Results for 'R. Bourgeois'

947 found
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  1. La théorie de la connaissance intellectuelle chez Henri de Gand.R. Bourgeois - 1936 - Revue de Philosophie 36:238-259.
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  2.  35
    Role taking, corporeal intersubjectivity, and self: Mead and Merleau-Ponty.R. L. Rosenthal Bourgeois S. B. - 1990 - Philosophy Today 34 (2).
    Explains the intersubjective nature of the self and the function of role taking in the development of the personal level of intersubjectivity out of primordial, pre-personal sociality or corporeal intersubjectivity of the lived body. Pragmatic philosophy of George Herbert Mead; Existential-phenomenology of Maurice Merleau-Ponty; Fundamental and pervasive rapport; More.
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  3.  10
    Analyse et théologie: croyances religieuses et rationalité.A. Benmakhlouf, S. Bourgeois-Gironde, P. Engel, M. Garandeau, R. Glauser & B. Gnassounou (eds.) - 2002 - Paris: Libr. philosophique J. Vrin.
    Textes de philosophes français et britanniques issus du colloque tenu à l'Université de Nantes en 1998. Ils sont consacrés à la philosophie analytique de la religion et abordent des sujets tels que la nature et la justification des croyances religieuses, la question du mal, celles des preuves de l'existence de Dieu, de la théodicée, du langage religieux, du miracle, de la prière, etc.
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  4.  7
    Quelle sagesse pour notre temps?Laylī Anvar, Anne Baudart, Bernard Bourgeois, Geneviève Gobillot, Maurice R. Hayoun, Michel Hulin, Michel Lacroix & Pierre Magnard (eds.) - 2015 - Paris: L'Harmattan.
    La diminution du poids institutionnel des religions dans notre société ne signifie pas pour autant que les hommes se détournent d'interrogations fondamentales touchant à leur identité profonde, à leur origine et à leur destination, au sens de leur vie ici-bas, à l'éventualité d'une vie après la mort. Que ces questions continuent d'occuper la pensée humaine, chacun est à même d'en faire le constat, et la science elle-même les a investies avec des moyens renouvelés. Ce qui a changé dans les dernières (...)
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  5.  19
    Improving oncology first-in-human and Window of opportunity informed consent forms through participant feedback.Rebecca D. Pentz, R. Donald Harvey, Margie Dixon, Shannon Blee, Tekiah McClary, John Bourgeois, Eli Abernethy, Gavin Campbell, Hannah Claire Sibold & Anna M. Avinger - 2023 - BMC Medical Ethics 24 (1):1-7.
    BackgroundAlthough patient advocates have developed templates for standard consent forms, evaluating patient preferences for first in human (FIH) and window of opportunity (Window) trial consent forms is critical due to their unique risks. FIH trials are the initial use of a novel compound in study participants. In contrast, Window trials give an investigational agent over a fixed duration to treatment naïve patients in the time between diagnosis and standard of care (SOC) surgery. Our goal was to determine the patient-preferred presentation (...)
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  6.  1
    Are two Dimensions Too Many? - A one-dimensional rival to two-dimensional semantics.Sacha Bourgeois-Gironde & Denis Bonnay - unknown
    We discuss two interpretations of two-dimensional semantics (2DMS) due to D. Chalmers and R. Stalnaker. The main problem with both interpretations of the formal framework is the relinquishng of rigidity for terms. They are in a sense unfaithful to an agent's beliefs. We present alternative principles to capture what we take to be agents's beliefs, namely: the principles of hyper-rigidity and backward reference to actuality. We propose then to go back to a one-dimensional semantics which affords a satisfactory model of (...)
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  7. Traces of understanding. A profile of Heidegger's and Ricœur's hermeneutics, coll. « Elementa ».Patrick L. Bourgeois & Frank Schalow - 1990 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 180 (3):556-556.
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  8. Contemporary Bourgeois philosophy in gfr and its connections with basic political conflicts.R. Steigerwald - 1978 - Filosoficky Casopis 26 (6):825-850.
