Results for 'Paul C. Paquet'

962 found
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  1.  37
    Wolf Stories.Paul C. Paquet - 2005 - Environmental Ethics 27 (2):115-134.
    Wolf stories, including the systematic and government-sponsored killing of Yukon wolves, provide a context for the examination of assumptions about Western epistemology, and particularly science, in light of the “ethics-based epistemology” presented by Jim Cheney and Anthony Weston, with implications for research, responsibility, and animal welfare. Working from a premise of universal consideration, andminding the ethical basis of knowledge claims, enables richer conceptions of environmental ethics and creates new possibilities for animal welfare and managing for wildlife.
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  2. Psychology as Religion the Cult of Self-Worship /Paul C. Vitz. --. --.Paul C. Vitz - 1977 - Eerdmans, C1977.
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  3. Understanding Risk: Informing Decisions in a Democratic Society.Paul C. Stern & Harvey V. Fineberg (eds.) - 1996 - National Academies Press.
  4. Race: A Philosophical Introduction.Paul C. Taylor - 2003 - Polity.
    Paul C. Taylor provides an accessible guide to a well-travelled but still-mysterious area of the contemporary social landscape. The result is the first philosophical introduction to the field of race theory and to a non-biological and situational notion of race. Provides the first philosophical introduction to the field of race theory. Outlines the main features and implications of race-thinking; asks questions such as: What is race-thinking? Don’t we know better than to talk about race now? Are there any races? (...)
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  5.  55
    Black is Beautiful: A Philosophy of Black Aesthetics.Paul C. Taylor - 2015 - Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell.
    Those who know anything about black history and culture probably know that aesthetics has long been a central concern for black thinkers and activists. The Harlem Renaissance, the Negritude movement, the Black Arts Movement, and the discipline of Black British cultural studies all attest to the intimate connection between black politics and questions of style, beauty, expression, and art. And the participants in these and other movements have made art and offered analyses that wrestle with clearly philosophical issues. In _A (...)
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  6. Towards a Decolonial Analytic Philosophy: Institutional Corruption and Epistemic Culture.Paul C. Taylor - 2015 - In Pedro Tabensky & Sally Matthews (eds.), Being at Home: Race, Institutional Culture and Transformation at South African Higher Education Institutions. University of KwaZulu-Natal Press. pp. 203-220.
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  7.  7
    Mocombeian Nominalism.Paul C. Mocombe - 2022 - Philosophy Study 12 (9).
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  8. Index.Paul C. Taylor - 2015 - In Black is Beautiful: A Philosophy of Black Aesthetics. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 186–188.
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  9. On Counterfactuals of Libertarian Freedom: Is There Anything I Would Have Done if I Could Have Done Otherwise?Paul C. Anders, Joshua C. Thurow & Kenneth Hochstetter - 2014 - American Philosophical Quarterly 51 (1):85-94.
  10.  74
    Natural deduction based set theories: a new resolution of the old paradoxes.Paul C. Gilmore - 1986 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (2):393-411.
    The comprehension principle of set theory asserts that a set can be formed from the objects satisfying any given property. The principle leads to immediate contradictions if it is formalized as an axiom scheme within classical first order logic. A resolution of the set paradoxes results if the principle is formalized instead as two rules of deduction in a natural deduction presentation of logic. This presentation of the comprehension principle for sets as semantic rules, instead of as a comprehension axiom (...)
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  11.  49
    Augustine’s use of Varro’s Antiquitates Rerum Divinarum in his De Civitate Dei.Paul C. Burns - 2001 - Augustinian Studies 32 (1):37-64.
  12.  10
    Solace: the missing dimension in psychiatry.Paul C. Horton - 1981 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Looks at the ways people soothe or console themselves when faced with suffering and studies the psychological use of transitional objects.
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  13.  21
    Linguistic applications to avian dialect biology.Paul C. Mundinger - 1985 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (1):111-112.
  14.  19
    An Interview with Paul C. Taylor.Paul C. Taylor & Ethan Harris - 2021 - Washington University Review of Philosophy 1:19-25.
