Results for 'Matthew Hutcherson'

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  1.  93
    Locke's Metaphysics.Matthew Stuart - 2013 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Matthew Stuart offers a fresh interpretation of John Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding, arguing for the work's profound contribution to metaphysics. He presents new readings of Locke's accounts of personal identity and the primary/secondary quality distinction, and explores Locke's case against materialism and his philosophy of action.
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  2.  13
    Emotion in multilingual interaction.Matthew T. Prior & Gabriele Kasper (eds.) - 2016 - Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
    This volume brings together for the first time a collection of studies that investigates how multilingual speakers construct emotions in their talk as a joint discursive practice. The contributions draw on the well established, converging traditions of conversation analysis, discursive psychology, and membership categorization analysis together with recent work on interactional storytelling, stylization, and multimodal analysis. By adopting a discursive approach to emotion in multilingual talk, the volume breaks with the dominant view of emotions as cognitive and intra-psychological phenomena and (...)
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  3.  39
    Kierkegaard and the nature of truth.Matthew Jacoby - 1999 - Sophia 38 (1):74-80.
  4. Rethinking revolution.Matthew Smith - manuscript
    This paper argues for a rehabilitation of philosophical engagement with the question of whether revolution can be justified. Such a renewed engagement with the problem of revolution appears to be stymied by the intuition that we have strong moral arguments ruling out revolution in almost every case. I aim to show that we should abandon this intuition. I will argue that standard arguments against revolution are not strong enough to warrant the relative inattention the question of the justifiability revolution has (...)
     
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  5. How to do things with emotions.Matthew P. Spackman - 2002 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 23 (4):393-412.
    J.L. Austin described speech acts as utterances which are themselves actions, and not simply descriptions of actions or states of affairs. It is suggested that emotions are also actions, and not simply results of actions. Emotions may be conceived as attunements in the phenomenological tradition, as means of experiencing the world. Understood as attunements, emotions are actions in the sense that they do not simply result from appraisal processes or social constraints, but are themselves our engagements with the world. Three (...)
     
