Results for 'Millsom S. Henry'

938 found
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  1.  8
    Book Review: Space Invaders: Race, Gender and Bodies Out of Place. [REVIEW]Millsom S. Henry-Waring - 2007 - Feminist Theory 8 (1):122-123.
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  2. Relativité généralisée.Henri Arzeliès - 1961 - Paris,: Gauthier-Villars. Edited by Jean Moulis.
    fasc. 1. Principes généraux; équations d'Einstein. Dynamique et optique. Repérages non einsteiniens. Avec une "Note sur le système Giorgi."--fasc. 2. Le champ statique à symétrie sphérique. Avec la collaboration de J. Moulis.
     
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  3.  18
    Relativistic kinematics.Henri Arzeliès - 1966 - New York,: Pergamon Press.
  4. Propensities and probabilities.Review author[S.]: Henry E. Kyberg - 1974 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 25 (4):358-375.
  5. La dynamique relativiste et ses applications.Henri Arzliès - 1957 - Paris,: Gauthier-Villars.
     
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  6.  25
    The temperature dependence of the characteristic thermopowers of zinc, gallium, germanium and arsenic in copper and silver.R. S. Crisp & W. G. Henry - 1965 - Philosophical Magazine 11 (112):841-851.
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  7. Reply to Philip J. Ivanhoe.Review author[S.]: Henry G. Skaja - 1994 - Philosophy East and West 44 (3):568-575.
  8. (3 other versions)The Methods of Ethics.Henry Sidgwick - 1874 - Bristol, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Emily Elizabeth Constance Jones.
    One of the most influential of the Victorian philosophers, Henry Sidgwick also made important contributions to fields such as economics, political theory, and classics. An active promoter of higher education for women, he founded Cambridge's Newnham College in 1871. He attended Rugby School and then Trinity College, Cambridge, where he remained his whole career. In 1859 he took up a lectureship in classics, and held this post for ten years. In 1869, he moved to a lectureship in moral philosophy, (...)
     
