Results for 'Milne, A. A'

971 found
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  1. The Ascent of Man.A. A. Milne - 1928 - E. Benn.
     
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  2.  7
    Winnie-the-Pooh's Little Book of Wisdom.A. A. Milne & Ernest Howard Shepard - 1999 - Methuen Childrens Books.
    Based upon the timeless character devised by A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh's Little Book of Wisdom brings together the best of Pooh's ponderings, thoughts and wisdom about himself and life as it should be lived according to his own philosophy.
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  3.  14
    Professor Milne's Reply.E. A. Milne - 1942 - Philosophy 17 (65):78-.
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  4.  71
    Some Points in the Philosophy of Physics: Time, Evolution and Creation.E. A. Milne - 1934 - Philosophy 9 (33):19 - 38.
    When I agreed to lecture to-night I stipulated that I might be allowed to interpret the subject announced so as to let my treatment relate less to the subject in general than to some particular aspects which happen to have been interesting me lately. Professor Whitehead, Sir Arthur Eddington, and Sir James Jeans have given to the world brilliant accounts of the present position of physics in relation to mathematics and philosophy. What I have to say bears to their writings, (...)
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  5. Relativity, Gravitation, and World-Structure.E. A. Milne - 1936 - Philosophy 11 (41):95-97.
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  6.  68
    John Charvet, The Idea of an Ethical Community, Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1995, pp. 221.A. J. M. Milne - 1997 - Utilitas 9 (1):155.
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  7. TAYLOR ed. Catalogue of the Manuscripts of Jeremy Bentham in the Library of University College.A. Milne - 1938 - Philosophical Review 47:333.
     
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  8.  19
    Reflections of a Physicist. By P. W. Bridgman. Philosophical Library: New York. Pp. xii + 392.E. A. Milne - 1951 - Philosophy 26 (97):162-.
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  9.  28
    Remarks on the Philosophical Status of Physics.E. A. Milne - 1941 - Philosophy 16 (64):356 - 371.
    Recent results in kinematics, obtained by myself and those working with me, have convinced me that the philosophical status of physics, as it has come down to us from Renaissance days, requires reconsideration. The reason can be stated in a couple of sentences: it has been found possible to establish certain laws of physics—laws of motion, the law of gravitation, the laws known under the name of the Lorentz transformation, and some others—purely deductively, without specific assumptions, and without empirical appeals (...)
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  10.  34
    A Modern Conception of Time.E. A. Milne - 1950 - Philosophy 25 (92):68 - 72.
    I think that to Lord Kelvin is attributed the saying that the scientific attitude to a thing, if you can't do anything else with it, is to measure it. This is the attitude I propose to adopt towards Time . The situation is to some extent analogous to the situation with regard to electricity . Science is unable to say what electricity is, and so it almost denies the word any entrance into a treatise on the subject. It replaces it (...)
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  11.  41
    The social philosophy of English idealism.A. J. M. Milne - 1962 - London,: Allen & Unwin.
    At the turn of the century Idealism was perhaps the leading school of philosophy in the English-speaking world. By the 1960s the situation was very different. There had occurred during the previous two generations what has been described as 'a revolution in philosophy', one consequence of which had been the almost total eclipse of Idealism. Originally published in 1962, this book is a critical study of certain aspects of the work of four Idealist philosophers: F. H. Bradley, T. H. Green, (...)
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  12.  54
    Mathematics in Aristotle. By Sir Thomas Heath. (Clarendon Press: Geoffrey Cumberlege. 1949. Pp. xiv + 291. Price 21s.).E. A. Milne - 1949 - Philosophy 24 (91):348-.
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  13.  35
    Time and its Importance in Modern Thought. By M. F. Cleugh. (London: Methuen & Co.1937. Pp. x + 308. Price 12s. 6d.).E. A. Milne - 1938 - Philosophy 13 (50):226-.
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  14.  84
    (4 other versions)Time and Thermodynamics. By A. R. Ubbelohde. (Oxford University Press. Pp. 105. Price 6s. net.).E. A. Milne - 1947 - Philosophy 22 (82):187-.
  15.  83
    Obituary.E. A. Milne & R. S. F. - 1950 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 1 (3):256-256.
  16. Modern Cosmology and the Christian Idea of God.E. A. Milne - 1953 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 4 (15):249-251.
  17.  34
    Natural Philosophy of Cause and Chance. By Max Born. Being the Waynflete Lectures delivered in the College of St. Mary Magdalen, Oxford, in Hilary Term, 1948. (Oxford: Clarendon Press (Geoffrey Cumberlege). Pp. viii + 215. Price 17s. 6d.). [REVIEW]E. A. Milne - 1949 - Philosophy 24 (91):370-.
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  18.  17
    Reason and analysis.A. J. M. Milne - 1962 - Philosophical Books 3 (4):5-6.
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  19.  27
    A Philosophy of Mathematics. By Louis O. Kattsoff, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of North Carolina. (Iowa State College Press, 1948. Pp. vii + 266. Price $5.00.). [REVIEW]E. A. Milne - 1949 - Philosophy 24 (88):90-.
  20.  46
    Four Views of Time in Ancient Philosophy. By John F. Callahan. (Harvard University Press. London: Geoffrey Cumberlege. Pp. ix + 209. Price 16s.). [REVIEW]E. A. Milne - 1949 - Philosophy 24 (91):349-.
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  21.  50
    From Euclid to Eddington: a study of conceptions of the external world. By Sir Edmund Whittaker Being the Tarner Lectures delivered in Trinity College, Cambridge, 1947. (Cambridge Univeristy Press. Pp. 212. Price 15s. net). [REVIEW]E. A. Milne - 1950 - Philosophy 25 (93):178-.
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  22. Sir James Jeans: A Biography.E. A. Milne & S. C. Roberts - 1953 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 4 (15):254-256.
     