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  6.  48
    The Relevance of Karl Rahner’s View of Human Dignity for the Catholic Social Thought Tradition.Matthew Petrusek - 2015 - Philosophy and Theology 27 (2):513-538.
    This article examines and seeks to define Karl Rahner’s distinctive view of human dignity. Despite the relative infrequency of the words “dignity” or “image of God” in Rahner’s work, the inherent and realized worth of the individual holds a central place in his overall moral theology, especially as it appears in Foundations of Christian Faith. In particular, the article seeks to demonstrate that Rahner’s view of the vulnerability of human dignity serves as a synthetic moral principle unifying his conceptions of (...)
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  7.  31
    Dewey, Enactivism, and the Qualitative Dimension.MacKenzie Matthew - 2016 - Humana Mente (31):21-36.
    This paper takes up the problem of the qualitative dimension from the perspectives of enactivism and John Dewey’s pragmatic naturalism. I suggest that the pragmatic naturalism of Dewey, combined with recent work on enactivism, points the way to a new account of the qualitative dimension, beyond the bifurcation of nature into the subjective and objective, or the qualitative and quantitative. The pragmatist-enactivist view I sketch here has both methodological-explanatory and ontological dimensions. Following the work of Francisco Varela and Evan Thompson, (...)
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  8.  11
    Negotiating Diversity: Liberalism, Democracy and Cultural Difference.David Archard Matthew Festenstein - 2007 - Contemporary Political Theory 6 (4):496.
  9.  37
    Was Levinas an Antiphilosopher? Archi-ethics and the Jewish Experience of the Prisoner.Matthew R. McLennan & Deniz Guvenc - 2015 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 23 (2):84-97.
    This paper explores Levinas’s Carnets de captivité and Écrits sur la captivité in light of Badiou’s category of ‘antiphilosophy’. We make four movements: firstly, a description of what antiphilosophy is; secondly, an explanation of why the category of antiphilosophy is important to a reading of Levinas; thirdly, an exposition of the antiphilosophical elements of the Carnets and Écrits on captivity; and fourthly, we situate our reading of the notebooks within the larger context of Levinas’s post-captivity work.
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  10.  41
    Newman and Peirce on Practical Religious Certainty.Matthew Moore - 2008 - Semiotics:48-56.
  11.  18
    What do we GANE with age?Matthew R. Nassar, Rasmus Bruckner & Ben Eppinger - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39.
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  12.  27
    The Army officers' professional ethic: past, present, and future.Matthew Moten - 2010 - [Carlisle, PA]: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College.
    This monograph surveys the history of the Army's professional ethic, focusing primarily on the Army officer corps. It assesses today's strategic, professional, and ethical environment. Then it argues that a clear statement of the Army officers' professional ethic is especially necessary in a time when the Army is stretched and stressed as an institution. The Army officer corps has both a need and an opportunity to better define itself as a profession, forthrightly to articulate its professional ethic, and clearly to (...)
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  13.  90
    Implanted Desires, Self-Formation and Blame.Matthew Talbert - 2009 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 3 (2):1-18.
    Those who advocate a “historicist” outlook on moral responsibility often hold that people who unwillingly acquire corrupt dispositions are not blameworthy for the wrong actions that issue from these dispositions; this contention is frequently supported by thought experiments involving instances of forced psychological manipulation that seem to call responsibility into question. I argue against this historicist perspective and in favor of the conclusion that the process by which a person acquires values and dispositions is largely irrelevant to moral responsibility. While (...)
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  14.  50
    Phase I cancer trials: A collusion of misunderstanding.Matthew Miller - 2000 - Hastings Center Report 30 (4):34-43.
    Physician‐investigators face the daunting task of enrolling desperate patients into Phase I cancer trials that are not meant to be therapeutic. Patients doggedly regard the trials as therapeutic, and researchers tend to collaborate in their confusion by glossing the trials’ true purposes and noting the occasional benefit that subjects accidentally receive. The disparity between hope and fact must be redressed by degrees, from many angles at once.
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  15.  87
    The Ideal of Equality.Matthew Clayton & Andrew Williams (eds.) - 2000 - Macmillan.
    One of the central debates within contemporary Anglo-American political philosophy concerns how to formulate an egalitarian theory of distributive justice which gives coherent expression to egalitarian convictions and withstands the most powerful anti-egalitarian objections. This book brings together many of the key contributions to that debate by some of the world’s leading political philosophers: Richard Arneson, G.A. Cohen, Ronald Dworkin, Thomas Nagel, Derek Parfit, John Rawls, T.M. Scanlon, and Larry Temkin.
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  16.  66
    The phenomenology of existential feeling.Matthew Ratcliffe - 2012 - In Jörg Fingerhut & Sabine Marienberg (eds.), Feelings of Being Alive. De Gruyter. pp. 23-54.
  17. What is Philosophy Good for at the End of Metaphysics?Matthew King - unknown - Eidos: The Canadian Graduate Journal of Philosophy 19.
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  18.  50
    God, Greed, and Flesh: Saint Paul, Thomas Hobbes, and the Nature/Nurture Debate.Matthew H. Kramer - 1992 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 30 (4):51-66.
  19.  18
    (1 other version)Aquinas, Hadot, and Spiritual Exercises.Matthew Kruger - 2016 - New Blackfriars 97 (1072).
    The work of Pierre Hadot can highlight understudied aspects of the work of Thomas Aquinas. Hadot offers two key concepts in his study of ancient philosophy: philosophy as a “way of life” and “spiritual exercises”, which help us to approach Thomas, especially given his regular use of the term “spiritual exercise” and the concept of “exercise.”.
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  20. Revival of Ideas & Revival of Persons.Matthew S. Santirocco, Richard Sorabji & Carlos G. Steel - 2001 - New York University Press.
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  21. The Self - Ancient and Modern.Matthew S. Santirocco, Richard Foley & Sorabji - 2000 - New York University Press.
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  22.  51
    Revealing Givenness: The Problem of Non-Intuited Phenomena in Jean-Luc Marion’s Phenomenology.Matthew Schunke - 2015 - Studia Phaenomenologica 15:473-494.
    This article questions Jean-Luc Marion’s move away from intuition and shows how it risks the promise of his account of religion by returning to metaphysics and speculation. My aim is not to ask whether Marion’s phenomenology can adequately account for religious phenomena, but to ask whether Marion’s account of revelation meets his own phenomenological principle — that one must rely on the phenomenon to establish the limits of phenomenology — which he establishes to guard against metaphysics and speculation. To this (...)
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  23. Crisis and Reconfigurations: 100 years of European Thinking After World War 1.Matthew Sharpe & Rory Jeffs (eds.) - forthcoming - Springer.
     
