Results for 'Nicholas Theo Westberg'

956 found
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  1.  7
    Descartes and the Scholastic Theory of Concursus.Nicholas Westberg - 2024 - Res Philosophica 101 (4):777-810.
    This article critically assesses a recent interpretation of Descartes’s physics, according to which he accepts a medieval account of the relation between God and physical creatures commonly called concurrentism. On this medieval view, God cooperates with creatures as efficient causes in bringing about change. If Descartes were to accept it, then it would entail that physical creatures (bodies) count as efficient causes in some way (otherwise God could not be said to cooperate with them), thus settling a long-standing debate about (...)
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  2.  33
    Francisco Suárez on the Ontological Ground of Logical Possibility.Nicholas Westberg - 2023 - Metaphysics 6 (1):60.
    This article reassesses Suárez’s claim that real essences are intrinsically logically possible. (Henceforth, this claim is referred to as ‘ILP.’) Most scholars have understood ILP as asserting the independence of logical possibility from God’s power; on their view, it in fact asserts that real essences in themselves explain logical possibility. As a result, the claim is in tension with Suárez’s other thesis that real essences are nothing in themselves. Scholars have taken two main approaches to assessing this tension. Some, like (...)
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  3. Works and Worlds of Art.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1983 - Mind 92 (366):306-309.
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  4.  67
    Reason Within the Bounds of Religion.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1984 - Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing.
    Expanding on his 1976 study of the bearing of Christian faith on the practice of scholarship, Wolterstorff has added a substantial new section on the role of faith in the decisions scholars make about their choice of subject matter.
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  5. Divine Discourse: Philosophical Reflections on the Claim That God Speaks.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1995 - Philosophy 71 (277):465-468.
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  6.  18
    On the complexity of bribery and manipulation in tournaments with uncertain information.Nicholas Mattei, Judy Goldsmith, Andrew Klapper & Martin Mundhenk - 2015 - Journal of Applied Logic 13 (4):557-581.
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  7.  19
    Controlled Donation After Circulatory Determination of Death: A Scoping Review of Ethical Issues, Key Concepts, and Arguments.Nicholas Murphy, Charles Weijer, Maxwell Smith, Jennifer Chandler, Erika Chamberlain, Teneille Gofton & Marat Slessarev - 2021 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 49 (3):418-440.
    Controlled donation after circulatory determination of death (cDCDD) is an important strategy for increasing the pool of eligible organ donors.
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  8.  67
    Internalism and external moral evaluation of violent sport.Nicholas Dixon - 2016 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 43 (1):101-113.
  9.  10
    The Moral Image of Nurture.Nicholas Agar - 2004 - In Liberal Eugenics: In Defence of Human Enhancement. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 111–131.
    This chapter contains section titled: A Moral and Developmental Parity of Genes and Environment Manufacturing Humans Enhancement and Bad Parenting The Limited Powers of Genetic Engineers Are Enhancements Problematic because they are Positionally Valuable? Regulating the Pursuit of Positional Value.
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  10. What do frogs really believe?Nicholas Agar - 1993 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 71 (1):1-12.
  11. Defending luck egalitarianism.Nicholas Barry - 2006 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 23 (1):89–107.
    abstract This article defends luck egalitarianism as an interpretation of the egalitarian ideal against two major criticisms levelled against it by Elizabeth Anderson — that it is trapped in the distributive paradigm, and that it treats the victims of bad option luck too harshly to be considered an egalitarian theory. Against the first criticism, I argue that luck egalitarianism will condemn non‐material inequalities and injustices if an appropriate conception of well‐being is adopted. I demonstrate this by showing how the approach (...)
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  12.  6
    Can a Theory of Content Rely on Selected Effect Functions? Response to Christie, Brusse, et al.Nicholas Shea - 2022 - Australasian Philosophical Review 6 (4):400-411.
    In the target article, Christie, Brusse, et al. argue that selected effect functions do not, in general, explain why a trait exists in a population and, therefore, theories of representational content should not rely on selected effect functions. This response focuses on the claim about functions-for-representation. The role of evolutionary functions in a theory of content is to pick out outcomes that have been systematically stabilized by natural selection. Correctness conditions are conditions involved in explaining how that happened. Selected effect (...)
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  13. The New Political Blogosphere.Nicholas John Munn - 2012 - Social Epistemology 26 (1):55-70.
    This article discusses the current epistemological status of the political blogosphere, in light both of the concerns raised by Alvin Goldman in his 2008 paper ?The Social Epistemology of Blogging? and the recent drastic changes in the structure of the blogosphere. I argue that the political blogosphere replicates epistemically beneficial functions of the mainstream media for the functioning of democracy, and defend this claim from objections to the blogosphere that have been levelled by Goldman and Richard Posner. I then provide (...)
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  14. Information dependency in quantificational subordination.Nicholas Asher - unknown
    The purpose of this paper is to (a) show that the received view of the problem of quantificational subordination (QS) is incorrect, and that, consequently, existing solutions do not succeed in explaining the facts, and (b) provide a new account of QS. On the received view of QS within dynamic semantic frameworks, determiners treated as universal quantifiers (henceforth universal determiners) such as all, every, and each behave as barriers to inter-sentential anaphora yet allow anaphoric accessibility in a number of situations. (...)
     
