Results for 'Phillipe Beriault'

944 found
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  1. The concept of organism: historical philosophical, scientific perspectives.Phillipe Huneman & Charles T. Wolfe - 2010 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 32 (2-3):147.
    0. Philippe Huneman and Charles T. Wolfe: Introduction 1. Tobias Cheung, “What is an ‘organism’? On the occurrence of a new term and its conceptual transformations 1680-1850” 2. Charles T. Wolfe, “Do organisms have an ontological status?” 3. John Symons, “The individuality of artifacts and organisms” 4. Thomas Pradeu, “What is an organism? An immunological answer” 5. Matteo Mossio & Alvaro Moreno, “Organisational closure in biological organisms” 6. Laura Nuño de la Rosa, “Becoming organisms. The organisation of development and the (...)
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  2.  5
    Selected problems of minimization of variable-valued logic formulas.Roland Phillipe Cuneo - 1975 - Urbana: Dept. of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
  3.  55
    Antígona: Heroína da psicanálise?Phillipe van Haute - 2007 - Discurso 36:287-312.
    Lacan reads Antigone, like Heidegger, in the light of the problematic of the truth (of the desire of) the subject/Dasein. The privilege accorded to the figure of Antigone and the rejection of Creon to which his interpretation bears witness, must also be understood against philosophical background. It also provides an insight into why Lacan gives Antigone – and only Antigone – a paradigmatic significance in the determination of the aim of analysis. we pointed to the analogy made by Lacan between (...)
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  4.  18
    Politicizing Honneth’s Ethics of Recognition.Jean-Phillipe Deranty & Emmanuel Renault - 2007 - Thesis Eleven 88 (1):92-111.
    This article argues that Axel Honneth’s ethics of recognition offers a robust model for a renewed critical theory of society, provided that it does not shy away from its political dimensions. First, the ethics of recognition needs to clarify its political moment at the conceptual level to remain conceptually sustainable. This requires a clarification of the notion of identity in relation to the three spheres of recognition, and a clarification of its exact place in a politics of recognition. We suggest (...)
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  5.  17
    What Is Work? Key Insights From the Psychodynamics of Work.Jean-Phillipe Deranty - 2009 - Thesis Eleven 98 (1):69-87.
    This article aims to present some of the main results of contemporary French psychodynamics of work. The writings of Christophe Dejours constitute the central references in this area. His psychoanalytical approach, which is initially concerned with the impact of contemporary work practices on individual health, has implications that go well beyond the narrow psycho-pathological interest. The most significant theoretical development to have come out of Dejours's research is that of Yves Clot, whose writings will constitute the second reference point in (...)
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  6.  16
    Democratize Work: The Case for Reorganizing the EconomyIsabelleFerreras, JulieBattilana, and DominiqueMéda. University of Chicago Press, 2022.Jean-Phillipe Deranty* - 2023 - Constellations 30 (3):364-366.
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  7.  33
    Sceaux sasanides de diverses collections privéesSceaux sasanides de diverses collections privees.Guitty Azarpay, Phillipe Gignoux & Rika Gyselen - 1986 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 106 (4):871.
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  8. Between relativism and absolutism : Democracry and human rights.Phillipe van Haute - 1995 - In Philippe van Haute & Peg Birmingham (eds.), Dissensus communis: between ethics and politics. Kampen: Kok Pharos.
  9.  47
    Psychoanalysis and/as philosophy? The anthropological significance of pathology in Freud's Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality and in the psychoanalytic tradition.Phillipe van Haute - 2005 - Natureza Humana 7 (2):359-374.
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  10.  1
    Climério Paulo da Silva Neto, Materializing the Foundations of Quantum Mechanics: Instruments and the First Bell Tests Cham: Springer Nature, 2023. Pp. 73. ISBN 978-3-031-29796-0. £39.99 (softcover). [REVIEW]Jean-Phillipe Martinez - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-2.
  11.  25
    Research in History and Philosophy of Mathematics: The Cshpm 2017 Annual Meeting in Toronto, Ontario.Amy Ackerberg-Hastings, Marion W. Alexander, Zoe Ashton, Christopher Baltus, Phil Bériault, Daniel J. Curtin, Eamon Darnell, Craig Fraser, Roger Godard, William W. Hackborn, Duncan J. Melville, Valérie Lynn Therrien, Aaron Thomas-Bolduc & R. S. D. Thomas (eds.) - 2018 - Springer Verlag.
