Results for 'Randall S. Scheibel'

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  1.  9
    Neuroimaging and Rehabilitation.Harvey S. Levin & Randall S. Scheibel - 2005 - In Walter M. High, Angelle M. Sander, Margaret A. Struchen & Karen A. Hart, Rehabilitation for Traumatic Brain Injury. Oxford University Press. pp. 338.
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  2. Structural brain imaging.Harvey S. Levin & Randall S. Scheibel - 2005 - In Walter M. High, Angelle M. Sander, Margaret A. Struchen & Karen A. Hart, Rehabilitation for Traumatic Brain Injury. Oxford University Press. pp. 338.
     
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  3.  39
    The Epistemological Double Standard Inherent in Christian Metaphysical Beliefs.Randall S. Firestone - 2014 - Open Journal of Philosophy 4 (3):265-280.
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  4.  41
    The organizational bases of ethical work climates in lodging operations as perceived by general managers.Randall S. Upchurch & Sheila K. Ruhland - 1996 - Journal of Business Ethics 15 (10):1083 - 1093.
    The focus of this research concentrated on ascertaining the presence of ethical climate types and the level of analysis from which ethical decisions were based as perceived by lodging managers. In agreement with Victor and Cullen (1987, 1988), ethical work climates are multidimensional and multi-determined. The results of this study indicated that: (a) benevolence is the predominate dimension of ethical climate present in the lodging organization as perceived by lodging managers, and (b) the local level of analysis (e.g. immediate workplace (...)
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  5.  49
    Oversimplification in Philosophy.Randall S. Firestone - 2019 - Open Journal of Philosophy 9 (3):396-427.
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  6.  21
    Dismantling Paley’s Watch: Equivocation Regarding the Word “Order” in the Teleological Argument.Randall S. Firestone - 2020 - Open Journal of Philosophy 10 (1):155-186.
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  7.  94
    Democratic education: A Deweyan reminder.Randall S. Hewitt - 2006 - Education and Culture 22 (2):43-60.
    : Educational historians, philosophers, and sociologists have long warned that the increasing encroachment of business logic in public schools bodes ill for democracy as a way of life. Many have concluded that the business person's interest in affecting public education is to bring about a greater bottom line, which, of course, is profit, albeit secured in the name of democratic freedom and social progress. These scholars have noted that the corporate parasite is eating away the insides of our public schools (...)
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  8.  51
    Aliens, Humans, Animals, & Luck: Animal Treatment & Human Morality.Randall S. Firestone - 2016 - Open Journal of Philosophy 6 (3):265-281.
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  9.  34
    The Character Development Defense to the Argument from Evil Is Logically Inconsistent.Randall S. Firestone - 2018 - Open Journal of Philosophy 8 (5):444-465.
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  10. I992,'.Randall S. Hansen - 1992 - A Multidimensional Scale for Measuring Business Ethics: A Purification and Refine-Ment', Journai of Business Ethics 11 (7):523-534.
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  11.  20
    The Givenness of Desire: Concrete Subjectivity and the Natural Desire to See God.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2017 - University of Toronto Press.
    "In The Givenness of Desire, Randall S. Rosenberg examines the human desire for God through the lens of Lonergan's "concrete subjectivity." Rosenberg engages and integrates two major scholarly developments: the tension between Neo-Thomists and scholars of Henri de Lubac over our natural desire to see God and the theological appropriation of the mimetic theory of René Girard, with an emphasis on the saints as models of desire. With Lonergan as an integrating thread, the author engages a variety of thinkers, (...)
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  12.  43
    Predisposed Agency: A New Term for Free Will Because Our Will Isn’t So Free.Randall S. Firestone - 2023 - Open Journal of Philosophy 13 (4):621-645.
    This paper proposes that we rename free will, also called libertarian free will, to the more accurate characterization of “predisposed agency.” This is needed for two reasons: First, classical compatibilists have redefined free will to mean something quite different than and in fact contrary to libertarian free will, and thus have introduced needless confusion into the concept. More importantly, even those who believe in libertarian free will recognize that our will is not so free in that we are predisposed toward (...)
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  13.  13
    Conscious in Two Ways: Robert M. Doran Remembers, ed. Joseph Ogbonnaya, Jeremy W. Blackwood, and Gregory Lauzon.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2021 - Method 35 (2):65-67.
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  14.  35
    Who Is the Real Existentialist? Debunking Sartre’s Distinction between Christian and Atheistic Existentialists.Randall S. Firestone - 2023 - Open Journal of Philosophy 13 (2):342-371.