     
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  9.  14
    The Politics of Subjectivity: Notes on Marxism, the Movement, and Bourgeois Society.R. Jacoby - 1971 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1971 (9):116-126.
  10. Marx theory of history as the basis of criticism of the concept of history in late Bourgeois thought.R. Steindl - 1983 - Filosoficky Casopis 31 (3):376-385.
     
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  11.  13
    Music and the Bourgeois; Music and the Proletarian.R. Norton & J. Bokina - 1976 - Télos 1976 (28):227-234.
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  12. The criticism of Bourgeois philosophical approaches to contemporary scientific and technical progress.Rr Akolektiv, R. Steindl, P. Horak, Z. Javurek & V. Zatka - 1983 - Filosoficky Casopis 31 (1):38-55.
     
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  13. The role of biological determinism in contemporary Bourgeois thought.R. Steindl - 1983 - Filosoficky Casopis 31 (1):64-74.
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  14.  24
    Henri Bourgeois, L'avenir de la confirmation, Lyon, Éditions du Chalet, 1972 , 192 pages. [REVIEW]R. -Michel Roberge - 1973 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 29 (3):323.
  15. Ecologic problem in Bourgeois ideology and as object of science.R. Mocek - 1977 - Filosoficky Casopis 25 (6):903-914.
     
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  16. Patrick L. Bourgeois and Sandra B. Rosenthal, "Thematic Studies in Phenomenology and Pragmatism". [REVIEW]Carl R. Hausman - 1984 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 20 (4):473.
     
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  17.  31
    Is Hobbes's View of Property Bourgeois?Neil R. Luebke - 1982 - Philosophical Topics 13 (9999):133-142.
  18.  25
    Marxism and Christianity. [REVIEW]J. B. R. - 1969 - Review of Metaphysics 22 (4):758-758.
    When the original version of this book appeared in 1953, MacIntyre was one of a very few Anglo-Saxon philosophers who exhibited any depth understanding of Marx and Marxism. The course of scholarship since that time both vindicates and supersedes many of the points that MacIntyre makes. He not only shows how Marx secularized the world view ingredient in Christianity, but how Marx moved from the critique of religion to the critique of philosophy. And he nicely sketches for us the move (...)
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  19. The Calvinist origins of Lockean political economy.R. Boyd - 2002 - History of Political Thought 23 (1):31-60.
    Criticisms of John Locke as a ‘bourgeois’ or ‘possessive individualist’ have been hotly contested since their appearance in the 1950s and 1960s. Locke's defenders have countered that his economic thought was governed by doctrines of charity, community and the public good. This project of recovering a kinder, gentler Locke has brought with it an emphasis on the centrality of Grotius and Pufendorf to seventeenth-century discussions of natural law. Still, the emergence of the ‘Grotius-Pufendorf thesis’ may have eclipsed other sources (...)
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  20. What's political or cultural about political culture and the public sphere? Toward an historical sociology of concept formation.Margaret R. Somers - 1995 - Sociological Theory 13 (2):113-144.
    The English translation of Habermas's The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere converges with a recent trend toward the revival of the "political culture concept" in the social sciences. Surprisingly, Habermas's account of the Western bourgeois public sphere has much in common with the original political culture concept associated with Parsonian modernization theory in the 1950s and 1960s. In both cases, the concept of political culture is used in a way that is neither political nor cultural. Explaining this peculiarity (...)
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  21.  83
    Antonio Gramsci’s Contribution to a Critical Economics.Peter Thomas & Michael R. Krätke - 2011 - Historical Materialism 19 (3):63-105.
    According to conventional wisdom, Antonio Gramsci is a political philosopher lacking in, and who avoids, a serious interest in political economy. That is a serious misrepresentation of Gramsci’s works and thought. Equally wrong is the widespread view that anything Gramsci had to say about political economy is to be found in his scattered notes on ‘Americanism and Fordism’. On the contrary, a careful rereading of Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks shows that Marx’s great and unfinished project of the critique of political economy (...)