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  9.  31
    The thermopowers and resistivities of the primary solid solutions of zinc, gallium, germanium and arsenic in copper.R. S. Crisp, W. G. Henry & P. A. Schroeder - 1964 - Philosophical Magazine 10 (106):553-577.
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  10.  9
    Commentary.Millsom Henry-Waring - 2004 - Feminist Theory 5 (3):317-323.
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  11. An abstract framework for argumentation with structured arguments.Henry Prakken - 2010 - Argument and Computation 1 (2):93-124.
    An abstract framework for structured arguments is presented, which instantiates Dung's ('On the Acceptability of Arguments and its Fundamental Role in Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Logic Programming, and n- Person Games', Artificial Intelligence , 77, 321-357) abstract argumentation frameworks. Arguments are defined as inference trees formed by applying two kinds of inference rules: strict and defeasible rules. This naturally leads to three ways of attacking an argument: attacking a premise, attacking a conclusion and attacking an inference. To resolve such attacks, preferences may (...)
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  12. Kant's Transcendental Idealism: An Interpretation and Defence.Eckart Forster & Henry E. Allison - 1985 - Journal of Philosophy 82 (12):734.
  13. A top-level model of case-based argumentation for explanation: Formalisation and experiments.Henry Prakken & Rosa Ratsma - 2022 - Argument and Computation 13 (2):159-194.
    This paper proposes a formal top-level model of explaining the outputs of machine-learning-based decision-making applications and evaluates it experimentally with three data sets. The model draws on AI & law research on argumentation with cases, which models how lawyers draw analogies to past cases and discuss their relevant similarities and differences in terms of relevant factors and dimensions in the problem domain. A case-based approach is natural since the input data of machine-learning applications can be seen as cases. While the (...)
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  14.  30
    Parallel and serial stages in matching.Henry K. Beller - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 84 (2):213.
  15.  29
    A formal analysis of some factor- and precedent-based accounts of precedential constraint.Henry Prakken - 2021 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 29 (4):559-585.
    In this paper several recent factor- and dimension-based models of precedential constraint are formally investigated and an alternative dimension-based model is proposed. Simple factor- and dimension-based syntactic criteria are identified for checking whether a decision in a new case is forced, in terms of the relevant differences between a precedent and a new case, and the difference between absence of factors and negated factors in factor-based models is investigated. Then Horty’s and Rigoni’s recent dimension-based models of precedential constraint are critically (...)
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  16.  12
    L'essence de la manifestation.Michel Henry - 1963 - Paris: Presses universitaires de France.
    La question du phénomène précède de beaucoup la phénoménologie, elle s'ouvre avec la philosophie et l'accompagne tout au long de son histoire. Mais ce préalable incontournable - car être veut dire apparaître - est surdéterminé par une présupposition irréfléchie. De la Grèce à Heidegger, dans les problématiques classiques de la conscience et de la représentation, dans leurs critiques, dans la phénoménologie de l'intentionnalité et dans ses prolongements, "phénomène" désigne ce qui se montre à l'intérieur d'un horizon de visihilisation, l'Ek-stase d'un (...)
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  17.  14
    Lupus of Ferrieres as Scribe and Text Critic, a Study of His Autograph Copy of Cicero's De Oratore.Tenney Frank & Charles Henry Beeson - 1931 - American Journal of Philology 52 (3):290.
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  18.  79
    An exercise in formalising teleological case-based reasoning.Henry Prakken - 2002 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 10 (1-3):113-133.
    This paper takes up Berman and Hafner's (1993) challenge to model legal case-based reasoning not just in terms of factual similarities and differences but also in terms of the values that are at stake. The formal framework of Prakken and Sartor (1998) is applied to examples of case-based reasoning involving values, and a method for formalising such examples is proposed. The method makes it possible to express that a case should be decided in a certain way because that advances certain (...)
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  19. Institutionally Divided Moral Responsibility*: HENRY S. RICHARDSON.Henry S. Richardson - 1999 - Social Philosophy and Policy 16 (2):218-249.
    I am going to be discussing a mode of moral responsibility that anglophone philosophers have largely neglected. It is a type of responsibility that looks to the future rather than the past. Because this forward-looking moral responsibility is relatively unfamiliar in the lexicon of analytic philosophy, many of my locutions will initially strike many readers as odd. As a matter of everyday speech, however, the notion of forward-looking moral responsibility is perfectly familiar. Today, for instance, I said I would be (...)