    In Sartre’s 1946 article “The Humanism of Existentialism,” Sartre places existentialists into two categories, Christian or atheist, and contends that existentialism works differently for each of them. This paper argues that such a distinction should not have been made because existentialist beliefs, views, and themes do not differ based on one’s religiosity. This paper specifically examines three examples in Sartre’s article which undermine his position, and further argues that Sartre made an equivocation fallacy by conflating two different types of essence, (...)
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  15.  37
    The Retrieval of Religious Intellectuality.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2011 - Renascence 63 (3):211-228.
  16.  52
    Naturalistic vs Supernatural Explanations: “Charting” a Course away from a Belief in God by Utilizing Inference to the Best Explanation.Randall S. Firestone - 2014 - Open Journal of Philosophy 4 (3):281-302.
  17. Why the Bible Cannot and Should Not Be Taken Literally.Randall S. Firestone - 2014 - Open Journal of Philosophy 4 (3):303-318.
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  18. A multidimensional scale for measuring business ethics: A purification and refinement. [REVIEW]Randall S. Hansen - 1992 - Journal of Business Ethics 11 (7):523 - 534.
    Many researchers in the field of business ethics have attempted to develop methods to determine and evaluate the ethics of a variety of different classes of people, including students, professionals, and mixed samples of students and professionals. Unfortunately, most of these studies were disjunctive, simply adding confusion to an already unfocused area of research. However, Reidenbach and Robin (1988, 1990), have changed this trend by attempting to quantify the various ethical philosophies into a multi-dimensional scale of business ethics. This paper (...)
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  19.  54
    A conceptual foundation for ethical decision making: A stakeholder perspective in the lodging industry (u.S.A.). [REVIEW]Randall S. Upchurch - 1998 - Journal of Business Ethics 17 (12):1349-1361.
    The purpose of this study was to build upon previous ethical research; thereby, advancing the hospitality industry's understanding of ethical decision making in lodging operations. In particular, this study reviewed: (a) the primary normative ethical precepts (i.e., egoism, benevolence, and principle) used as a criterion in ethical decision making, and (b) the predominant locus of analysis (e.g., individual, local, or cosmopolitan referent sources) used in applying ethical precepts to ethical decisions.The sample consisted of 500 lodging operations as randomly abstracted from (...)
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  20.  33
    The Human Quest and Divine Disclosure according to Walker Percy.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2014 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 17 (1):63-89.
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  21.  19
    Lonergan on the Transcendent Orientation of Art.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2009 - Renascence 61 (3):141-151.
  22.  54
    Meaning and Authenticity: Bernard Lonergan and Charles Taylor on the Drama of Authentic Human Existence. By Brian J. Braman.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (2):359-361.
  23. 6. The Drama of Scripture: Reading Patristic Biblical Hermeneutics through Lonergan's Reflections on Art.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2008 - Logos- St. Thomas 11 (2).
     
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  24.  66
    The catholic imagination and modernity: William Cavanaugh's theopolitical imagination and Charles Taylor's modern social imagination.Randall S. Rosenberg - 2007 - Heythrop Journal 48 (6):911–931.
    This essay argues that William Cavanaugh's ‘Theopolitical Imagination’ uncovers some of the possibilities latent within the Catholic imagination. While his critique of modernity is often persuasive, this essay questions whether Cavanaugh's assessment of modernity can be complemented by a more differentiated approach. What Charles Taylor provides is both a bolstering of Cavanaugh's thesis about the power of the imagination and an alternative: that there is a way of thinking about the relationship between the Church and modernity other than in dialectical (...)
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  25. Geography and paratactical interdisciplinarity: Views from the ESRC-NERC PhD studentship programme.J. Evans & S. Randalls - unknown
    Interdisciplinarity is a notoriously difficult concept to define, and even harder to achieve in practice. All too often social approaches reduce science to an object of study, or conversely physical science approaches are invoked as a source of 'higher' truth. Drawing upon our experiences as ESRC-NERC PhD students within geography, we outline a paratactical approach that links disciplines by adjacency rather than hierarchy. Toppling the disciplinary hierarchy creates the potential for non-reductionistic dialogue between science and social science, but it also (...)
     
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  26.  32
    Hans Urs von Balthasar and Protestantism: The Ecumenical Implications of his Theological Style. By Rodney A. Howsare. [REVIEW]Randall S. Rosenberg - 2008 - Heythrop Journal 49 (1):157-158.
