Results for 'Paul B. Duff'

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  1. Book Review: The Revelation of John: A Narrative Commentary. [REVIEW]Paul B. Duff - 2011 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 65 (3):312-313.
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  2.  4
    Jesus Followers in the Roman Empire. By Paul B. Duff. Pp. xii, 263, Grand Rapids, MI, Eerdmans, 2017, £24.99/$30.00. [REVIEW]Patrick Madigan - 2021 - Heythrop Journal 62 (2):379-380.
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  3. The agrarian roots of pragmatism / edited by Paul B. Thompson and Thomas C. Hilde.Paul B. Thompson & Thomas C. Hilde (eds.) - 2000 - Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.
    The essays in this volume critically analyze and revitalize agrarian philosophy by tracing its evolution in the classical American philosophy of key figures such as Franklin, Jefferson, Emerson, Thoreau, Dewey, and Royce.
     
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  4.  45
    Commentary on Paul B. Thompson’s From Field to Fork: Food Ethics for Everyone.Paul B. Thompson - 2017 - Social Philosophy Today 33:209-215.
    Paul Thompson’s excellent book, From Field to Fork: Food Ethics for Everyone, argues that contemporary food ethics persistently ignores the nature and actual impact of GMOs, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, food aid to developing countries, and more. On Thompson’s view, such philosophical analyses must incorporate empirical knowledge. Additional strengths of Thompson’s book: its attention to quality-of-life issues, its openness to the concerns of the marginalized, and its emphasis on the interconnectedness of problems in food ethics. I raise one area (...)
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  5.  48
    The Agrarian Vision: Sustainability and Environmental Ethics.Paul B. Thompson - 2010 - University Press of Kentucky.
    Agrarian political philosophies since ancient Greece stress the role of agriculture in forming political solidarity and civic virtue. More recent transformations suggest a way to conjoin these elements of what makes a polity politically sustainable with environmental sensitivity and literacy.
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  6.  72
    From Field to Fork: Food Ethics for Everyone.Paul B. Thompson - 2015 - New York: Oxford University Press USA.
    After centuries of neglect, the ethics of food are back with a vengeance. Justice for food workers and small farmers has joined the rising tide of concern over the impact of industrial agriculture on food animals and the broader environment, all while a global epidemic of obesity-related diseases threatens to overwhelm modern health systems. An emerging worldwide social movement has turned to local and organic foods, and struggles to exploit widespread concern over the next wave of genetic engineering or nanotechnologies (...)
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  7.  23
    The Agrarian Roots of Pragmatism.Paul B. Thompson & Thomas C. Hilde (eds.) - 2000 - Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.
    Critically analyzes and revitalizes agrarian philosophy by tracing its evolution. Today, most historians, philosophers, political theorists, and scholars of rural America take a dim view of the agrarian ideal that farmers and farming occupy a special moral and political status in society. Agrarian rhetoric is generally seen as special pleading on the part of farmers seeking protection from labor reform and environmental regulation while continuing to receive direct payments and subsidies from the public till. Agrarianism should not be viewed as (...)
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  8.  73
    Re-Envisioning the Agrarian Ideal.Paul B. Thompson - 2012 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 25 (4):553-562.
    Abstract Critics of The Agrarian Vision: Sustainability and Environmental Ethics (Lexington: 2010, University Press of Kentucky) have difficulties with its commitment to agrarian philosophy, and have also suggested that the program described there needs more elaboration of how sustainability might be pursued, especially in its social dimensions. The book draws upon agrarian philosophy to argue that habit and material practice are an appropriate and vital focus of ethics. Attention to habit and material practice will counterbalance an overemphasis on intentions and (...)
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  9.  80
    Trust based obligations of the state and physician-researchers to patient-subjects.Paul B. Miller & Charles Weijer - 2006 - Journal of Medical Ethics 32 (9):542-547.
    When may a physician enroll a patient in clinical research? An adequate answer to this question requires clarification of trust-based obligations of the state and the physician-researcher respectively to the patient-subject. The state relies on the voluntarism of patient-subjects to advance the public interest in science. Accordingly, it is obligated to protect the agent-neutral interests of patient-subjects through promulgating standards that secure these interests. Component analysis is the only comprehensive and systematic specification of regulatory standards for benefit-harm evaluation by research (...)
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  10.  77
    Equipoise and the duty of care in clinical research: A philosophical response to our critics.Paul B. Miller & Charles Weijer - 2007 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (2):117 – 133.
    Franklin G. Miller and colleagues have stimulated renewed interest in research ethics through their work criticizing clinical equipoise. Over three years and some twenty articles, they have also worked to articulate a positive alternative view on norms governing the conduct of clinical research. Shared presuppositions underlie the positive and critical dimensions of Miller and colleagues' work. However, recognizing that constructive contributions to the field ought to enjoy priority, we presently scrutinize the constructive dimension of their work. We argue that it (...)
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  11. Hospital mergers and acquisitions: A new catalyst for examining organizational ethics.Paul B. Hofmann - 1996 - Bioethics Forum 12 (2):45-48.
     