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  20.  32
    The Principles of Political Economy.Henry Sidgwick - 2011 - Cambridge University Press.
    Henry Sidgwick,, philosopher, classicist, lecturer and fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and supporter of women's university education, is well known for his Method of Ethics, a significant and influential book on moral theory. First published in 1883, this work considers the role the state plays in economic life, and whether economics should be considered an Art or a Science. Sidgwick applies his utilitarian views to economics, defending John Stuart Mill's 1848 treatise of the same name. The book calls for (...)
  21. A formal model of adjudication dialogues.Henry Prakken - 2008 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 16 (3):305-328.
    This article presents a formal dialogue game for adjudication dialogues. Existing AI & law models of legal dialogues and argumentation-theoretic models of persuasion are extended with a neutral third party, to give a more realistic account of the adjudicator’s role in legal procedures. The main feature of the model is a division into an argumentation phase, where the adversaries plea their case and the adjudicator has a largely mediating role, and a decision phase, where the adjudicator decides the dispute on (...)
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  22.  35
    Essays on Kant.Henry E. Allison - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    This volume presents seventeen essays by one of the world's leading scholars on Kant. Henry E. Allison explores the nature of transcendental idealism, freedom of the will, and the concept of the purposiveness of nature. He places Kant's views in their historical context and explores their contemporary relevance to present day philosophers.
  23.  50
    Caliban’s Reason: Introducing Afro-Caribbean Philosophy.H. Adlai Murdoch & Paget Henry - 2002 - Substance 31 (2/3):296.
  24. AI & Law, Logic and Argument Schemes.Henry Prakken - 2005 - Argumentation 19 (3):303-320.
    This paper reviews the history of AI & Law research from the perspective of argument schemes. It starts with the observation that logic, although very well applicable to legal reasoning when there is uncertainty, vagueness and disagreement, is too abstract to give a fully satisfactory classification of legal argument types. It therefore needs to be supplemented with an argument-scheme approach, which classifies arguments not according to their logical form but according to their content, in particular, according to the roles that (...)
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  25.  23
    The Genealogy of Psychoanalysis.Michel Henry - 1993 - Stanford University Press.
    This book’s basic argument is that the Freudian unconscious, far from constituting a radical break with the philosophy of consciousness, is merely the latest exemplar in a heritage of philosophical misunderstanding of the Cartesian cogito that interprets “I think, therefore I am” as “I represent myself, therefore I am” (in the classic interpretation of Heidegger, one of the targets of the book).
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  26.  60
    Perceptions, attitudes, and willingness of the public in low- and middle-income countries of the Arab region to participate in biobank research.Henry Silverman, Latifa Adarmouch, Nada Taha Mostafa, Manal Shahouri, Ehsan Gamel, Eman Elsebaie, Karima El-Rhazi, Zeinab Mohammed, Alya Elgamri, Maha Emad Ibrahim, Ahmed Samir Abdelhafiz, Samar Abd ElHafeez, Fatma Abdelgawad & Mamoun Ahram - 2022 - BMC Medical Ethics 23 (1):1-18.
    Population-based genomics studies have proven successful in identifying genetic variants associated with diseases. High-quality biospecimens linked with informative health data from diverse segments of the population have made such research possible. However, the success of biobank research depends on the willingness of the public to participate in this type of research. We aimed to explore the factors associated with the willingness of the public to participate in biobank research from four low- and middle-income countries in the Arab region (Egypt, Jordan, (...)
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  27.  94
    Theoretical Philosophy After 1781.Henry E. Allison, Peter Heath, Gary Hatfield & Michael Friedman (eds.) - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    This volume, originally published in 2002, assembles the historical sequence of writings that Kant published between 1783 and 1796 to popularize, summarize, amplify and defend the doctrines of his masterpiece, the Critique of Pure Reason of 1781. The best known of them, the Prolegomena, is often recommended to beginning students, but the other texts are also vintage Kant and are important sources for a fully rounded picture of Kant's intellectual development. As with other volumes in the series there are copious (...)
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  28.  7
    The religious investigations of William James.Henry Samuel Levinson - 1981 - Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
    Religious Investigations of William James.
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  29.  65
    Third World of Theory: Enlightenment’s Esau.Henry Louis Gates Jr - 2008 - Critical Inquiry 34 (S2):191-205.
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  30. Spiritual Philosophy, Founded on the Teaching of S.T. Coleridge, Ed. By J. Simon.Joseph Henry Green & John Simon - 1865
     
