Results for 'Michael Place'

971 found
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  1.  65
    Health care as an essential building Block for a free society: The convergence of the catholic and secular american imperative.Michael D. Place - 1999 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 9 (3):245-262.
    : As the twentieth century closes, marked by triumphal strides in medical advances, the American society has yet to ensure that each person has access to affordable health care. To correct this injustice, this article calls on the nation's political and corporate leaders, providers, and faith-based groups to join all Americans in a new national conversation on systemic health care reform. The Catholic faith tradition is one that compels both a proclamation to ministry values and a commitment to speak out (...)
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  2.  64
    The place of syllogistic in logical theory.Michael Clark - 1980 - Nottingham: Nottingham University Press.
    Chapter 1 presents BS, a basic syllogistic system based on Aristotle's logic, in natural deduction form. Chapters 2 and 3 treat the metatheory of BS: consitency, soundness, independence, and completeness. Chapter 4 and 5 deal with syllogistic and, in turn, propositional and predicate logic, chapter 6 is on existential import, chapter 7 on subject and predicate and chapter 8 on classes. Chapter 9 adds negative variables to BS, and proves its soundness and completeness.
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  3.  23
    Michael Ryan's writings on medical ethics.Michael Ryan - 2009 - New York: Springer. Edited by Howard Brody, Zahra Meghani & Kimberley Greenwald.
    Michael Ryan (d. 1840) remains one of the most mysterious figures in the history of medical ethics, despite the fact that he was the only British physician during the middle years of the 19th century to write about ethics in a systematic way. Michael Ryan’s Writings on Medical Ethics offers both an annotated reprint of his key ethical writings, and an extensive introductory essay that fills in many previously unknown details of Ryan’s life, analyzes the significance of his (...)
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  4. No place for the a priori.Michael Devitt - unknown
    Why believe in the a priori? The answer is clear: there are many examples, drawn from mathematics, logic and philosophy, of knowledge that does not seem to be empirical. It does not seem possible that this knowledge could be justified or revised “by experience.” It must be justified in some other way, justified a priori.
     
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  5.  15
    In Place of 'Global Democracy'.Michael Saward - 2008 - Ethical Perspectives 15 (4):507-526.
    In his “In place of 'global democracy'”, Michael Saward points at the many unknowns on the path towards a democratization of the international political order. According to Saward, this makes it a priori impossible to anticipate what a possible global democratic practice will look like.
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  6.  13
    The Place of Desert in Theological Conceptions of Distributive Justice.Michael R. Turner - 2011 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 31 (2):131-149.
    DOES A STANDARD OF DESERT BELONG IN CHRISTIAN CONCEPTIONS OF distributive justice? This essay places John Calvin and John Rawls, two of desert's most incisive critics, in conversation to examine the theological and philosophical issues raised by this question. Calvin and Rawls make similar arguments against deservingness as a moral principle, but Calvin emerges as the more adamant detractor, noting that God's grace and humanity's corrupt nature make the validity of positive human desert claims virtually unthinkable. Still, the moral force (...)
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  7.  26
    Simultanagnosia, Sense of Place and the Garden Idea.Michael Crozier - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 74 (1):76-88.
    A pervasive theme in George Seddon's extensive oeuvre is sense of place. Over a number of decades he has explored and reworked the conceptual and phenomenological aspects of this theme. This article takes its cue from Seddon's more recent critical observations on sense of place and considers the temporal and spatial dimensions of everyday experience in the informational age. Recent trends in gardening and garden theory are examined in the context of certain pathologies associated with this experience, and (...)
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  8.  32
    Digital people, digital places: Rethinking privacy in a world of geographic information.Michael R. Curry - 1997 - Ethics and Behavior 7 (3):253 – 263.
    With respect to the right of privacy, some of the most difficult concerns arise from the map, and especially the modern, computer-generated map. Maps support a view in which the local--and the private--are unimportant, as they represent the world in ways that make places seem fundamentally alike. By geocoding he location of people, places, and events, maps offer a universal set of identifiers, one much more difficult to regulate than traditional identifiers like the social security number. At the same time, (...)
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  9.  12
    (1 other version)The place of philosophy in European culture.Michael Dummett - 2007 - European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 3 (1):21-30.
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  10.  26
    The Place of a Cognitive Developmental Approach to Aesthetic Response.Michael J. Parsons - 1986 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 20 (4):107.
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  11. The place of vows in the theory of practical rationality.Michael H. Robins - 1993 - In K. B. Agrawal & Rajendra Kumar Raizada (eds.), Sociological Jurisprudence and Legal Philosophy: Random Thoughts On. University Book House.
     