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  23. Bertrand Russell, Human Knowledge-its Scope and Limits. [REVIEW]E. A. Milne - 1948 - Hibbert Journal 47:298.
     
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  24.  69
    What price cheap food?Michael C. Appleby, Neil Cutler, John Gazzard, Peter Goddard, John A. Milne, Colin Morgan & Andrew Redfern - 2003 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 16 (4):395-408.
    This paper is the report of a meetingthat gathered many of the UK's most senioranimal scientists with representatives of thefarming industry, consumer groups, animalwelfare groups, and environmentalists. Therewas strong consensus that the current economicstructure of agriculture cannot adequatelyaddress major issues of concern to society:farm incomes, food security and safety, theneeds of developing countries, animal welfare,and the environment. This economic structure isbased primarily on competition betweenproducers and between retailers, driving foodprices down, combined with externalization ofmany costs. These issues must be addressed (...)
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  25. Jack Donnelly, Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice. [REVIEW]A. Milne - 1990 - Philosophy in Review 10:487-489.
  26.  10
    From Verbal Account to Written Evidence: Do Written Statements Generated by Officers Accurately Represent What Witnesses Say?Rebecca Milne, Jordan Nunan, Lorraine Hope, Jemma Hodgkins & Colin Clarke - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Most countries compile evidence from witnesses and victims manually, whereby the interviewer assimilates what the interviewee says during the course of an interview to produce an evidential statement. This exploratory research examined the quality of evidential statements generated in real world investigations. Transcribed witness/victim interviews were compared to the resultant written statements produced by the interviewing officer and signed as an accurate record by the interviewee. A coding protocol was devised to assess the consistency of information between what was said (...)
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  27.  41
    ‘Asthippoi’ Again.R. D. Milns - 1981 - Classical Quarterly 31 (2):347-354.
    In his article ‘A Cavalry Unit in the Army of Antigonus Monophthalmus: Asthippoi’, N. G. L. Hammond argues that the reading of the manuscript R at Diodorus 19. 29. 2 should be retained and that we should read ⋯π⋯ π⋯σι δ⋯ το⋯ς τε ⋯σθ⋯ππους ⋯νομαζομ⋯νους κα⋯ τοὺς ⋯κ τ⋯ν ἄνω κατοικο⋯ντων ⋯κτακοσιο⋯ς. The readings of F and its copy X, ⋯νθ⋯ππους, and the commonly accepted conjecture of Wesseling ⋯μɸ⋯ππους, should both be abandoned. Hammond's arguments for retaining this reading are that (...)
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  28.  67
    Desert, Effort and Equality.Heather Milne - 1986 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 3 (2):235-243.
    Desert theories of distributive justice have been attacked on the grounds that they attempt to found large inequalities on morally arbitrary features of individuals: desert is usually classified as a meritocratic principle in contrast to the egalitarian principle that goods should be distributed according to need. I argue that there is an egalitarian version of desert theory, which focuses on effort rather than success, and which aims at equal levels of well‐being; I call it a ‘well‐being desert’ theory. It is (...)
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  29.  21
    The perceptual relevance of balance, evenness, and entropy in musical rhythms.Andrew J. Milne & Steffen A. Herff - 2020 - Cognition 203 (C):104233.
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  30.  66
    Human Rights and Human Diversity: An Essay in the Philosophy of Human Rights.Alan John Mitchell Milne - 1986 - State University of New York Press.
    He argues that an adequate idea of human rights must take such a diversity seriously, and unlike the UN Declaration, it must not presuppose Western institutions and values.
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  31.  51
    Charles Lamb: Professor of indifference.Tim Milnes - 2004 - Philosophy and Literature 28 (2):324-341.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Literature 28.2 (2004) 324-341 [Access article in PDF] Charles Lamb: Professor of Indifference Tim Milnes University of Edinburgh Nothing puzzles me more than time and space, and yet nothing puzzles me less, for I never think about them.1 I The name of Charles Lamb—essayist, poet, and notorious punster—does not loom large in studies of the philosophy of the English Romantics. The reasons for this initially unsurprising fact (...)
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  32. Subformula and separation properties in natural deduction via small Kripke models: Subformula and separation properties.Peter Milne - 2010 - Review of Symbolic Logic 3 (2):175-227.
    Various natural deduction formulations of classical, minimal, intuitionist, and intermediate propositional and first-order logics are presented and investigated with respect to satisfaction of the separation and subformula properties. The technique employed is, for the most part, semantic, based on general versions of the Lindenbaum and Lindenbaum–Henkin constructions. Careful attention is paid to which properties of theories result in the presence of which rules of inference, and to restrictions on the sets of formulas to which the rules may be employed, restrictions (...)
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  33. [email protected].ProfPeter Milne - unknown
    In natural deduction classical logic is commonly formulated by adding a rule such as Double Negation Elimination (DNE) or Classical Reductio ad Absurdum (CRA) to a set of introduction and elimination rules sufficient for intuitionist first-order logic with conjunction, disjunction, implication, negation and the universal and existential quantifiers all taken as primitive. The natural deduction formulation of intuitionist logic, coming from Gentzen, has nice properties:— (i) the separation property: an intuitionistically valid inference is derivable using only the introduction and elimination (...)
     