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  12. The "new empire of common sense" : the reception of common sense philosophy in Britain, 1764-1793.Paul B. Wood - 2018 - In Charles Bradford Bow (ed.), Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment. [Oxford, United Kingdom]: Oxford University Press.
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  13.  25
    IPO Firm Performance and Its Link with Board Officer Gender, Family-Ties and Other Demographics.Paul B. McGuinness - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 152 (2):499-521.
    Issues of social justice underlie the clamour for greater gender balance in top-management. The present study reveals that pursuit of such social justice is also value-enhancing in relation to the longer-run performance of initial public offerings stocks, especially where female board members are unencumbered by family-connection with other directors. This study examines the economic benefits of board gender diversity for state- and privately controlled firms in the Hong Kong IPO market. Gender board diversity is much less common in state-run IPO (...)
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  14.  34
    Moral Solutions in Assessing Research Risk.Paul B. Miller & Charles Weijer - 2000 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 22 (5):6.
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  15. Who Is Thomas Reid?Paul B. Wood - 2001 - Reid Studies 5 (1):35.
     
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  16. John Powell Clayton, The Concept of Correlation: Paul Tillich and the Possibility of a Mediating Theology Reviewed by.Paul B. Whittemore - 1981 - Philosophy in Review 1 (6):247-249.
     
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  17.  36
    Buddhism and the State in Sixteenth-Century Japan.Paul B. Watt & Neil McMullin - 1986 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 106 (3):616.
  18.  39
    Comparisons of digits and dot patterns.Paul B. Buckley & Clifford B. Gillman - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (6):1131.
  19.  53
    Agriculture and working-class political culture: A lesson from The Grapes of Wrath.Paul B. Thompson - 2007 - Agriculture and Human Values 24 (2):165-177.
    John Steinbeck’s 1939 novel can be given a reading that links events and the mentality of characters to mainstream schools of liberal and neo-liberal political theory: libertarianism, egalitarianism, and utilitarianism. Each of these schools is sketched in outline and applied to topics in rural political culture. While it is likely that Steinbeck himself would have identified with an egalitarian or utilitarian view, he resists the temptation to deny his Okie characters an authentic voice that matches none of these schools so (...)
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  20.  43
    Martin’s Maximum and definability in H.Paul B. Larson - 2008 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 156 (1):110-122.
    In [P. Larson, Martin’s Maximum and the axiom , Ann. Pure App. Logic 106 135–149], we modified a coding device from [W.H. Woodin, The Axiom of Determinacy, Forcing Axioms, and the Nonstationary Ideal, Walter de Gruyter & Co, Berlin, 1999] and the consistency proof of Martin’s Maximum from [M. Foreman, M. Magidor, S. Shelah, Martin’s Maximum. saturated ideals, and non-regular ultrafilters. Part I, Annal. Math. 127 1–47] to show that from a supercompact limit of supercompact cardinals one could force Martin’s (...)
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  21. Collective responsibility and professional roles.Paul B. Thompson - 1986 - Journal of Business Ethics 5 (2):151 - 154.
    Flores and Johnson (Ethics 93 No. 3 (1983) pp. 537, 545.) offer a solution to the problem of individual and collective responsibility which obscures the fundamental requirement for responsibility ascriptions, namely, moral agency. Close attention to matters of individual and collective agency provides a simple yet defensible criterion for establishing when an individual is and isn't responsible for the untoward consequences of a collective act.
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  22.  57
    Ebola Needs One Bioethics.Paul B. Thompson & Monica List - 2015 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 18 (1):96-102.
    Bioethics coverage of the recent Ebola outbreak neglected the ethical issues associated with aspects of the outbreak having environmental significance. The neglect of environmental dimensions is symptomatic of the way that the current institutionalization of bioethics as a field of inquiry separates medical and environmental expertise. As visionaries who are recognizing the need for better integration of human and veterinary medicine with environmental health are starting to call for “One Health”, it is now time to recognize the need for “One (...)
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  23.  35
    Religion and Violence or the Reluctance to Study this Relationship.Paul B. Cliteur - 2010 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 15 (1):205-226.
    This article is about the religious roots of violence, in particular religious terrorism. The author argues that there is a great reluctance to study this relationship. This is unfortunate because only on the basis of a realistic estimate of the facts can a successful counterterrorist strategy be developed. One of the problems with religious violence is that holy scriptures, in some passages, exhort believers to violent acts. In combination with a theory of ethics that is known as “divine command morality” (...)
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  24.  17
    Historical Topicality in Plautus.Paul B. Harvey - 1986 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 79 (5):297.
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  25.  36
    The stationary set splitting game.Paul B. Larson & Saharon Shelah - 2008 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 54 (2):187-193.
    The stationary set splitting game is a game of perfect information of length ω1 between two players, unsplit and split, in which unsplit chooses stationarily many countable ordinals and split tries to continuously divide them into two stationary pieces. We show that it is possible in ZFC to force a winning strategy for either player, or for neither. This gives a new counterexample to Σ22 maximality with a predicate for the nonstationary ideal on ω1, and an example of a consistently (...)
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  26. The multiple existence of a literary work.Paul B. Armstrong - 1986 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 44 (4):321-329.
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  27. Cheats as first propagules: A new hypothesis for the evolution of individuality during the transition from single cells to multicellularity.Paul B. Rainey & Benjamin Kerr - 2010 - Bioessays 32 (10):872-880.
    The emergence of individuality during the evolutionary transition from single cells to multicellularity poses a range of problems. A key issue is how variation in lower‐level individuals generates a corporate (collective) entity with Darwinian characteristics. Of central importance to this process is the evolution of a means of collective reproduction, however, the evolution of a means of collective reproduction is not a trivial issue, requiring careful consideration of mechanistic details. Calling upon observations from experiments, we draw attention to proto‐life cycles (...)
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  28. Science teachers who left: A survey report.Paul B. Hounshell & Sandra S. Griffin - 1989 - Science Education 73 (4):433-443.
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  29.  25
    Automated Theorem-proving in Non-classical Logics.Paul B. Thistlewaite, Michael A. McRobbie & Robert K. Meyer - 1988 - Pitman Publishing.
  30.  16
    Enhancing Collaborative Ideation in Organizations.Paul B. Paulus, Jonali Baruah & Jared B. Kenworthy - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  31. Author meets critics environmentalism, feminism, and agrarianism: Three isms in search of sustainable agriculture.Paul B. Thompson - 1998 - Agriculture and Human Values 15 (2):170-176.
     