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  15. Lyotard on Wittgenstein: The differend, language games, and education.Nicholas C. Burbules - 2000 - In Pradeep Ajit Dhillon & Paul Standish (eds.), Lyotard: just education. New York: Routledge. pp. 36--53.
     
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  16.  29
    Realism, Meaning and Truth.Nicholas Asher - 1991 - Philosophical Review 100 (1):107.
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  17.  75
    Inquiring about God.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Terence Cuneo.
    This volume collects Wolterstorff's essays on the philosophy of religion written over the last thirty-five years.
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  18. Relative Identity.Nicholas Griffin - 1978 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 168 (2):226-228.
     
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  19. A default, truth conditional semantics for the progressive.Nicholas Asher - 1992 - Linguistics and Philosophy 15 (5):463 - 508.
  20.  36
    Kant and the Demands of Normativity: Response to Harbin.Nicholas Dunn - 2020 - Dialogue 59 (4):613-619.
    RÉSUMÉJe conteste l'affirmation de Harbin selon laquelle les jugements esthétiques, pour Kant, ne sont pas normatifs. En me concentrant sur la nature systématique de la philosophie critique de Kant, je montre que les jugements esthétiques, comme les jugements dans les domaines théorique et pratique, doivent être normatifs, bien que de tels jugements affichent un type distinct de normativité, qui s'exprime dans leur subjectivité, leur indétermination et leur affectivité.
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  21. Questions in dialogue.Nicholas Asher & Alex Lascarides - 1998 - Linguistics and Philosophy 21 (3):237-309.
    In this paper we explore how compositional semantics, discourse structure, and the cognitive states of participants all contribute to pragmatic constraints on answers to questions in dialogue. We synthesise formal semantic theories on questions and answers with techniques for discourse interpretation familiar from computational linguistics, and show how this provides richer constraints on responses in dialogue than either component can achieve alone.
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  22. Worlds of works of art.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1976 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 35 (2):121-132.
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  23.  23
    Hooking some stem‐group “worms”: fossil lophotrochozoans in the Burgess Shale.Nicholas J. Butterfield - 2006 - Bioessays 28 (12):1161-1166.
    The fossil record plays a key role in reconstructing deep evolutionary relationships through its documentation of the early diverging stem groups leading to extant phyla. In the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale, two famously problematic worms, Odontogriphus and Wiwaxia, have recently been reinterpreted as stem‐group molluscs based on their shared expression of a putative radula and putative ctenidia in Odontogriphus.1 More detailed analysis of these fossil structures, however, reveals pronounced anatomical and histological discrepancies with molluscan analogues, such that they are more (...)
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  24.  17
    Chomsky and Pragmatics.Nicholas Allott & Deirdre Wilson - 2021 - In Nicholas Allott, Terje Lohndal & Georges Rey (eds.), A Companion to Chomsky. Wiley. pp. 433–447.
    Pragmatic processes crucially rely on background or contextual information supplied by the hearer, which may significantly affect the outcome of the comprehension process. Construed as a branch of cognitive psychology, pragmatics is the study of the cognitive systems apart from the I‐language and the parser which enable speaker and hearer (or communicator and audience) to co‐ordinate on the intended interpretation, and this is how we propose to treat it here. This chapter considers some of Noam Chomsky's suggestions about how the (...)
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  25.  9
    Ethical Idealism.Nicholas Rescher - 1987 - University of California Press.
    This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1987.
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  26.  17