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  34.  8
    Rights of the Child: 25 Years After the Adoption of the UN Convention.Brian Milne - 2015 - Cham: Imprint: Springer.
    This work reviews the progress of children's rights 25 years since the adoption of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. It studies the progress of that human rights instrument as part of an ongoing process. It examines how recent past, present and future generations will benefit or suffer as part of the process in which outcomes cannot be predicted. It does not project into the future. Its emphasis is on a review of the period after 1989 and (...)
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  35.  36
    Concealment of Birth: Time to Repeal a 200-Year-Old “Convenient Stop-Gap”?Emma Milne - 2019 - Feminist Legal Studies 27 (2):139-162.
    Feminists have long argued that women who offend are judged by who they are, not what they do, with idealised images of femininity and motherhood used as measures of culpability. The ability to meet the expectations of motherhood and femininity are particularly difficult for women who experience a crisis pregnancy, as evident in cases where women have been convicted of concealment of birth. The offence prohibits the secret disposal of the dead body of a child, to conceal knowledge of its (...)
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  36.  24
    Cavaillès on Gentzen ‘dans son poêle’: A Brief Historical Note.Peter Milne - 2023 - History and Philosophy of Logic:1-3.
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  37. Log[p(h/eb)/p(h/b)] is the one true measure of confirmation.Peter Milne - 1996 - Philosophy of Science 63 (1):21-26.
    Plausibly, when we adopt a probabilistic standpoint any measure Cb of the degree to which evidence e confirms hypothesis h relative to background knowledge b should meet these five desiderata: Cb > 0 when P > P < 0 when P < P; Cb = 0 when P = P. Cb is some function of the values P and P assume on the at most sixteen truth-functional combinations of e and h. If P < P and P = P then (...)
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  38.  60
    Bets and Boundaries: Assigning Probabilities to Imprecisely Specified Events.Peter Milne - 2008 - Studia Logica 90 (3):425-453.
    Uncertainty and vagueness/imprecision are not the same: one can be certain about events described using vague predicates and about imprecisely specified events, just as one can be uncertain about precisely specified events. Exactly because of this, a question arises about how one ought to assign probabilities to imprecisely specified events in the case when no possible available evidence will eradicate the imprecision (because, say, of the limits of accuracy of a measuring device). Modelling imprecision by rough sets over an approximation (...)
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  39.  22
    Ethical Challenges Associated with Pathogen and Host Genetics in Infectious Disease.Richard Milne & Christine Patch - 2022 - The New Bioethics 29 (1):24-36.
    The Covid-19 pandemic has demonstrated the potential of genomic technologies for the detection and surveillance of infectious diseases. Pathogen genomics is likely to play a major role in the future of research and clinical implementation of genomic technologies. However, unlike human genetics, the specific ethical and social challenges associated with the implementation of infectious disease genomics has received comparatively little attention. In this paper, we contribute to this literature, focusing on the potential consequences for individuals and communities of the use (...)
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  40. The Alienation of Content: Truth, Rationality and Mind.Andrew Milne - 1996 - Dissertation, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick
    This dissertation is concerned with theories of mental content, and in particular with the relationships between a theory of content and truth and rationality. My strategy is to examine the metaphysics of various approaches to content and ask certain questions. What is it for a belief to be true on a particular theory? What is it for a thought process to be rational? Are truth and rationality useful explanatory properties on each theory? Are they useful normative or action-guiding properties? Does (...)
     