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  22. Narrating and naturalizing civil society and citizenship theory: The place of political culture and the public sphere.Margaret R. Somers - 1995 - Sociological Theory 13 (3):229-274.
    The English translation of Habermas's The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere converges with the revival of the "political culture concept" in the social sciences. Surprisingly, Habermas's account of the Western bourgeois public sphere has much in common with the original political culture concept associated with Parsonian modernization theory in the 1950s and 1960s. In both cases, the concept of political culture is used in a way that is neither political nor cultural. Explaining this peculiarity is the central problem (...)
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  23.  67
    The Ontology of Production in Marx.David R. Lachterman - 1996 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 19 (1):3-23.
    Praxis is the identifying signature of the most prevalent contemporary versions of the reception and interpretation of Marx and of the movements of thought inspired or provoked by him. This view seems to accord well with the early “Theses on Feuerbach” and is frequently mobilized in support of the further claim that the “mature” or “scientific” Marx, the Marx of Das Kapital, above all had left behind his former preoccupations with philosophy in anything like a traditional sense, in order to (...)
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  24.  14
    Sartre and the Sacred. [REVIEW]R. F. T. - 1975 - Review of Metaphysics 28 (4):757-758.
    Described in the blurb as "the first systematic account of Sartre’s phenomenology of religion," King’s work also locates Sartre’s observations in the tradition of religious mysticism which Sartre is said to have studied in the early ‘30s. In fact, one of King’s most telling criticisms throughout the exposition is that Sartre was not faithful enough to the phenomena of mysticism, sacrificing phenomenology to his ontological commitments whenever the two seemed to conflict. The opening chapter sets the theme by treating the (...)
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  25.  18
    Classified by their classifications: nineteenth-century library classifications in context.John R. Hodgson - 2022 - History of European Ideas 48 (5):499-517.
    ABSTRACT This paper investigates influences upon the development of library classification systems in nineteenth-century Britain. Two case studies – Edward Edwards's ‘scheme of classification for a town library’ of 1859 and the Bibliotheca Lindesiana of the earls of Crawford who made a number of significant contributions to the development of library classification over a fifty-year period – are deployed to explore how classification schemes reflected the habituses of their creators and how they were shaped by their socio-economic, epistemological and geographical (...)
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  26.  43
    Perspectives on 19th and 20th-Century Protestant Theology. [REVIEW]A. R. E. - 1969 - Review of Metaphysics 23 (1):141-141.
    This book is a transcription from tapes of a course given by Tillich in the spring quarter of 1963 at the University of Chicago Divinity School. The title is somewhat misleading as Tillich spends a very limited amount of time on the period after Nietzsche--no doubt because of lack of time in the course schedule--and also devotes an entire third of the book to developing the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophical, theological, and cultural background for nineteenth-century Protestant theology. He is especially (...)
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  27.  76
    Workerism’s Inimical Incursions: On Mario Tronti’s Weberianism.Sara R. Farris - 2011 - Historical Materialism 19 (3):29-62.
    This article considers the engagement of Mario Tronti - one of the leading figures of classical Italian workerism [operaismo] - with the thought of Max Weber. Weber constituted one of Tronti’s most important cattivi maestri. By analysing Weber’s influence upon Tronti’s development, this article aims to show the ways in which this encounter affected his Marxism and political theory in general. In particular, during the period of the debate in Italian Marxism about the thesis of the autonomy of the political, (...)
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  28.  27
    Ressentiment. [REVIEW]R. D. K. - 1962 - Review of Metaphysics 15 (4):679-679.
    A free and lucid translation of Scheler's first mature work on social and ethical theory. It represents an imaginative reinterpretation of Nietzsche's concept of "ressentiment," the structural key to the phenomenon of "slave morality." Generously sprinkled with apt illustrations, Ressentiment is a sustained attack on the notions of "work" and the "universal love of mankind" as ultimate sources of value. Such ressentiment-laden social tendencies are seen to form the faulty cornerstone of modern morality, both bourgeois and socialist.--K. R. D.