    Bring Your Non-self to Work? The Interaction Between Self-decentralization and Moral Reasoning.Nicholas Burton & Mai Chi Vu - 2021 - Journal of Business Ethics 181 (2):427-449.
    AbstractSpirituality continues to exert a strong influence in people’s lives both in work and beyond. However, given that spirituality is often non-formalized and personal, we continue to know little about how moral reasoning is strategized. In this paper, we examine how Buddhist leader-practitioners interpret and operationalize a process of self-decentralization based upon Buddhist emptiness theory as a form of moral reasoning. We find that Buddhist leader-practitioners share a common understanding of a self-decentralized identity and operationalize self-decentralization through two practices in (...)
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  27.  34
    Different patterns of recollection for matched real-world and laboratory-based episodes in younger and older adults.Nicholas B. Diamond, Hervé Abdi & Brian Levine - 2020 - Cognition 202:104309.
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  28.  61
    On the logic of presupposition.Nicholas Rescher - 1960 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 21 (4):521-527.
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  29.  18
    The Sceptical Optimist: Why Technology Isn't the Answer to Everything.Nicholas Agar - 2015 - Oxford: Oxford University Press UK.
    The rapid developments in technologies -- especially computing and the advent of many 'smart' devices, as well as rapid and perpetual communication via the Internet -- has led to a frequently voiced view which Nicholas Agar describes as 'radical optimism'. Radical optimists claim that accelerating technical progress will soon end poverty, disease, and ignorance, and improve our happiness and well-being. Agar disputes the claim that technological progress will automatically produce great improvements in subjective well-being. He argues that radical optimism (...)
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  30. Induction, Simplicity and Scientific Progress.Nicholas Maxwell - 1979 - Scientia 114 (14):629-653.
    In a recent work, Popper claims to have solved the problem of induction. In this paper I argue that Popper fails both to solve the problem, and to formulate the problem properly. I argue, however, that there are aspects of Popper's approach which, when strengthened and developed, do provide a solution to at least an important part of the problem of induction, along somewhat Popperian lines. This proposed solution requires, and leads to, a new theory of the role of simplicity (...)
     
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  31.  22
    Selectional restrictions, types and categories.Nicholas Asher - 2014 - Journal of Applied Logic 12 (1):75-87.
  32.  50
    Wittgenstein's Criticism of Russell's Theory of Judgment.Nicholas Griffin - 1985 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 5 (2):132.
  33. The migration of the theistic arguments: from natural theology to evidentialist apologetics.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1986 - In Robert Audi & William J. Wainwright (eds.), Rationality, religious belief, and moral commitment: new essays in the philosophy of religion. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 38--81.
     
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  34. How not to solve a problem for the eliminative materialist.Nicholas Everitt - 1983 - Mind 92 (October):590-92.
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  35.  15
    Reality Bites: Rhetoric and the Circulation of Truth Claims in U.S. Political Culture by Dana Cloud.Nicholas Lepp - 2021 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 54 (1):94-100.
    In one of his many defenses of rhetoric, Aristotle states that "even if we were to have the most exact knowledge, it would not be very easy for us in speaking to use it to persuade [some audiences] … it is necessary for pisteis and speeches [as a whole] to be formed on the basis of common [beliefs]". Dana Cloud's Reality Bites advances a similar position, suggesting that the political left needs to reclaim rhetorical appeals as a form of argumentation (...)
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  36. The Attractive and Imperative: Sidgwick's View of Greek Ethics.Nicholas White - 1992 - In Bart Schultz (ed.), Essays on Henry Sidgwick. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 311--30.
     
