Practice of Architecture.Colin St John Wilson - 1992 - Butterworth Architecture.
    In this book of the world's greatest architects explores the original aims and principles of modern architecture.
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  37.  17
    Life, death, and the law: a study of the relationship between law and Christian morals in the English and American legal systems.Norman St John-Stevas - 1961 - Littleton, Colo.: Rothman.
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  38.  3
    The life of John Stuart Mill.Michael St John Packe - 1954 - London,: Secker & Warburg.
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  39. Hō to dōtoku: shikei, jisatsu, sanji seigen tō o megutte.Norman St John-Stevas - 1968 - Tokyō-to Shinjuku-ku: Risōsha. Edited by Seiichi Anan.
     
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  40.  16
    Most Simple Extensions of Are Undecidable.Nikolaos Galatos & Gavin St John - 2022 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 87 (3):1156-1200.
    All known structural extensions of the substructural logic $\textbf{FL}_{\textbf{e}}$, the Full Lambek calculus with exchange/commutativity (corresponding to subvarieties of commutative residuated lattices axiomatized by $\{\vee, \cdot, 1\}$ -equations), have decidable theoremhood; in particular all the ones defined by knotted axioms enjoy strong decidability properties (such as the finite embeddability property). We provide infinitely many such extensions that have undecidable theoremhood, by encoding machines with undecidable halting problem. An even bigger class of extensions is shown to have undecidable deducibility problem (the (...)
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  41.  11
    Book review: C.W. WATSON, Multiculturalism. Buckingham: Open University Press, 2000. 124 pp. ISBN 0 335 2052 0. [REVIEW]St John Skilton - 2002 - Discourse Studies 4 (2):259-261.
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  42.  43
    Friedenberg Sasanian Jewry and its Culture. A Lexicon of Jewish and Related Seals. Introduction by Norman Golb. Pp. xvi + 75, ills. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2009. Cased, US$40. ISBN: 978-0-252-03367-4. [REVIEW]St John Simpson - 2010 - The Classical Review 60 (2):621-622.
  43.  73
    Medically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration: A Contribution to the Dialogue.Mark Repenshek & John Paul Slosar - 2004 - Hastings Center Report 34 (6):13-16.
  44.  3
    Hegel’s Metametaphysical Antirealism.Annapolis W. Clark Wolf St John’S. College & U. S. A. Maryland - forthcoming - International Journal of Philosophical Studies:1-22.
    This essay defends a reading of Hegel as a metametaphysical antirealist. Metametaphysical antirealism is a denial that metaphysics has as its subject matter answers to theoretical questions about the mind-independent world. Hence, on this view, metaphysical questions are not, in principle, knowledge transcendent. I hold that Hegel presents a version of metaphysical antirealism in the Science of Logic because he pursues his project by suspending reference to all supposed objects of metaphysical theory as practiced before him. Hegel introduces reference in (...)
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  45. The Breakthrough Experience: DMT Hyperspace and its Liminal Aesthetics.Graham St John - 2018 - Anthropology of Consciousness 29 (1):57-76.
    Known to produce out-of-body states and profound changes in sensory perception, mood, and thought, DMT is a potent short-lasting tryptamine that has experienced growing appeal in the last decade, independent from ayahuasca, the Amazonian visionary brew in which it is an integral ingredient. Investigating user reports available online as well as a variety of other sources consulted in extended cultural research, this article focuses on the “breakthrough” event commonly associated with the DMT trance. The DMT breakthrough event coincides with significant (...)
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  46.  9
    Cambridge Essays on Adult Education.R. St John Parry (ed.) - 2014 - Cambridge University Press.
    Originally published in 1920, this collection of essays presents and discusses some of the principal subjects addressed in the Report of the Committee on Adult Education in 1919. The authors examine topics such as women and adult education, and the democratic foundations and implications of further education for those past school-leaving age. One essay is written by an adult student from Southport who is a self-described 'working-man'. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest in the history (...)
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  47.  22
    Letters to sir William Windham and mr. Pope.Henry St John Bolingbroke - unknown
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  48.  38
    Being-in-Love: an Enquiry Into the Ontological Foundation of Ethics.Hal St John Broadbent - 2007 - Studies in Christian Ethics 20 (3):345-363.
    This paper takes issue with those commentators of Heidegger's philosophy whose point of entry into his thinking is the inherited prejudices of others. It demonstrates that if prior judgments are suspended, so that Heidegger's texts are permitted to speak for themselves, the truth of his `position', more a wege than a static motionless point, gradually and inexorably begins to emerge. I take Pope Benedict's first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est, to draw the theological contours of a truly post-modern ethic. I then (...)
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  49.  33
    Task demands modulate the effects of perceptual expectations in early visual cortex.St John-Saaltink Elexa, Utzerath Christian, Kok Peter, Lau Hakwan & De Lange Floris - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  50.  19
    The Plantation System Throughout Jamaica and the Early Caribbean.Jason St John Oliver Campbell - 2006 - International Studies in Philosophy 38 (1):19-29.
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