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  29. Tyranny and Revolution: Rousseau to Heidegger.Waller R. Newell - 2022 - Cambridge University Press.
    The Philosophy of Freedom from Rousseau to Heidegger launched a great protest against modern liberal individualism, inspired by the virtuous political community of the ancient Greeks. Hegel argued that the progress of history was gradually bringing about greater freedom and restoring our lost sense of community. But his successors Marx, Nietzsche and Heidegger rejected Hegel's version of the end of history with its legitimization of the bourgeois nation-state. They sought to replace it with ever more utopian, apocalyptic and illiberal (...)
     
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  30.  27
    Herman Melville: Between Charlemagne and the Antemosaic Cosmic Man: Race, Class, and the Crisis of Bourgeois Ideology in the American Renaissance Writer.Robert Tally Jr - 2009 - Historical Materialism 17 (3):235-243.
    Tally reviews Loren Goldner's Herman Melville: Between Charlemagne and the Antemosaic Cosmic King, which posits that Melville was the American Marx, exposing the crisis of bourgeois ideology in the revolutionary period around 1848. In this, Goldner follows a tradition of Marxian scholarship of Melville, notably including C.L.R. James, Michael Paul Rogin, and Cesare Casarino. Tally concludes that Goldner's argument, while interesting, is limited by its focus on American exceptionalism and by ignoring the postnational force of Melville's novels.
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  31.  9
    Middle-earth and the return of the common good: J.R.R. Tolkien and political philosophy.Joshua Hren - 2018 - Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
    The gift of death and the new magic of politics: Hegel and Tolkien on sorcery and secondary worlds -- The political theology of catastrophe: Plato's Athenian Atlantis, Tolkien's Númenoran Atalantë, and the Nazi Reich -- Burglar and bourgeois? Bilbo Baggins' dialectical ethics -- Hobbes, Hobbits, and the modern state of Mordor: myths of power and desire in Leviathan and Tolkien's Legendarium -- Middle-earth and the return of the common good -- Epilogue: from apocalypse to eucatastrophe: "The end of history," (...)
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  32.  14
    G. W. F. Hegel und Hermann Cohen: Wege zur Versöhnung: Festschrift für Myriam Bienenstock.Norbert Waszek & Myriam Bienenstock (eds.) - 2018 - Freiburg: Verlag Karl Alber.
    Dass sich Hegel und Hermann Cohen trotz scheinbarer Gegensatze miteinander versohnen lassen, ist eine Grunduberzeugung des Werkes von Myriam Bienenstock, welches sich stets durch die doppelte Ausrichtung auf Hegel und das judische Denken auszeichnete. Mit diesem Band wird Myriam Bienenstock, seit 1997 Professorin fur Philosophie an der Universitat Francois Rabelais in Tours, anlasslich ihres 70. Geburtstages geehrt. Mit Beitragen von Dominque Bourel, Bernard Bourgeois, Christophe Bouton, Pierfrancesco Fiorato, Jean-Francois Goubet, Dana Hollander, Helmut Holzhey, Gerhard Kurz, Claudia Melica, Wolfdietrich Schmied-Kowarzik, (...)
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  33.  88
    The ‘Constitutive Thought’ of Regret.Geoffrey Scarre - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 25 (5):569-585.
    In this paper I defend and develop Bernard Williams’ claim that the ‘constitutive thought’ of regret is ‘something like “how much better if it had been otherwise”’. An introductory section on cognitivist theories of emotion is followed by a detailed investigation of the concept of ‘agent-regret’ and of the ways in which the ‘constitutive thought’ might be articulated in different situations in which agents acknowledge casual responsibility for bringing about undesirable outcomes. Among problematic cases discussed are those in which agents (...)
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  34.  69
    (1 other version)The Apocalypse of Hope.Nicolas de Warren - 2006 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 27 (1):25-59.