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  32.  11
    Collective action and the analysis of risk.Paul B. Thompson - 1987 - Public Affairs Quarterly 1 (3):23-42.
  33.  55
    Uncertainty Arguments in Environmental Issues.Paul B. Thompson - 1986 - Environmental Ethics 8 (1):59-75.
    A large part of environmental policy is based upon scientific studies ofthe likely health, safety, and ecological consequences of human actions and practices. These studies, however, are frequently vulnerable to epistemological and methodological criticisms which challenge their validity. Epistemological criticisms can be used in ethical and political philosophy arguments to challenge the applicability of scientific knowledge to environmental policy, and, in turn, to challenge the democratic basis of specific environmental policies themselves. Uncertainty arguments thus draw upon philosophy of science, epistemology, (...)
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  34.  11
    Afghanistan: Forging Civilizations along the Silk Road; and Afghanistan: Forging Civilizations along the Silk Road.Paul B. Harvey - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 135 (3).
    Afghanistan: Forging Civilizations along the Silk Road. Edited by Joan Aruz and Elisabetta Valtz Fino. The Metropolitan Museum of Art Symposia. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2012. Pp. viii + 134, illus. $35. [Distributed by Yale University Press] Afghanistan: Forging Civilizations along the Silk Road. By Frank L. Holt. Hellenistic Culture and Society, vol. 53. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2012. Pp. xxi + 343, illus. $39.95.
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  35. Aid and Trade.Paul B. Thompson - 1991 - In Charles V. Blatz (ed.), Ethics and agriculture: an anthology on current issues in world context. Moscow, Idaho: University of Idaho Press. pp. 340.
     