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  15.  24
    Conceptual errors, different perspectives, and genetic analysis of song ontogeny.Paul C. Mundinger - 1988 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11 (4):643-644.
  16. What can we learn from a theory of complexity9.C. Paul - 2000 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 2 (1):23-33.
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  17.  60
    Emergence of object representations in young infants: Corroborating findings and a challenge for the feature creation approach.Paul C. Quinn - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (1):35-36.
    Arguments for feature creation receive support from studies of young infants forming category representations from perceptual experience. A challenge for Schyns et al. will be to determine how a feature creation system might interface with a perceptual system that appears constrained to follow organizational principles that specify how edge segments should be grouped into functional units of coherent object representations.
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  18.  50
    Set theory generated by Abelian group theory.Paul C. Eklof - 1997 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 3 (1):1-16.
    Introduction. This survey is intended to introduce to logicians some notions, methods and theorems in set theory which arose—largely through the work of Saharon Shelah—out of attempts to solve problems in abelian group theory, principally the Whitehead problem and the closely related problem of the existence of almost free abelian groups. While Shelah's first independence result regarding the Whitehead problem used established set-theoretical methods, his later work required new ideas; it is on these that we focus. We emphasize the nature (...)
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  19.  83
    Cinema and subjectivity in Krzysztof kieslowski.Paul C. Santilli - 2006 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 64 (1):147–156.
  20.  13
    Palliative sedation in terminally ill patients.Paul C. Rousseau - 2004 - In C. Machado & D. E. Shewmon (eds.), Brain Death and Disorders of Consciousness. Plenum. pp. 263--267.
  21.  29
    Effects of Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol on conditioned avoidance responding in mice and rats and the one-trial conflict test in rats.Paul C. Harrison, R. Duane Sofia & Vincent B. Ciofalo - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (4):207-210.
  22.  31
    Demystifying biology: Did life begin as a complex system?Paul C. Lauterbur - 2005 - Complexity 11 (1):30-35.
    The process of condensation of an amorphous solid into a rigid matrix can often trap molecules in reversible binding sites. Exchange of the same molecular species with such sites is known to be sensitive to small chemical differences and to distinguish between enantiomers. In addition to their usefulness in chromatographic processes, such materials can separate, by solid phase extraction, specific compounds from complex mixtures. Furthermore, the trapped molecules can have their reactions guided and catalytically changed. The combination of this spontaneously (...)
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  23.  20
    (1 other version)Classes Closed Under Substructures and Direct Limits.Paul C. Eklof - 1976 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 23 (27‐30):427-430.
  24. Eine entwicklungstheoretische Betrachtung uber das Verhaltnis von Wissen und Glauben.Paul C. Franze - 1910 - Philosophical Review 19:231.
  25.  38
    Expressive meaning in art.Paul C. Hayner - 1960 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 21 (4):543-551.
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  26.  20
    The self: beyond the postmodern crisis.Paul C. Vitz & Susan M. Felch (eds.) - 2006 - Wilmington, De.: ISI Books.
    The peculiar dilemma of the self in our era has been noted by a wide range of writers, even as they have emphasized different aspects of that dilemma, such as the self’s alienation, disorientation, inflation, or fragmentation. In The Self: Beyond the Postmodern Crisis, Paul C. Vitz and Susan M. Felch bring together scholars from the disciplines of psychology, philosophy, theology, literature, biology, and physics to address the inadequacies of modern and postmodern selves and, ultimately, to suggest what an (...)
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  27. Empirical evidence for the consciousness field in phenomenological structuralism: the Garyian equation, psychonic wave, and life after life.Paul C. Mocombe - 2024 - New York: Nova Science Publishers. Translated by Paul Mocombe.
    This book explores the empirical evidence for Mocombe's consciousness field theory, which describes the origins and nature of consciousness in the universe/multiverse in his overall structurationist theory of phenomenological structuralism. Mocombe utilizes a logical metaphysical materialist approach to understanding the ontological question regarding the nature and origins of consciousness in the universe/multiverse. The work argues that the consciousness field emanates from an emerging fifth force of nature, the absolute vacuum, which constitutes and reproduces human consciousness and practical activities in the (...)