    “The apocalypse of hope” and other comparable flourishes in the writings of Frantz Fanon and Jean-Paul Sartre on political violence strike an alarming tone. In The Wretched of the Earth, Fanon advocates the way of revolutionary violence as the inevitable consequence of colonialism and its systematic exploitation of colonized natives. In his role of agent provocateur, Sartre’s preface to Fanon’s influential and controversial work characteristically dramatizes this redemptive promise of violence: “to gun down a European is to kill two birds (...)
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  35.  34
    The undecidability of k-provability.Samuel R. Buss - 1991 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 53 (1):75-102.
    Buss, S.R., The undecidability of k-provability, Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 53 75-102. The k-provability problem is, given a first-order formula ø and an integer k, to determine if ø has a proof consisting of k or fewer lines . This paper shows that the k-provability problem for the sequent calculus is undecidable. Indeed, for every r.e. set X there is a formula ø and an integer k such that for all n,ø has a proof of k sequents if (...)
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  36.  8
    Practice in Christianity.Robert L. Perkins - 2004 - Mercer University Press.
    "Practice in Christianity is the second volume in what could be called the "collected Works" of "Anti-Climacus," Kierkegaard's new pseudonym. Anti-Climacus's first volume, The Sickness Unto Death, appeared just a year earlier in 1849. The use of a pseudonym is consistent with Kierkegaard's usual practice when presenting an idealized statement of his subject, be it sexual seduction or Christian theology. Anti-Climacus argues the conceptual content of Christianity against the "leading thought of the times" and also against the ethical and social (...)
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  37.  29
    From the ‘spirit of capital’ to the “spirit” of capitalism: The transition in German economic thought between Lujo Brentano and Max Weber.Peter Ghosh - 2009 - History of European Ideas 35 (1):62-92.
    I dedicate this essay to the memory of the late Wolfgang Mommsen—the subject would have been congenial to him. It is one of a series of offshoots from a central project: a scholarly edition of Max Weber's Protestant Ethic with commentary. When I first told Prof. Mommsen of my plan in 1994 he looked me full in the face and gave a characteristic growl: “All that work!” Here was a man who knew what he was about. My thanks to Ross (...)
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  38.  11
    An introduction to moral and social philosophy.Jeffrie G. Murphy - 1973 - Belmont, Calif.,: Wadsworth Pub. Co..
    Plato. Crito.--Mill, J. S. Utilitarianism.--Rawls, J. Two concepts of rules.--Kant, I. Fundamental principles of the metaphysic of morals.--Rawls, J. Justice as fairness.--Benn, S. I. and Peters, R. S. Society and types of social regulation.--Hobbes, T. Leviathan, abridged.--Hayek, F. A. The principles of a liberal social order.--Marx, K. Alienation and its overcoming in Communism.--Lukes, S. Alienation and anomie.--Garver, N. What violence is.--Zinn, H. The force of nonviolence.--Caudwell, C. Pacifism and violence; a study in bourgeois ethics.--Bennett, J. Whatever the consequences.--Foot, P. (...)
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  39.  18
    Very long term memory for tacit knowledge.R. Allen - 1980 - Cognition 8 (2):175-185.
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  40.  15
    Zur Rekonstruktion der praktischen Philosophie: Gedenkschrift für Karl-Heinz Ilting.Karl-Otto Apel & Riccardo Pozzo - 1990
    Inhalt: K.-O. Apel: Vorwort - G. Calabro: Gesprach uber Hobbes mit Karl-Heinz Ilting - I. Grundfragen der praktischen Philosophie: H.-G. Gadamer: Die Gegenwart der sokratischen Frage in Aristoteles - P. Lorenzen: Politische Ethik - J. D'Hondt: Die Ethik und der Weltlauf - K.-O. Apel: Faktische Anerkennung oder einsehbar notwendige Anerkennung? - H. Schnadelbach: Rationalitat und Normativitat - F. W. Veauthier: Vom sozialen Verantwortungsapriori im phanomenologischen Denken - K. Lorenz: Der Antagonismus von Freiheit und Gerechtigkeit - P. Rohs: Moralische Praferenzen - (...)