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  41.  12
    Dislocation interactions and slip in a flux line lattice.I. Milne - 1973 - Philosophical Magazine 28 (1):133-143.
  42. The dying patient, a doctor's dilemma.F. J. Milne - 1984 - In Ellison Kahn (ed.), The Sanctity of human life. Johannesburg: University of the Witwatersrand.
  43.  7
    A study in Alcidamas and his relation to contemporary sophistic.Marjorie Josephine Milne - 1924 - Bryn Mawr, Pa.,: [S.N.].
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  44.  33
    What can data trusts for health research learn from participatory governance in biobanks?Richard Milne, Annie Sorbie & Mary Dixon-Woods - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    New models of data governance for health data are a focus of growing interest in an era of challenge to the social licence. In this article, we reflect on what the data trust model, which is founded on principles of participatory governance, can learn from experiences of involving and engagement of members of the public and participants in the governance of large-scale biobanks. We distinguish between upstream and ongoing governance models, showing how they require careful design and operation if they (...)
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  45.  36
    Philosophy of Science in the Twentieth Century: Four Central Themes.Reading the Book of Nature: an Introduction to the Philosophy of Science.Common Sense, Science and Scepticism: a Historical Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge.Peter Milne - 1995 - Philosophical Quarterly 45 (180):379-384.
  46.  35
    The Medical Ethics Curriculum in Medical Schools: Present and Future.Julian Savulescu, Sharyn Milnes & Alberto Giubilini - 2016 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 27 (2):129-145.
    In this review article we describe the current scope, methods, and contents of medical ethics education in medical schools in Western English speaking countries (mainly the United Kingdom, the United States, and Australia). We assess the strengths and weaknesses of current medical ethics curricula, and students’ levels of satisfaction with different teaching approaches and their reported difficulties in learning medical ethics concepts and applying them in clinical practice. We identify three main challenges for medical ethics education: counteracting the bad effects (...)
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  47. Not every truth has a truthmaker II.Peter Milne - 2013 - Analysis 73 (3):473-481.
    A proof employing no semantic terms is offered in support of the claim that there can be truths without truthmakers. The logical resources used in the proof are weak but do include the structural rule Contraction.
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  48.  79
    Can there be a realist single-case interpretation of probability?Peter Milne - 1986 - Erkenntnis 25 (2):129 - 132.
  49. Bruno de finetti and the logic of conditional events.Peter Milne - 1997 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 48 (2):195-232.
    This article begins by outlining some of the history—beginning with brief remarks of Quine's—of work on conditional assertions and conditional events. The upshot of the historical narrative is that diverse works from various starting points have circled around a nexus of ideas without convincingly tying them together. Section 3 shows how ideas contained in a neglected article of de Finetti's lead to a unified treatment of the topics based on the identification of conditional events as the objects of conditional bets. (...)
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  50. Sensibility and the Law: On Rancière's Reading of Lyotard.Peter Milne - 2011 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 15 (2):95-119.
    This paper responds to Rancière’s reading of Lyotard’s analysis of the sublime by attempting to articulate what Lyotard would call a “differend” between the two. Sketching out Rancière’s criticisms, I show that Lyotard’s analysis of the Kantian sublime is more defensible than Rancière claims. I then provide an alternative reading, one that frees Lyotard’s sublime from Rancière’s central accusation that it signals nothing more than the mind’s perpetual enslavement to the law of the Other. Reading the sublime through the figure (...)
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