    This volume contains thirteen papers that were presented at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society for History and Philosophy of Mathematics/Société canadienne d’histoire et de philosophie des mathématiques, which was held at Ryerson University in Toronto. It showcases rigorously reviewed modern scholarship on an interesting variety of topics in the history and philosophy of mathematics from Ancient Greece to the twentieth century. A series of chapters all set in the eighteenth century consider topics such as John Marsh’s techniques (...)
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  12.  17
    Catalogue des Sceaux, Camées et Bulles Sasanides de la Bibliothèque Nationale et du Musée du Louvre. II. Les Sceaux et Bulles InscritsCatalogue des Sceaux, Camees et Bulles Sasanides de la Bibliotheque Nationale et du Musee du Louvre. II. Les Sceaux et Bulles Inscrits. [REVIEW]Christopher J. Brunner & Phillipe Gignoux - 1982 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 102 (1):206.
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  13.  26
    Debating a Post-Work Future: Perspectives from Philosophy and the Social Sciences.Kory P. Schaff, Michael Cholbi, Jean-Phillipe Deranty & Denise Celentano (eds.) - 2024 - New York, NY, USA: Routledge.
    Growing economic inequality, workforce precarity, the perceived meaninglessness of many jobs, and the prospect of widespread technological unemployment have led to an unprecedented level of critical scrutiny of the institution of work. Some scholars go so far as to propose that we should take seriously, or even embrace, a “post-work” future. This volume aims to provide the first critical overview of the scholarly arguments about the design and desirability of such a “post-work” world. Topics addressed in its chapters include the (...)
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  14.  72
    Augustine's Invention of the Inner Self: The Legacy of a Christian Platonist.Phillip Cary - 2000 - Oup Usa.
    Phillip Cary argues that Augustine invented or created the concept of self as an inner space--as space into which one can enter and in which one can find God. This concept of inwardness, says Cary, has worked its way deeply into the intellectual heritage of the West and many Western individuals have experienced themselves as inner selves. After surveying the idea of inwardness in Augustine's predecessors, Cary offers a re-examination of Augustine's own writings, making the controversial point that in his (...)
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  15. Self-Defence and Innocence: Aggressors and Active Threats: Phillip Montague.Phillip Montague - 2000 - Utilitas 12 (1):62-78.
    Although people generally agree that innocent targets of culpable aggression are justified in harming the aggressors in self-defence, there is considerable disagreement regarding whether innocents are justified in defending themselves when their doing so would harm other innocent people. I argue in this essay that harming innocent aggressors and active innocent threats in self-defence is indeed justified under certain conditions, but that defensive actions in such cases are justified as permissions rather than as claim rights. This justification therefore differs from (...)
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  16.  65
    The Darwinian Revolution: Science Red in Tooth and Claw. Michael Ruse.Phillip R. Sloan - 1981 - Philosophy of Science 48 (4):623-627.
  17.  60
    Signalling signalhood and the emergence of communication.Thomas C. Scott-Phillips, Simon Kirby & Graham R. S. Ritchie - 2009 - Cognition 113 (2):226-233.
  18.  14
    The Death of Human Capital?: Its Failed Promise and How to Renew It in an Age of Disruption.Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder & Sin Yi Cheung - 2020 - Oup Usa.
    In The Death of Human Capital?, Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder, and Sin Yi Cheung demonstrate that the human capital story is one of a failed revolution that requires an alternative approach to education, jobs, and income inequalities. Rather than abandoning human capital theory, the authors seek to redefine it in a way that more accurately addresses today's challenges presented by global competition, new technologies, economic inequalities, and national debt.
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  19. No watershed for overflow: Recent work on the richness of consciousness.Ian Phillips - 2016 - Philosophical Psychology 29 (2):236-249.
    A familiar and enduring controversy surrounds the question of whether our phenomenal experience “overflows” availability to cognition: do we consciously see more than we can remember and report? Both sides to this debate have long sought to move beyond naïve appeals to introspection by providing empirical evidence for or against overflow. Recently, two notable studies—Bronfman, Brezis, Jacobson, and Usher and Vandenbroucke, Sligte, Fahrenfort, Ambroziak, and Lamme —have purported to provide compelling evidence in favor of overflow. Here I explain why the (...)
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  20.  16
    (1 other version)A History of Greek Philosophy.Phillip De Lacy & W. K. C. Guthrie - 1964 - American Journal of Philology 85 (4):435.
  21. Plato and Pythagoreanism.Phillip Sidney Horky - 2013 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Was Plato a Pythagorean? Plato's students and earliest critics thought so, but scholars since the nineteenth century have been more skeptical. With this probing study, Phillip Sidney Horky argues that a specific type of Pythagorean philosophy, called "mathematical" Pythagoreanism, exercised a decisive influence on fundamental aspects of Plato's philosophy. The progenitor of mathematical Pythagoreanism was the infamous Pythagorean heretic and political revolutionary Hippasus of Metapontum, a student of Pythagoras who is credited with experiments in harmonics that led to innovations in (...)