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  31.  12
    The scientific method: an evolution of thinking from Darwin to Dewey.Henry M. Cowles - 2020 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
    The idea of a single scientific method, shared across specialties and teachable to ten-year-olds, is just over a hundred years old. For centuries prior, science had meant a kind of knowledge, made from facts gathered through direct observation or deduced from first principles. But during the nineteenth century, science came to mean something else: a way of thinking. The Scientific Method tells the story of how this approach took hold in laboratories, the field, and eventually classrooms, where science was once (...)
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  32. Comments on Guyer.Henry E. Allison - 2007 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 50 (5):480 – 488.
    Guyer argues for four major theses. First, in his early, pre-critical discussions of morality, Kant advocated a version of rational egoism, in which freedom, understood naturalistically as a freedom from domination by both one's own inclinations and from other people, rather than happiness, is the fundamental value. From this point of view, the function of the moral law is to prescribe rules best suited to the preservation and maximization of such freedom, just as on the traditional eudaemonistic account it is (...)
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  33.  1
    The Bishop of Worcester's Answer to Mr. Locke's Second Letter: Wherein His Notion of Ideas is Prov'd to be Inconsistent with Itself, and with the Articles of the Christian Faith.Edward Stillingfleet, Henry Mortlock & H. J. - 1698 - Printed by J.H. For Henry Mortlock at the Phœix in St. Paul's Church-Yard.
  34.  49
    Hegel and the Identity of Indiscernibles.Henry Southgate - 2014 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 96 (1):71-103.
    : Hegel is commonly thought to affirm Leibniz’s principle of the identity of indiscernibles, which states that no two things are exactly alike. I argue that this interpretation is mistaken: it cannot accommodate passages in which Hegel rejects PII, and the texts cited in favor of this interpretation admit of another reading, which I provide. On my view, Hegel distinguishes between different senses of PII, and the sense of PII he accepts only entails that determinacy is immanent to individuals qua (...)
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  35.  79
    Two approaches to the formalisation of defeasible deontic reasoning.Henry Prakken - 1996 - Studia Logica 57 (1):73 - 90.
    This paper compares two ways of formalising defeasible deontic reasoning, both based on the view that the issues of conflicting obligations and moral dilemmas should be dealt with from the perspective of nonmonotonic reasoning. The first way is developing a special nonmonotonic logic for deontic statements. This method turns out to have some limitations, for which reason another approach is recommended, viz. combining an already existing nonmonotonic logic with a deontic logic. As an example of this method the language of (...)
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  36.  88
    Comments on 'nonlocal influences and possible worlds'.Henry P. Stapp - 1990 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 41 (1):59-72.
    Clifton, Butterfield, and Redhead [1989] have constructed two separate arguments that bear some resemblances to a proof of mine pertaining to the nonlocal character of quantum theory. Their arguments have flaws, which they point out. I explicate my proof by explaining in detail both how it differs logically from the two arguments they have constructed, and how it avoids the pitfalls of both. *This work was supported by the Director, Office of Energy Research, Office of High Energy and Nuclear Physics, (...)
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  37.  35
    Response.Henry Kilham & David Isaacs - 2011 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 8 (2):215-216.
    Response Content Type Journal Article Pages 215-216 DOI 10.1007/s11673-011-9296-0 Authors Henry Kilham, General Medicine and Clinical Ethics, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead, Westmead, NSW, Australia 2063 David Isaacs, The Centre for Values Ethics and the Law in Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia 2006 Journal Journal of Bioethical Inquiry Online ISSN 1872-4353 Print ISSN 1176-7529 Journal Volume Volume 8 Journal Issue Volume 8, Number 2.
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  38.  4
    The Charismatic Corporation: Finance, Administration, and Shop Floor Management under Henry Ford.S. Link - 2020 - Sociology of Power 32 (1):263-298.
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  39.  73
    Descriptions in Russell's theory and in ontology.Henry Hiz - 1977 - Studia Logica 36 (4):271 - 283.
  40.  93
    Intuition and horizon in the philosophy of Husserl.Henry Pietersma - 1973 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 34 (1):95-101.
    The notion of "seeing the object itself," basic in husserl's theory of knowledge, Can only make sense, If we interpret it with the help of his notion of horizon or implicit context. Seeing the object itself is an achievement experienced as such. This must mean that the subject has an implicit awareness of a context of other possible epistemic situations in which what is now "seen" or viewed "close up" can be referred to from a "distance." "distance" is here of (...)
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  41.  64
    Functional interpretation and inductive definitions.Jeremy Avigad & Henry Towsner - 2009 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 74 (4):1100-1120.
    Extending Gödel's Dialectica interpretation, we provide a functional interpretation of classical theories of positive arithmetic inductive definitions, reducing them to theories of finite-type functionals defined using transfinite recursion on well-founded trees.
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  42.  88
    Theory of reality.Henry Pierce Stapp - 1977 - Foundations of Physics 7 (5-6):313-323.
    Bell's theorem is used to guide the formulation of a unified theory of reality that incorporates the basic principles of relativistic quantum theory.
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  43.  10
    Do's and don'ts in the search for faculty talent.Donald Lee Vardaman, Shellye A. Vardaman, Henry Findley & Isabelle Warren - 2012 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education:1-5.
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  44.  8
    The life of John Locke.Henry Richard Fox Bourne - 1876 - Aalen,: Scientia-Verl.
    The earlier Life of Locke, by Lord King, had consisted largely of an assemblage of Locke's own letters and manuscripts, of great value to the historian, but of rather less interest to the student of Locke's philosophy. Fox Bourne's biography, by contrast, concentrates on Locke the philosopher, and seeks to place his philosophical works in the context of his life. Fox Bourne thus describes Locke's studies at Oxford, his distaste for scholasticism, the discovery of Descartes' Meditations, and the role of (...)
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  45. (1 other version)Plato's banishment of poetry.Morriss Henry Partee - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 29 (2):209-222.
  46. Aristotle: A Chapter from the History of Science, including Analyses of Aristotle’s Scientific Writings.George Henry Lewes - 1864 - Smith, Elder & Co.
  47.  30
    Metaphysics and the Paradoxes.Henry Veatch & Theodore Young - 1952 - Review of Metaphysics 6 (2):199 - 218.
    And at the other extreme and in a somewhat different sense, a realistic metaphysician in, say, the Aristotelian tradition would be equally insistent that he must be able to consider and talk about beings or things or entities just as such, about being qua being, in other words. And he too would mean to employ such terms in a way that would be all-inclusive and all-embracing. For he would say that there is literally nothing--unless it be just nothing--which could not (...)
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  48. Collected Essays: Volume 4, Science and the Hebrew Tradition.Thomas Henry Huxley - 2012 - Cambridge University Press.
    Known as 'Darwin's Bulldog', the biologist Thomas Henry Huxley was a tireless supporter of the evolutionary theories of his friend Charles Darwin. Huxley also made his own significant scientific contributions, and he was influential in the development of science education despite having had only two years of formal schooling. He established his scientific reputation through experiments on aquatic life carried out during a voyage to Australia while working as an assistant surgeon in the Royal Navy; ultimately he became President (...)
     
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  49.  27
    Ontological Destruction of the Kantian Critique of the Paralogism of Rational Psychology.Michel Henry - 2016 - Analecta Hermeneutica 8.
    In Kant, remarkably, and for the first time perhaps in the history of philosophy, the problem of the Ego receives an ontological signification. The critique of the paralogisms of rational psychology concerns, explicitly, this fundamental problem of the being of the ego. Kant’s examination of this problem constitutes an essential moment of the history of modern philosophy. This examination results finally in the complete failure to determine such a being, a failure that Kant attempts to pass off ultimately as a (...)
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  50. From Anthropomimetic to Biomimetic Cities.Henry Dicks - 2018 - Architecture Philosophy 3 (1).
    In recent years biomimicry has emerged as a powerful response to the problem of sustainability and today exerts an important influence on both architecture and urbanism. The implications of this trend for the humanities have, however, been largely overlooked. Taking a historical approach, the first key argument of this article is that throughout Western history the dominant model for the polis, qua both city and State, has been the human being and that it was also this basic model that underlay (...)
     
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