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  12.  12
    Philosophy in Mind: The Place of Philosophy in the Study of Mind.Michaelis Michael & John O’Leary-Hawthorne - 1994 - Kluwer Academic Publishers. Edited by Michaelis Michael & John O’Leary-Hawthorne.
    Introduction: Philosophy in Mind / Michaelis Michael and John O’Leary-Hawthorne -- AI and the Synthetic A Priori / Jose Benardete -- Armchair Metaphysics /Frank Jackson -- Doubts About Conceptual Analysis /Gilbert Harman -- Deflationary Self-Knowledge / Andre Gallois -- How to Get to Know One’s Own Mind: Some Simple Ways / Annette Baier -- Psychology in Perspective / Huw Price -- Can Philosophy of Language Provide the Key to the Foundations of Ethics? /Karl-Otto Apel --Unprincipled Decisions / Lee Overton (...)
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  13. The Place of Philosophy in the Study of Mind.Michaelis Michael & John O'Leary-Hawthorne (eds.) - 1996 - Kluwer Academic Publishers.
     
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  14.  33
    Hell as education: From place to state of being? Hell, Hades, Tartarus, Gehinnom.Michael A. Peters - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (4):320-322.
  15.  50
    Backbeat and overlap : time, place, and character subjectivity in Run Lola Run.Michael Wedel - 2009 - In Warren Buckland (ed.), Puzzle films: complex storytelling in contemporary cinema. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 129--150.
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  16.  15
    The Place of Plants: Spatiality, Movement, Growth.Michael Marder - 2015 - Performance Philosophy 1 (1):185-194.
    Considering the ways in which plants move and shape the places of their growth, this article suggests that performing arts should account for the vegetal model of movement. The implications of including plants in the category of “moving beings” are vast, as they touch upon the dynamic relation between immanence and transcendence, questions of time-scales appropriate to different kinds of beings and their responses to the environment, and phenomenologies of place corresponding to diverse forms of life. I argue that (...)
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  17.  65
    Defining Dignity and Its Place in Human Rights.Lucy Michael - 2014 - The New Bioethics 20 (1):12-34.
    The concept of dignity is widely used in society, particularly in reference to human rights law and bioethics. Several conceptions of dignity are identified, falling broadly within two categories: full inherent dignity (FID) and non-inherent dignity (NID). FID is a quality belonging equally to every being with full moral status, including all members of the human natural kind; it is permanent, unconditional, indivisible and inviolable. Those beings with FID ought to be treated deferentially by others by virtue of their belonging (...)
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  18. Michael Keith & Steve Pile eds, Place and the Politics of Identity.K. Ansell-Pearson - forthcoming - Radical Philosophy.
     
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  19.  61
    A Place of Learning.Michael Oakeshott - 1982 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 3 (3-4):65-75.
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  20. Place and time in socialist theory.Michael Rustin - 1987 - Radical Philosophy 47:30-6.
     
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  21.  48
    Relative to What? - Interpretation with higher-place predicates.Michael Samhammer - 2019 - Kriterion - Journal of Philosophy 33 (3):75-104.
    Ordinary language contains groups of related predicates with different arities. Interpreting utterances that appear to contain an n-place predicate by using an n+m-place predicate to dissolve merely apparent disagreements and other misunderstandings is an established practice in everyday discourse. This paper aims to present hermeneutical maxims to guide and evaluate these interpretations through arity raising. In interpreting utterances by using a higher-place predicate, we should use only expressions that their authors themselves reasonably could have used and which (...)
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  22.  20
    Principle and Place: Complementary Concepts in Confucian Yijing Commentary.Michael Harrington - 2016 - Philosophy East and West 66 (3):861-882.
    The classical Western concept of place points in two directions: toward isolating things from one another and toward articulating their connections. Aristotle’s famous definition of a thing’s place as the limit of its surrounding body, which serves to isolate the thing from all but its immediate surroundings, sits side-by-side in the Physics with his theory of natural places, according to which things have places only in relation to each other.1 A thing’s natural place may be at the (...)
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  23.  31
    Papers from the 1993 Joint Session: The Place of Language.Michael Morris & Stephen Neale - 1994 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 94 (1):215-228.
    Michael Morris, Stephen Neale; Papers from the 1993 Joint Session: The Place of Language, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 94, Issue 1, 1 June 19.
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  24. Geopolitical displacements. The non-place of Argento : The bird with the crystal plumage and Roman urban history.Michael Siegel - 2011 - In John David Rhodes & Elena Gorfinkel (eds.), Taking Place: Location and the Moving Image. University of Minnesota Press.
     