     
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  28.  29
    The Catholic Church and the Modern Mind.Paul C. Reinert - 1934 - Modern Schoolman 11 (4):95-95.
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  29.  41
    Martha, Mary and Saint Thomas Aquinas.Paul C. Perrotta - 1941 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 16 (3):418-420.
  30.  25
    Model theory of modules over a serial ring.Paul C. Eklof & Ivo Herzog - 1995 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 72 (2):145-176.
    We use the Drozd-Warfield structure theorem for finitely presented modules over a serial ring to investigate the model theory of modules over a serial ring, in particular, to give a simple description of pp-formulas and to classify the pure-injective indecomposable modules. We also study the question of whether every pure-injective indecomposable module over a valuation ring is the hull of a uniserial module.
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  31.  42
    Corporate Social Responsibility.Paul C. Godfrey, Nile A. Hatch & Jared M. Hansen - 2005 - Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 16:112-117.
    Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is a tortured concept. In this paper, we reframe CSR into a number of discrete Corporate Social Responsibilities (CSR’s), each of which can have a positive or negative social impact, and each of which has an endogenous managerially driven component, and an exogenous stakeholder driven component. Using an industry-level sample drawn from the KLD data base, we test the impact of hypothesized drivers of CSR on various CSR’s.
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  32.  29
    Atheism, Atoms, and the Activity of God: Science and Religion in Early Boyle Lectures, 1692–1707.Paul C. H. Lim - 2021 - Zygon 56 (1):143-167.
    The last‐half of seventeenth‐century England witnessed an increasing number of works published questioning the traditional notions of God's work of creation and providence. Ascribing agency to matter, motion, chance, and fortune, thinkers ranging from Hobbes, Spinoza, modern‐Epicureans, and other presented a challenge to the Anglican defenders of social and ecclesiastical order. By examining the genesis of the Boyle Lectures that began in 1692 with a bequest from Robert Boyle, we can see that while the Lecturers—three of whom will be examined (...)
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  33.  16
    Commentary on" Freud's' Project for a Scientific Psychology'after 100 Years".Paul C. Mohl - 1995 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 2 (2):135-136.
  34.  59
    Differences in moral values between corporations.Paul C. Nystrom - 1990 - Journal of Business Ethics 9 (12):971 - 979.
    This research compares the importance of moral values for corporations' managements, as reported by 97 knowledgeable employees in eight corporations. Does an employee consensus emerge within corporations and does it differ between corporations? To answer this question, an analysis of covariance technique was used to compare the importance of moral values between corporations versus within corporations. Results corroborate the hypothesis that closely matched corporations do differ significantly from one another in the importance of prevailing moral values. Evidence also suggests that (...)
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  35.  88
    The Limits of Language: Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus and Lao Tzu’s Tao Te Ching.Paul C. L. Tang & Robert David Schwartz - 1988 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 15 (1):9-33.
  36.  39
    Modules of existentially closed algebras.Paul C. Eklof & Hans-Christian Mez - 1987 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 52 (1):54-63.
    The underlying modules of existentially closed ▵-algebras are studied. Among other things, it is proved that they are all elementarily equivalent, and that all of them are existentially closed as modules if and only if ▵ is regular. It is also proved that every saturated module in the appropriate elementary equivalence class underlies an e.c. ▵-algebra. Applications to some problems in module theory are given. A number of open questions are mentioned.
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  37.  54
    Introduction to 'technological change': A special issue of ethics, place & environment.Paul C. Adams - 2007 - Ethics, Place and Environment 10 (1):1 – 6.
    In 1894 the anthropologist Otis Tufton Mason called for research in an area he dubbed ‘technogeography’, and he lauded the potential benefits of the knowledge to be acquired under this heading: The...
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  38.  16
    Together and apart in the family.Paul C. Rosenblatt & Sandra L. Titus - forthcoming - Humanitas.
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  39.  57
    Challenging the Moral Status of Blood Donation.Paul C. Snelling - 2014 - Health Care Analysis 22 (4):340-365.