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  24.  28
    Do Not Forget to Live.Matthew Sharpe - 2018 - Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 22:93-99.
    Pierre Hadot is famous for his work on ancient philosophy, and the notion that ancient philosophia was conceived in the Greek schools as a way of life, including existential practices to reshape students’ beliefs, desires, and actions. Yet his last published book before his death in 2010 was the study N’Oublie Pas de Vivre, on the oeuvre of the modern German thinker and litterateur, Goethe. Hadot’s work throughout refuses to make a sharp distinction between ancients and moderns, interested rather, as (...)
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  25.  90
    ‘In the Court of a Great King’: Some Remarks on Leo Strauss’ Introduction to the Guide for the Perplexed.Matthew Joel Sharpe - 2011 - Sophia 50 (1):141-158.
    This essay, which will be divided between two SOPHIA editions, proposes to test the consensus in Maimonidean scholarship on the alleged intellectualism of Leo Strauss’ Maimonides by making a close interpretive study of Strauss’ 1963 essay ‘How to Begin to Study the Guide for the Perplexed’. While the importance of this essay, which is Strauss’ last extended piece on the Guide, is established in Maimonidean scholarship, its recognised esotericism has been matched by a dearth of detailed studies of the piece. (...)
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  26.  36
    Performing Ives's Musical Borrowings.Matthew Shaftel - 2008 - Semiotics:825-837.
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  27. “then We Will Fight Them In The Shadows!”: Seven Parataxic Views, On Žižek’s Style.Matthew Sharpe - 2010 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 4 (2).
     
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  28. Monash University.Matthew Sidebotham - 1994 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 72 (4).
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  29.  76
    Freedom, Property, and the Rhetoric of Family.Matthew R. Silliman - 1993 - Social Philosophy Today 9:171-184.
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  30. A Paradox of Sovereignty in the Social Contract.".Matthew Simpson - 2006 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 3 (1):47-58.
     
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  31.  17
    Correction to: How to count biological minds: symbiosis, the free energy principle, and reciprocal multiscale integration.Matthew Sims - 2020 - Synthese 199 (1-2):2181-2181.
  32. Doctoral dissertation.Matthew Slater - manuscript
    Taxonomy is undeniably central to science — indeed, some see taxonomy as prerequisite to scientific theorizing. But what are taxonomies about? Are taxonomies discoveries or inventions? Has the world an objective, monistic structure — natural kinds or, to use Plato’s metaphor, joints along which true scientific theories carve? Controversy surrounding these issues has been at the heart of important debates in the philosophy of science, metaphysics, and the philosophy of language.
     