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  22. Modal Matters: Essays in Metaphysics.Phillip Bricker (ed.) - 2020 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
    This volume contains eighteen papers, three with new postscripts, that were written over the past 35 years. Five of the papers have not been previously published. Together they provide a comprehensive account of modal reality—the realm of possible worlds—from a Humean perspective, with excursions into neighboring topics in metaphysics. Part 1 sketches an account of reality as a whole, both the mathematical and the modal, defending a form of plenitudinous realism: every consistent proposition is true of some portion of reality. (...)
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  23.  40
    Cognitive and noncognitive determinants and consequences of complex skill acquisition.Phillip L. Ackerman, Ruth Kanfer & Maynard Goff - 1995 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 1 (4):270.
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  24. Debate on unconscious perception.Ian Phillips & Ned Block - 2016 - In Bence Nanay (ed.), Current Controversies in Philosophy of Perception. New York: Routledge. pp. 165–192.
     
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  25. Direct causation in the linguistic coding and individuation of causal events.Phillip Wolff - 2003 - Cognition 88 (1):1-48.
  26.  79
    The niche construction perspective: a critical appraisal.Thomas C. Scott-Phillips, Kevin N. Laland, David M. Shuker, Thomas E. Dickins & Stuart A. West - unknown
    Niche construction refers to the activities of organisms that bring about changes in their environments, many of which are evolutionarily and ecologically consequential. Advocates of niche construction theory (NCT) believe that standard evolutionary theory fails to recognize the full importance of niche construction, and consequently propose a novel view of evolution, in which niche construction and its legacy over time (ecological inheritance) are described as evolutionary processes, equivalent in importance to natural selection. Here, we subject NCT to critical evaluation, in (...)
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  27. Liberation Theology: The Essential Facts About the Revolutionary Movement in Latin America and Beyond.Phillip Berryman - 1987
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  28.  38
    ‘Psychoanalysis is one more way of taking people seriously’: Adam Phillips in conversation with Emma Williams.Adam Phillips & Emma Williams - 2022 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 56 (1):180-189.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 56, Issue 1, Page 180-189, February 2022.
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  29. Knowledge before belief.Jonathan Phillips, Wesley Buckwalter, Fiery Cushman, Ori Friedman, Alia Martin, John Turri, Laurie Santos & Joshua Knobe - 2021 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44:e140.
    Research on the capacity to understand others' minds has tended to focus on representations ofbeliefs,which are widely taken to be among the most central and basic theory of mind representations. Representations ofknowledge, by contrast, have received comparatively little attention and have often been understood as depending on prior representations of belief. After all, how could one represent someone as knowing something if one does not even represent them as believing it? Drawing on a wide range of methods across cognitive science, (...)
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  30.  19
    Correction to: Speculative Fiction and the Political Economy of Healthcare: Chang-Rae Lee’s On Such a Full Sea.Phillip Barrish - 2022 - Journal of Medical Humanities 43 (2):209-209.
    Due to an editing error, this article was initially published with an incorrect title. The correct title is reflected above. The original article has been corrected.
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  31.  26
    Glossarium Epicureum.Phillip De Lacy, Hermann Karl Usener, M. Gigante & W. Schmid - 1979 - American Journal of Philology 100 (3):468.
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  32.  94
    Pastoral Care: Finding a Niche in Ethical Decision Making.Donald F. Phillips - 1993 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2 (1):99.
    The last three articles within this section of Cambridge Quarterly have focused on organizations or disciplines outside the mainstream of bioethics that are making inroads within the field. This issue's article may be viewed as a departure, but it is not-my thesis is that despite the active presence of the clergy in the ethics field, individuals involved in pastoral care are often thought by health professionals, as well as by a sizeable number of pastors themselves, to not be within the (...)
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  33.  34
    Buffon, German Biology, and the Historical Interpretation of Biological Species.Phillip R. Sloan - 1979 - British Journal for the History of Science 12 (2):109-153.
    The entry of time and history into biological systems of classification is perhaps the single most significant development in the history of biological systematics in the modern era. Darwin's claiming that descent is ‘… the hidden bond of connexion which naturalists have been seeking under the term of the natural system’, rather than seeing the answer in the multitude of previous attempts to resolve the problem in terms of morphological affinities, analogies, and complex relations of resemblance, marked the turning point (...)