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  27.  39
    Distinctive features, categorical perception, and probability learning: Some applications of a neural model.James A. Anderson, Jack W. Silverstein, Stephen A. Ritz & Randall S. Jones - 1977 - Psychological Review 84 (5):413-451.
  28.  21
    New Cardiovascular Drugs: Patterns of Use and Association with Non-Drug Health Expenditures.G. Edward Miller, John F. Moeller & Randall S. Stafford - 2005 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 42 (4):397-412.
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  29. The sociology of philosophies: A précis.Randall Collins - 2000 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 30 (2):157-201.
    cis is presented of Randall Collins's book, The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change. It presents a sociological theory of intellectual networks that connect thinkers in chains of masters and pupils, colleagues and rivals, and of the internalized conversations that constitute the social processes of thinking. The theory is used to analyze long-term developments of the intellectual communities of philosophers in ancient Greece, ancient and medieval China and India, medieval and modern Japan, medieval Islam and Judaism, (...)
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  30.  14
    Conversations with Wittgenstein, St. Augustine, and Stanley Cavell.Belle Randall - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (1):1-11.
    In memory of Stanley Cavell, a family friend of more than a half-century’s standing writes about his years in Berkeley, when he was deciding between music and philosophy as his field and then, eventually, joined the philosophy faculty as a lecturer. This guest column is a collage of diverse original sources—Randall’s poetry and memories, Cavell’s memoir Little Did I Know, and relevant passages in Wittgenstein and Augustine—that involve the interplay of events in Cavell’s personal life with the dissertation that (...)
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  31.  36
    Commentary on Nikolay Milkov’s “A Logical-Contextual History of Philosophy”.Randall E. Auxier - 2011 - Southwest Philosophy Review 27 (2):1-3.
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  32. The Ethics of Cyberwarfare.Randall R. Dipert - 2010 - Journal of Military Ethics 9 (4):384-410.
    The paper addresses several issues in the morality of cyberwar and cyberwarfare, defined as one nation's attacks on the governmental or civilian information systems of another nation. It sketches the diverse technical ways in which an attack may occur, including denial-of-service attacks and the insertion of various forms of malware. It argues that existing international law and widely discussed principles of Just War Theory do not straightforwardly apply to cyberwarfare, and many forms of cyberwarfare differ from previous forms of warfare (...)
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  33.  16
    Okja as Philosophy: Why Animals Matter.Randall M. Jensen - 2022 - In David Kyle Johnson, The Palgrave Handbook of Popular Culture as Philosophy. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 773-794.
    The eponymous protagonist of Okja is an adorable “super-pig,” larger than an ordinary pig not only in size but also in heart and mind. The film explores and interrogates different ways of seeing Okja, different portraits of Okja’s moral status, as philosophers would put it. To the Mirando Corporation, Okja has no moral status. She is a mere product to be used as they see fit. To the Animal Liberation Front, Okja is a dramatic symbol of animals everywhere who are (...)
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  34.  10
    The book that changed America: how Darwin's theory of evolution ignited a nation.Randall Fuller - 2017 - New York, New York: Viking Press.
    Traces the impact of Charles Darwin's "On the Origin of Species" on a diverse group of writers, abolitionists, and social reformers, including Henry David Thoreau and Bronson Alcott, against a backdrop of growing tensions and transcendental idealism in 1860 America.
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  35. Ghostly bodies and worker voices: Power and resistance in Ron rash's eureka mill.Randall Wilhelm - 2010 - In Giselle Walker & Elisabeth Leedham-Green, Identity. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 17.
     
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  36. Two unjustly neglected aspects of C.s. Peirce's philosophy of mind.Randall R. Dipert - manuscript
    Few philosophers today know much about Charles Peirce’s metaphysics, although a great many know something about his epistemology, philosophy of science, and logic. Indeed, few Peirce experts have written much on his metaphysics or made it the focus of their research. To an extent, this is understandable. Peirce’s writings were left in a disastrously disorganized state (mostly unpublished), and the crucial papers on metaphysics from his later years have not yet been republished in the first-rate chronological edition, the incomplete Writings (...)
     
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  37.  66
    Care Ethics and Obligations to Future Generations.Thomas Randall - 2019 - Hypatia 34 (3):527-545.
    A dominant area of inquiry within intergenerational ethics concerns how goods ought to be justly distributed between noncontemporaries. Contractualist theories of justice that have broached these discussions have often centered on the concepts of mutual advantage and reciprocal cooperation between rational, self‐interested beings. However, another prominent reason that many in the present feel that they have obligations toward future generations is not due to self‐interested reciprocity, but simply because they care about what happens to them. Care ethics promises to be (...)