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  33.  23
    Moving toward the Modern: The Nationalist Imagery of Malik al‑Shu‘arā Bahār.Matthew C. Smith - 2016 - In Alireza Korangy, Wheeler M. Thackston, Roy P. Mottahedeh & William Granara (eds.), Essays in Islamic Philology, History, and Philosophy. De Gruyter. pp. 3-28.
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  34.  18
    Humanitarianism and Modern Culture by Keith Tester: University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2010.Matthew Specter - 2012 - Human Rights Review 13 (1):135-137.
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  35. Nicholas berdyaev.Matthew Spinka - 1956 - In Carl Michalson (ed.), Christianity and the existentialists. New York,: Scribner.
  36.  21
    Motor speech deficits in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia.Poole Matthew, Brodtmann Amy, Pemberton Hugh, Low Essie, Darby David & Vogel Adam - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  37.  58
    Healthy Understanding and Urtheilskraft: The development of the power of judgment in Kant’s early faculty psychology.Matthew McAndrew - 2014 - Kant Studien 105 (3).
  38. Logical consequence, philosophical considerations.Matthew McKeon - 2004 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  39.  15
    Teaching Across the Divide: Perceived Barriers to the Movement of Teachers Across the Traditional Sectors in Northern Ireland.Matthew Milliken, Jessica Bates & Alan Smith - 2021 - British Journal of Educational Studies 69 (2):133-154.
    The community separation of the school system in Northern Ireland limits opportunities for daily cross-community interaction between young people. The deployment pattern of teachers is largely consistent with this divide. Pupils are therefore unlikely to be taught by a teacher from a community background other than their own. Nonetheless, recent research has shown that an increased proportion of teachers are diverting from the community consistent path and are teaching in a school not associated with their own community identity, although this (...)
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  40.  13
    Alasdair MacIntyre, Charles Taylor, and the Decline of Naturalism by Jason Blakely.Matthew Mutter - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (1):165-165.
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  41.  28
    A decade later: The Internet as Public Space.Matthew North - 2010 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 40 (2):22-27.
    In the September 2000 edition of Computers and Society, Drs. Jean Camp and Y. T. Chien, of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, published a paper titled "The Internet as Public Space: Concepts, Issues and Implications in Public Policy." Now, ten years later, the Internet landscape has changed dramatically.
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  42.  34
    Tacitus, annals 1.1.1 and Aristotle.Matthew Leigh - 2013 - Classical Quarterly 63 (1):452-454.
    The first sentence of the Annals reads urbem Romam a principio reges habuere. Commentators observe the echo of Sallust, Catiline 6.1 urbem Romam, sicuti ego accepi, condidere atque habuere initio Troiani, and of Claudius, ILS 212 quondam reges hanc tenuere urbem. In a stimulating recent contribution David Levene also compares the first sentence of Justinus' Epitome of the Histories of Pompeius Trogus: principio rerum gentium nationumque imperium penes reges erat. A fourth potential model may now be taken into consideration: Ἀθηναῖοι (...)
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  43.  21
    Paths to the Triune God: An Encounter between Aquinas and Recent Theologies – By Anselm K. Min.Matthew Levering - 2007 - Modern Theology 23 (2):304-307.
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  44.  6
    Whatever Happened to Dewey and James? Discourse, Power, and Subjectivity in the Age of Standardization.Matthew T. Lewis - 2012 - Philosophy of Education 68:187-195.
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  45.  60
    Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines.Matthew Lipman - 1988 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 1 (1):3-4.
  46.  42
    Landmarks in Critical Thinking.Matthew Lipman - 1993 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 12 (1-2):3-3.
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  47.  16
    A Social Practice Prioritarian Response to Allen Buchanan’s The Heart of Human Rights.Matthew Lister - 2017 - Law and Philosophy 36 (2):121-133.
    Allen Buchanan’s ‘The Heart of Human Rights’ addresses the moral justification of the international legal human rights system. Buchanan identifies two functions of the ILHRS: a well-being function and a status egalitarian function. Because Buchanan assumes that the well-being function is sufficientarian, he augments it with a status egalitarian function. However, if the well-being function is utilitarian or prioritarian, there is no need for a separate status egalitarian function, because the status egalitarian function can be subsumed by the utilitarian or (...)
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  48.  20
    The Early Hellenistic Peloponnese. Politics, Economies, and Networks 338–197 BC by D. Graham J. Shipley.Matthew Maher - 2019 - American Journal of Philology 140 (3):564-567.
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  49.  9
    Reassessment of the Hebrew Negative Interrogative Particle hlʾ.Matthew McAffee - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 135 (1):115-130.
    The trend in recent scholarship on the Hebrew negative interrogative particle hlʾ has been to suggest two distinct, underlying etymologies. In addition to the traditional etymology of interrogative {h} + negative particle lōʾ, some scholars propose an asseverative particle *hallū, now lost in the Masoretic leveling of all forms to halōʾ. The following study reassesses this proposal, suggesting that the evidence for the new etymology is untenable.
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  50.  31
    Against type E.Matthew McKeever - unknown
    It’s generally assumed that a compositional semantic theory will have to recognise a semantic category of expressions which serve simply to pick out some one object: e-type expressions. Kripke’s views about names, Kaplan’s about indexicals and demonstratives, the standard Tarskian semantics for bound variables, Heim and Kratzer’s Strawsonian view about definites, even an analysis of indefinites, assume as much. In this thesis, I argue that recent advances in the semantics of names and of quotation, and in metaphysics, give good reason (...)
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