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  34.  37
    America COMPETES at 5 years: An Analysis of Research-Intensive Universities’ RCR Training Plans.Trisha Phillips, Franchesca Nestor, Gillian Beach & Elizabeth Heitman - 2018 - Science and Engineering Ethics 24 (1):227-249.
    This project evaluates the impact of the National Science Foundation's policy to promote education in the responsible conduct of research. To determine whether this policy resulted in meaningful RCR educational experiences, our study examined the instructional plans developed by individual universities in response to the mandate. Using a sample of 108 U.S. institutions classified as Carnegie “very high research activity”, we analyzed all publicly available NSF RCR training plans in light of the consensus best practices in RCR education that were (...)
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  35.  17
    Converging evidence for the functional significance of imagery in problem solving.Phillip Shaver, Lee Pierson & Stephen Lang - 1974 - Cognition 3 (4):359-375.
  36.  78
    Semantic Powers: Meaning and the Means of Knowing in Classical Indian Philosophy.Stephen H. Phillips - 2001 - Mind 110 (439):749-753.
  37. Justice, reasonableness, and the similar handling of similar cases.Phillip Montague - 1972 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 33 (1):90-99.
  38. Realism without parochialism.Phillip Bricker - 2020 - In Modal Matters: Essays in Metaphysics. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 40-76.
    I am a realist of a metaphysical stripe. I believe in an immense realm of "modal" and "abstract" entities, of entities that are neither part of, nor stand in any causal relation to, the actual, concrete world. For starters: I believe in possible worlds and individuals; in propositions, properties, and relations (both abundantly and sparsely conceived); in mathematical objects and structures; and in sets (or classes) of whatever I believe in. Call these sorts of entity, and the reality they comprise, (...)
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  39. Prudence.Phillip Bricker - 1980 - Journal of Philosophy 77 (7):381-401.
    The article explicates a notion of prudence according to which an agent acts prudently if he acts so as to satisfy not only his present preferences, but his past and future preferences as well. A simplified decision-theoretic framework is developed within which three analyses of prudence are presented and compared. That analysis is defended which can best handle cases in which an agent's present act will affect his future preferences.
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  40. What language might tell us about the perception of cause.Phillip Wolff & Dedre Gentner - 1996 - In Garrison W. Cottrell (ed.), Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual Conference of The Cognitive Science Society. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 453--458.
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  41.  67
    The Buffon-Linnaeus Controversy.Phillip Sloan - 1976 - Isis 67 (3):356-375.
  42.  92
    Infant rights and the morality of infanticide.Phillip Montague - 1989 - Noûs 23 (1):63-81.
  43. Adam Smith, belletrist.Mark Salber Phillips - 1996 - In Knud Haakonssen (ed.), The Cambridge companion to Adam Smith. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  44.  10
    Chapter One. The Background of Science and Natural Theology.Phillip Wiener - 1949 - In Philip Paul Wiener (ed.), Evolution and the Founders of Pragmatism. Cambridge, MA, USA: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 1-17.
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  45.  23
    Not All Dead White Men: Classics and Misogyny in the Digital Age by Donna Zuckerberg.Phillip Zapkin - 2019 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 112 (3):239-240.
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  46. Evolution and devolution of folkbiological knowledge.Phillip Wolff, Douglas L. Medin & Connie Pankratz - 1999 - Cognition 73 (2):177-204.
  47. Isolation and Unification: The Realist Analysis of Possible Worlds.Phillip Bricker - 1996 - Philosophical Studies 84 (2-3):225 - 238.
    If realism about possible worlds is to succeed in eliminating primitive modality, it must provide an 'analysis' of possible world: nonmodal criteria for demarcating one world from another. This David Lewis has done. Lewis holds, roughly, that worlds are maximal unified regions of logical space. So far, so good. But what Lewis means by 'unification' is too narrow, I think, in two different ways. First, for Lewis, all worlds are (almost) 'globally' unified: at any world, (almost) every part is directly (...)
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  48. Bradley and the Structure of Knowledge.Phillip Ferreira - 2000 - Philosophical Quarterly 50 (200):401-402.
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  49.  81
    Self-defense and choosing between lives.Phillip Montague - 1981 - Philosophical Studies 40 (2):207 - 219.
  50. Plenitude of Possible Structures.Phillip Bricker - 1991 - Journal of Philosophy 88 (11):607-619.
    Which mathematical structures are possible, that is, instantiated by the concrete inhabitants of some possible world? Are there worlds with four-dimensional space? With infinite-dimensional space? Whence comes our knowledge of the possibility of structures? In this paper, I develop and defend a principle of plenitude according to which any mathematically natural generalization of possible structure is itself possible. I motivate the principle pragmatically by way of the role that logical possibility plays in our inquiry into the world.
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