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  36. The GMO Quandary and What It Means for Social Philosophy.Paul B. Thompson - 2014 - Social Philosophy Today 30:7-27.
    Agricultural crops developed using the tools of genetic engineering have become socially institutionalized in three ways that substantially compromise the inherent potential of plant transformation tools. The first is that when farming depends upon debt finance, farmers find themselves in a competitive situation such that efficiency-enhancing technology fuels a trend of bankruptcy and increasing scale of production. As efficiency increasing tools, GMOs are embedded in controversial processes of social change in rural economies. The United States, at least, has chosen not (...)
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  37.  22
    Coding with canonical functions.Paul B. Larson & Saharon Shelah - 2017 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 63 (5):334-341.
    A function f from ω1 to the ordinals is called a canonical function for an ordinal α if f represents α in any generic ultrapower induced by forcing with math formula. We introduce here a method for coding sets of ordinals using canonical functions from ω1 to ω1. Combining this approach with arguments from, we show, assuming the Continuum Hypothesis, that for each cardinal κ there is a forcing construction preserving cardinalities and cofinalities forcing that every subset of κ is (...)
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  38. What Happens to Environmental Philosophy in a Wicked World?Paul B. Thompson & Kyle Powys Whyte - 2012 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 25 (4):485-498.
    What is the significance of the wicked problems framework for environmental philosophy? In response to wicked problems, environmental scientists are starting to welcome the participation of social scientists, humanists, and the creative arts. We argue that the need for interdisciplinary approaches to wicked problems opens up a number of tasks that environmental philosophers have every right to undertake. The first task is for philosophers to explore new and promising ways of initiating philosophical research through conducting collaborative learning processes on environmental (...)
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  39. Convergence in an agrarian key.Paul B. Thompson - 2009 - In Ben Minteer (ed.), Nature in Common?: Environmental Ethics and the Contested Foundations of Environmental Policy. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
     
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  40.  14
    Ethics in the Innovation Process: Some Unaddressed Issues for Pragmatists.Paul B. Thompson - 2023 - Contemporary Pragmatism 20 (1-2):53-76.
    There are now dozens of proposals for integrating ethics into the early planning and assessment of technological innovation. This paper tracks some of Larry Hickman’s contributions to these trends. While Hickman’s suggestions could be incorporated into virtually many of the new proposals for integrating ethics into technological research, development and dissemination, barriers remain. In this paper, I will explores some reasons why the field remains fragmented, emphasizing weaknesses in the pragmatist approach. First, I acknowledge the significance of obvious explanations: the (...)
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  41. Technological mediation and nuclear weapons.Paul B. Thompson - 1985 - In Larry A. Hickman (ed.), Philosophy, technology, and human affairs. [College Station, Tex.]: IBIS Press of College Station, Texas. pp. 117.
     
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  42. Moral and ethical obligations of colleges and universities to minority students.Paul B. Zuber - 1981 - In Ronald H. Stein & M. Carlota Baca (eds.), Professional ethics in university administration. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
  43. Ethics and Practice in Science Communication.Paul B. Thompson (ed.) - 2018 - Chicago:
     
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  44.  5
    Further Thoughts on Food Futures.Paul B. Thompson - 2023 - In Samantha Noll & Zachary Piso (eds.), Paul B. Thompson's Philosophy of Agriculture: Fields, Farmers, Forks, and Food. Springer Verlag. pp. 185-206.
    Thompson provides commentary and reaction to other chapters in the book. It is organized as sections identified by the names of chapter authors. Thompson responds to chapters advancing new ideas in agriculture by indicating how he understands the authors’ analysis with respect to his own work. Chapters that address more philosophical dimensions of Thompson’s writings are addressed by clarifying the pragmatist orientation of Thompson’s thought. Michel Foucault’s metaethics is used as a basis for explaining pragmatist ethical pluralism.
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  45.  48
    Putting Pragmatism to Work?Paul B. Thompson - 2003 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 7 (1):41-44.
  46.  34
    Privacy and the Urinalysis Testing of Athletes.Paul B. Thompson - 1982 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 9 (1):60-65.
  47.  33
    Walking the Moral Tightrope: Respecting and Protecting Children in Health-Related Research.Paul B. Miller & Nuala P. Kenny - 2002 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (3):217-229.
    Special moral, regulatory, and scientific questions surround the inclusion of children in health-related research. These questions arise from a fundamental moral tension between the obligation to expose children to research participation to ensure that they share in the benefits that arise from it and the obligation to protect them from the harms associated with their inappropriate involvement in research. This tension is felt in the development of moral and regulatory frameworks for the protection of child research subjects and in the (...)
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  48.  10
    Lucky Nine: Dating a Chinese Cognate in Thai and Vietnamese.Paul B. Denlinger - 1986 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 106 (2):343-344.
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  49. Conceptions of sustainability in livestock farming.Paul B. Thompson - 1997 - Ludus Vitalis 2 (UMERO ESPECIAL):143-156.
     
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  50.  59
    Bolzano's deducibility and tarski's logical consequence.Paul B. Thompson - 1981 - History and Philosophy of Logic 2 (1-2):11-20.
    In this paper I argue that Bolzano's concept of deducibility and Tarski's concept of logical consequence differ with respect to their philosophical intent. I distinguish between epistemic and ontic approaches to logic, and argue that Bolzano's deducibility presupposes an epistemic approach, while Tarski's logical consequence presupposes an ontic approach.
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