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  25. Placing blame: a theory of the criminal law.Michael S. Moore - 1997 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Originally published: Oxford: Clarendon, 1997.
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  26.  12
    Introduction: Rhetoric and Hermeneutics: Places Along the Way.Michael J. Hyde & Walter Jost - unknown - In eds Walter Jost and Michael J. Hyde (ed.), Rhetoric and Hermeneutics in Our Time: A Reader. Yale University Press. pp. 1-42.
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  27. Bottoms up: The Standard Model Effective Field Theory from a model perspective.Philip Bechtle, Cristin Chall, Martin King, Michael Krämer, Peter Mättig & Michael Stöltzner - 2022 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 92 (C):129-143.
    Experiments in particle physics have hitherto failed to produce any significant evidence for the many explicit models of physics beyond the Standard Model (BSM) that had been proposed over the past decades. As a result, physicists have increasingly turned to model-independent strategies as tools in searching for a wide range of possible BSM effects. In this paper, we describe the Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SM-EFT) and analyse it in the context of the philosophical discussions about models, theories, and (bottom-up) (...)
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  28.  52
    The Place of Language.Michael Morris & Stephen Neale - 1993 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 67 (1):153-174.
    This paper attempts to raise a question for the everyday view that language is a means of communication, a system of marks or sounds which we use to convey thoughts and describe the world. It first isolates the assumptions behind this everyday view before raising questions about them.
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  29.  13
    Adam Smith's Legacy: His Place in the Development of Modern Economics.Michael Fry (ed.) - 1992 - Routledge.
    First published in 1992. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  30.  11
    A Phenomenology of Human Place.Michael D. Moga - 1998 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 2 (2):247-263.
  31. 7 “Hereness” and the normativity of place.Michael R. Curry - 1999 - In James D. Proctor & David Marshall Smith (eds.), Geography and ethics: journeys in a moral terrain. New York: Routledge. pp. 95.
     
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  32. La place de Gassendi dans l'histoire de la logique.F. Michael - 1992 - Corpus: Revue de philosophie 20:9-36.
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  33. Valuing Emotions.Michael Stocker & Elizabeth Hegeman - 1996 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Elizabeth Hegeman.
    This 1996 book is the result of a uniquely productive union of philosophy, psychoanalysis and anthropology, and explores the complexity and importance of emotions. Michael Stocker places emotions at the very centre of human identity, life and value. He lays bare how our culture's idealisation of rationality pervades the philosophical tradition and leads those who wrestle with serious ethical and philosophical problems into distortion and misunderstanding. Professor Stocker shows how important are the social and emotional contexts of ethical dilemmas (...)
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  34.  22
    The Place of the Self in C. S. Lewis’s The Great Divorce: A Marriage of the “Two Lewises”.Michael Raiger - 2010 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 13 (2):109-131.
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  35. A closer look at the 'new' principle.Michael Strevens - 1995 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 46 (4):545-561.
    David Lewis, Michael Thau, and Ned Hall have recently argued that the Principal Principle—an inferential rule underlying much of our reasoning about probability—is inadequate in certain respects, and that something called the ‘New Principle’ ought to take its place. This paper argues that the Principle Principal need not be discarded. On the contrary, Lewis et al. can get everything they need—including the New Principle—from the intuitions and inferential habits that inspire the Principal Principle itself, while avoiding the problems (...)
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  36.  22
    Putting food access in its topological place: thinking in terms of relational becomings when mapping space.Michael Carolan - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (1):243-256.
    This paper adopts a relational, also known as a topological, approach to food accessibility—the idea that food spaces are best understood as relational becomings rather than as voids filled exclusively with mass and address. It is animated by an experimental spirit, in terms of the methods employed, the data collected, and by how those data are brought together, which together better enriches inductive theorizing. The project looks at the daily macro-mobilities—trips from one GPS coordinate to another—of 70 Coloradoans, triangulated with (...)
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  37.  42
    Discovering Levinas.Michael L. Morgan - 2007 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Discovering Levinas, Michael L. Morgan shows how this thinker faces in novel and provocative ways central philosophical problems of twentieth-century philosophy and religious thought. He tackles this task by placing Levinas in conversation with philosophers such as Donald Davidson, Stanley Cavell, John McDowell, Onora O'Neill, Charles Taylor, and Cora Diamond. He also seeks to understand Levinas within philosophical, religious, and political developments in the history of twentieth-century intellectual culture. Morgan demystifies Levinas by examining his unfamiliar and surprising vocabulary, (...)
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  38.  36
    The Dialectical Relationship Between Place and Space in Education: How the Internet Is Changing Our Perceptions of Teaching and Learning.Michael Glassman & Jonathan Burbidge - 2014 - Educational Theory 64 (1):15-32.
    In this essay Michael Glassman and Jonathan Burbidge explore the idea of a dialectical relationship between the traditional place(s) of teaching/learning settings and the challenges to our perceptions created by the new spaces of the Internet. The authors examine this topic in the context of a three-stage evolution of humans' relationship with new technologies: (1) fear of how new technologies will change our everyday actions, (2) recognition of emerging technologies as tools capable of offering new possibilities in our (...)
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  39. Botanical Garden Design: It's about Plants and People-Places of education, conservation and entertainment.Michael Maunder - 2008 - Topos 62:14.
     