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  41.  18
    Direct observation of antiphase boundaries in the AuCu3superlattice.R. M. Fisher & M. J. Marcinkowski - 1961 - Philosophical Magazine 6 (71):1385-1405.
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  42.  46
    Quasi-Aesthetic Appraisals.R. Harré - 1958 - Philosophy 33 (125):132 - 137.
    IN the right circumstances and the right frame of mind we are prepared to make aesthetic appraisals of almost anything, from hills, cottages and cars, to symphonies, people and poems. My problem is to try and set a boundary in at least one direction to the catholicity of this kind of judgement. I want to argue that when we use a word from our aesthetic vocabulary for appraising a theory in science or a proof in mathematics we are not properly (...)
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  43.  8
    Ethica Eudemia.R. R. Walzer & J. M. Mingay (eds.) - 1991 - Oxford University Press UK.
    BLWith new text and full apparatus criticusThe Eudemian Ethics was one of two ethical treatises which Aristotle wrote on the subject of ethica or `matters to do with character'. Although the two works cover much the same ground, the Nicomachean Ethics is better known; the poor manuscript tradition of the Eudemian Ethics has made correct translation and interpretation of the text extremely difficult. The subject of the work is the choice of a certain means of conduct, made by a `man (...)
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  44.  20
    IX—Can there be a Private Morality?R. S. Downie - 1968 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 68 (1):167-186.
    R. S. Downie; IX—Can there be a Private Morality?, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 68, Issue 1, 1 June 1968, Pages 167–186, https://doi.org/10.1.
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  45.  54
    Two Manuscripts of Statius' Thebaid.R. D. Williams - 1948 - Classical Quarterly 42 (3-4):105-.
    Professor R. J. Getty has drawn attention to a tenth- or early eleventh-century manuscript of Statius’ Thebaid, hitherto examined only in Book I, namely Turonensis . Dr. Klotz, in his Teubner edition of 1908, gave citations from Book I, and wrote , ‘dolendum est sane de hoc codice primum tantum librum innotuisse, sed cum Roffensis libri maxime affinis accuratiorem notitiam haberemus, collatione quamvis -aegre careri posse nobis visum est.’ I have collated both T and Roffensis in full, and find firstly (...)
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  46.  14
    The Fundamental Questions of Philosophy.A. D. R. - 1953 - Philosophical Quarterly 3 (10):94-94.
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  47.  11
    The Buddha in the Machine: Art, Technology, and the Meeting of East and West.R. John Williams - 2014 - Yale University Press.
    The famous 1893 Chicago World’s Fair celebrated the dawn of corporate capitalism and a new Machine Age with an exhibit of the world’s largest engine. Yet the noise was so great, visitors ran out of the Machinery Hall to retreat to the peace and quiet of the Japanese pavilion’s Buddhist temples and lotus ponds. Thus began over a century of the West’s turn toward an Asian aesthetic as an antidote to modern technology. From the turn-of-the-century Columbian Exhibition to the latest (...)
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  48.  23
    The generation of vacancies in metals.R. S. Barnes - 1960 - Philosophical Magazine 5 (54):635-646.
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  49.  5
    The Metaphysics of the Narrative Self.R. E. A. Michael - 2022 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 8 (4):586-603.
    This essay develops a theory of identities, selves, and ‘the self’ that both explains the sense in which selves are narratively constituted and also explains how the self relates to a person's individual autobiographical identity and to their various social identities. I argue that identities are the contents of narratively structured representations, some of which are hosted individually and are autobiographical in form, and others of which are hosted collectively and are biographical in form. These identities, in turn, give rise (...)
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  50.  47
    Verbal hallucinations, unintendedness, and the validity of the schizophrenia diagnosis.R. P. Bentall & P. D. Slade - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (3):519-520.
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