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  37.  9
    The Idea of Hellenic Harmony.Nicholas White - 2002 - In Individual and conflict in Greek ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.
    The historiography of Greek ethics has, since the days of Winckelmann, Schiller, and Hegel, been shaped by an effort to use it in modern debates. Kantians believed that the Greeks ignored the notion of morality. Hegelians by contrast thought that they understood how to show that one's own happiness is compatible with the happiness of others and conformity to ethical norms—either through inclusivism or fusionism.
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  38.  13
    Pan Yue's “Study of a Widow” and Its Predecessors.Nicholas Morrow Williams - 2012 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 132 (3):347.
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  39. Jesus' resurrection and Christian origins.Nicholas Thomas Wright - 2002 - Gregorianum 83 (4):615-635.
    Cet article traite d'un point de vue historique de la résurrection du Christ et de l'origine du Christianisme. Comment la théologie devient histoire, puis évènement, c'est ce que nous montre l'A.
     
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  40. Susan Buck-Morss, The Dialects of Seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project Reviewed by.Nicholas Xenos - 1991 - Philosophy in Review 11 (3):159-161.
     
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  41.  11
    3 Maccabees as a monomyth.Nicholas P. L. Allen - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (3).
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  42.  71
    Archaeological Finds: Legacies of Appropriation, Modes of Response.George P. Nicholas & Alison Wylie - 2009 - In James O. Young & Conrad G. Brunk (eds.), The Ethics of Cultural Appropriation. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 11–54.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Historical Contexts of Cultural Appropriation in Archaeology A Typology of Cultural Appropriation in Archaeology Modes of Resolution Conclusions Acknowledgments References.
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  43.  58
    Still afraid of needy post-persons.Nicholas Agar - 2013 - Journal of Medical Ethics 39 (2):81-83.
    I want to thank all of those who have commented on my article in the Journal of Medical Ethics.1 The commentaries address a wide cross-section of the issues raised in my article. I have organised my responses thematically.The state of playAllen Buchanan's scepticism2 about moral statuses higher than personhood derives, in part, from our apparent inability to describe them. We seem to have little difficulty in imagining what it might be to have scientific understanding far beyond that of any human (...)
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  44.  35
    Referring and existing.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1961 - Philosophical Quarterly 11 (45):335-349.
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  45.  45
    Toleration, justice, and dignity. Lecture on the occasionof the inauguration as professor of Dirk-Martin Grube, Free University of Amsterdam, September 24, 2015.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 2015 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 76 (5):377-386.
    After discussing the nature of toleration, giving a brief history of the emergence of religious toleration in the West, and presenting my understanding of religion, I develop what I call ‘the dignity argument’ for religious toleration: to fail to tolerate a person’s religion is to treat that person in a way that does not befit their dignity. And to treat them in a way that does not befit their dignity is to wrong them, to treat them unjustly.
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  46. Classical logic, conditionals and “nonmonotonic” reasoning.Nicholas Allott & Hiroyuki Uchida - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (1):85-85.
    Reasoning with conditionals is often thought to be non-monotonic, but there is no incompatibility with classical logic, and no need to formalise inference itself as probabilistic. When the addition of a new premise leads to abandonment of a previously compelling conclusion reached by modus ponens, for example, this is generally because it is hard to think of a model in which the conditional and the new premise are true.
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  47.  82
    Events, facts, propositions, and evolutive anaphora.Nicholas Asher - 2000 - In James Higginbotham, Fabio Pianesi & Achille C. Varzi (eds.), Speaking of events. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 123--150.
  48.  34
    Metaphor in Discourse.Nicholas Asher & Alex Lascarides - 2001 - In Pierrette Bouillon & Federica Busa (eds.), The language of word meaning. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 262-289.
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  49.  44
    A Utilitarian Argument for Vegetarianism.Nicholas Dixon - 1995 - Between the Species 11 (1):1.
  50. The dilemma of" relevance" in the philosophy of education.Nicholas C. Burbules - forthcoming - Philosophy of Education.
     
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