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  40.  54
    Environmental concern, moral education and our place in nature.Michael Bonnett - 2012 - Journal of Moral Education 41 (3):285-300.
    Some strands of environmental concern invite a radical re-evaluation of many taken for granted assumptions of late modern ways of life—particularly those that structure how we relate to the natural world. This article explores some of the implications of such a re-evaluation for our understanding of moral education by examining the significance of ideas of our place in nature that focus not on our location in some grand abstract system, but on our felt sense of place in the (...)
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  41.  37
    The Place of Totality in Dialectical Critical Realism.Michael Bhaskar - 2013 - Journal of Critical Realism 12 (2):202 - 209.
    Originally presented to Roy Bhaskar’s postgraduate seminar at the Institute of Education, London, in 2012, this article situates and delineates the concept of totality and the cluster of related concepts in dialectical critical realism.
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  42.  23
    Dignity: Its History and Meaning.Michael Rosen - 2012 - Harvard University Press.
    Dignity plays a central role in current thinking about law and human rights, but there is sharp disagreement about its meaning. Combining conceptual precision with a broad historical background, Michael Rosen puts these controversies in context and offers a novel, constructive proposal. “Penetrating and sprightly...Rosen rightly emphasizes the centrality of Catholicism in the modern history of human dignity. His command of the history is impressive...Rosen is a wonderful guide to the recent German constitutional thinking about human dignity...[Rosen] is in (...)
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  43.  8
    Schools as Places of Unselving: An educational pathology?Michael Bonnett - 2010-02-19 - In Gloria Dall'Alba (ed.), Exploring Education through Phenomenology. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 28–40.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Unselving Anticipation Departures Conclusion: Schools as Places of Unselving Acknowledgement Notes References.
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  44.  62
    Paradox and Persuasion: Negotiating the Place of Molecular Evolution within Evolutionary Biology. [REVIEW]Michael R. Dietrich - 1998 - Journal of the History of Biology 31 (1):85 - 111.
  45.  26
    Ajaṇṭā: Its Place in Buddhist ArtAjanta: Its Place in Buddhist Art.Michael W. Meister & Sheila L. Weiner - 1978 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 98 (4):563.
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  46.  15
    Michael Dummett.Bernhard Weiss - 2002 - Princeton University Press.
    Michael Dummett's approach to the metaphysical issue of realism through the philosophy of language, his challenge to realism, and his philosophy of language itself are central topics in contemporary analytic philosophy and have influenced the work of other major figures such as Quine, Putnam, and Davidson. This book offers an accessible and systematic presentation of the main elements of Dummett's philosophy. This book's overarching theme is Dummett's discussion of realism: his characterization of realism, his attack on realism, and his (...)
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  47.  31
    Owning persons, places, and things.Michael Otsuka - 2009 - In Stephen De Wijze, Matthew H. Kramer & Ian Carter (eds.), Hillel Steiner and the Anatomy of Justice: Themes and Challenges. New York: Routledge. pp. 131-143.
    ABSTRACT I believe that the first correspondence I received from Hillel Steiner was an email in 1998 in which he generously praised a recently-published article of mine and added: ‘I hope it’s not presumptuous of me to say “Welcome to the wonderful world of left-libertarianism!”’ The piece (Otsuka 1998) that prompted this unpresumptuous welcome was left-libertarian in spirit, as it was an attempt to reconcile self-ownership with equality. I was not yet convinced, however, that I was a left-libertarian, so it (...)
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  48.  49
    Stump`s Dialectic and its Place in the Development of Medieval Logic.Emily Michael & Fred S. Michael - 1996 - Informal Logic 18 (1).
  49.  24
    Groundless Belief: An Essay on the Possibility of Epistemology - Second Edition.Michael Williams - 1999 - Princeton University Press.
    Inspired by the work of Wilfrid Sellars, Michael Williams launches an all-out attack on what he calls "phenomenalism," the idea that our knowledge of the world rests on a perceptual or experiential foundation. The point of this wider-than-normal usage of the term "phenomenalism," according to which even some forms of direct realism deserve to be called phenomenalistic, is to call attention to important continuities of thought between theories often thought to be competitors. Williams's target is not phenomenalism in its (...)
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  50. Parables of power III: Revolutionary Ideas, Leaders, movements and events ... and places.Michael Adcock - 2011 - Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 46 (4):43.
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