    The World Health Organisation encourages that blood donation becomes voluntary and unremunerated, a system already operated in the UK. Drawing on public documents and videos, this paper argues that blood donation is regarded and presented as altruistic and supererogatory. In advertisements, donation is presented as something undertaken for the benefit of others, a matter attracting considerable gratitude from recipients and the collecting organisation. It is argued that regarding blood donation as an act of supererogation is wrongheaded, and an alternative account (...)
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  40. William Dembski and Michael Ruse, eds., Debating Design: From Darwin to DNA Reviewed by.Paul C. Anders - 2005 - Philosophy in Review 25 (3):175-179.
  41.  14
    The disavowal of the spirit: Integration and wholeness in Buddhism and psychoanalysis.Paul C. Cooper - 1998 - In Anthony Molino (ed.), The couch and the tree: dialogues in psychoanalysis and Buddhism. New York: North Point Press. pp. 231--246.
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  42.  14
    Ab initiostudy of palladium and silicon carbide.Paul C. Schuck, David Shrader & Roger E. Stoller - 2011 - Philosophical Magazine 91 (3):458-467.
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  43.  43
    Expressive meaning.Paul C. Hayner - 1956 - Journal of Philosophy 53 (4):149-157.
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  44.  4
    The Zen Impulse and the Psychoanalytic Encounter.Paul C. Cooper - 2009 - Routledge.
    Although psychoanalysis and Zen Buddhism derive from theoretical and philosophical assumptions worlds apart, both experientially-based traditions share at their heart a desire for the understanding, development, and growth of the human experience. Paul Cooper utilizes detailed clinical vignettes to contextualize the implications of Zen Buddhism in the therapeutic setting to demonstrate how its practices and beliefs inform, relate to, and enhance transformative psychoanalytic practice. The basic concepts of Zen, such as the identity of the relative and the absolute and (...)
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  45.  58
    Paradigm Shifts, Scientific Revolutions, and the Unit of Scientific Change: Towards a Post-Kuhnian Theory of Types of Scientific Development.Paul C. L. Tang - 1984 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1984:125 - 136.
    One of the central problems arising from just the descriptive aspect of Kuhn's theory of scientific development by revolutions concerns the problem of generality. Is Kuhn's theory general enough to encompass the development of all the sciences, including both the natural sciences and the social sciences? The answer to this question is no. It is argued that this negative answer is due not to the nature of the sciences themselves but to the nature of Kuhn's theory and, in particular, its (...)
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  46.  33
    Can the revised UK code direct practice?Paul C. Snelling - 2017 - Nursing Ethics 24 (4):392-407.
    The Nursing and Midwifery Council, the United Kingdom regulator of nursing and midwifery has recently revised its professional code of practice. This article begins by arguing that a professional code must be capable of sustaining close reading and of action guidance. Using four exemplar clauses, it is argued that the new revised code does not meet this purpose. First, I show that in setting out requirements for consent and documentation, the meaning of the relevant clause has changed significantly during the (...)
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  47.  31
    Evolution and populations.Paul C. Mundinger - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (2):245-246.
  48.  57
    On the semantics of infant categorization and why infants perceive horses as humans.Paul C. Quinn - 2008 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (6):724-726.
    This commentary considers the issues of what should be taken as evidence for semantic categorization in infants and why infants display a surprising asymmetry in the categorization of humans versus nonhuman animals. It is argued that perceptual knowledge should be viewed as a potent source of information for semantic categorization, and that the asymmetrical categorization behavior arises as a consequence of the frequency and similarity structure of experience.
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  49.  63
    Saying something interesting about responsibility for health.Paul C. Snelling - 2012 - Nursing Philosophy 13 (3):161-178.
    The concept of responsibility for health is a significant feature of health discourse and public health policy, but application of the concept is poorly understood. This paper offers an analysis of the concept in two ways. Following an examination of the use of the word ‘responsibility’ in the nursing and wider health literature using three examples, the concept of ‘responsibility for health’ as fulfilling a social function is discussed with reference to policy documents from the UK. The philosophical literature on (...)
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  50.  26
    Editorial remarks on mr. Wilkinson's article.Paul Carus & P. C. - 1899 - The Monist 9 (2):300 - 305.
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