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  38.  16
    Bonaventure's Reductio of the Nine Choirs of Angels: How Bonaventure Compressed Two Monumental Traditions into Nine Words and Nine Short Phrases.Randall B. Smith - 2023 - Nova et Vetera 21 (2):583-605.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Bonaventure's Reductio of the Nine Choirs of Angels:How Bonaventure Compressed Two Monumental Traditions into Nine Words and Nine Short PhrasesRandall B. Smith"There is probably no better illustration in medieval thought of how the genius of the symbolic imagination also involves deep speculative insight." So wrote Bernard McGinn of Bonaventure's Itinerarium mentis in deum in The Flowering of Mysticism: Men and Woman in the New Mysticism, 1200–1350.1 There is no (...)
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  39.  65
    The Return of the Initiate.Randall E. Auxier - 1991 - The Owl of Minerva 22 (2):191-208.
    The question of the import and role of Christian allusions in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit has received much historical attention, and this continues into the present. Often juxtaposed in this interpretive issue are two questions: Does Hegel think that “the ontological project was first a Greek event from which Christianity would have developed an outer graft”? Or is it more accurate to say that, “for Hegel at least, no ontology is possible before the Gospel or outside it”? In the latter (...)
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  40.  65
    Patriotic Education in a Global Age.Randall Curren & Charles Dorn - 2018 - Chicago, IL, USA: University of Chicago Press.
    The central question for this book is whether schools should attempt to cultivate patriotism, and if so why, how, and with what conception of patriotism in mind. The promotion of patriotism has figured prominently in the history of public schooling in the United States, always with the idea that patriotism is both an inherently admirable attribute and an essential motivational basis for good citizenship. It has been assumed, in short, that patriotism is a virtue in its own right and that (...)
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  41. Nietzsche's Genealogy: Nihilism and the Will to Knowledge.Randall Havas - 1995 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    In this provocative book, Randall Havas articulates an approach to Nietzsche which demonstrates that the authentic individual need not stand apart from his or her culture in order to resist the demands of conformism. On Havas's reading, the task of the Nietzschean individual is instead to replace the illusion of culture - "herd morality" - with real community, and in this way to avoid nihilism. It is such community that Nietzsche aspires to establish with his readers - a claim (...)
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  42.  9
    Repetition and the fullness of time: gift, task, and narrative in Kierkegaard's upbuilding ethics.Randall G. Colton - 2013 - Macon Georgia: Mercer University Press.
    In Recent Decades, Many Moral Philosophers Have Begun to Think More Carefully about the significance of our inveterate storytelling habits for moral reflection. For some time those who promoted narrative's central role for ethics on a variety of levels seemed to be commanding the field; but more recently skeptics of narrative's relevance have begun to mount a vigorous resistance. Some of these struggles have played out on the terrain of Kierkegaard studies, and this book seeks to move the battle lines (...)
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  43.  40
    Tests of Lenzer’s model of intracranial reinforcement.Larry D. Reid, Nancy J. Casper & Randall S. Smith - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 2 (5):261-263.
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  44.  8
    The Coming Revolution in Education: Process, Time, and Singularity.Randall Auxier - 2018 - In Aaron Stoller & Eli Kramer, Contemporary Philosophical Proposals for the University: Toward a Philosophy of Higher Education. Springer Verlag. pp. 217-260.
    The ideas of process philosophy in general, and Alfred North Whitehead in particular, will soon come into greater use and wider familiarity. This emergence of his ideas into wider use will be a great aid to education and to the reforming of our institutions and practices around the very different educational requirements of the sort of world that sits just beyond the horizon of our present vision. There will be discontinuities in the world to come, but there will also be (...)
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  45.  25
    To Serve Man? Rod Serling and Effective Destining.Randall E. Auxier - 2021 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (4):190-204.
    Popular culture is a vital part of the philosophy of culture. Immersion in the world of popular culture provides an immanent understanding, and after all, some of what is merely popular culture today will be the high culture of tomorrow. The genre of science fiction is one of the more important and durable forms of cultural and social criticism. Science fiction narratives guide our imaginations into the relation between the might-be and the might-have-been. The central idea of this paper is (...)
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  46.  20
    Emerging treason? Politics and identity in the Emerging Church Movement.Randall W. Reed - 2014 - Critical Research on Religion 2 (1):66-85.
    The Emerging Church is one of the more interesting new movements in the religious landscape of the United States today. The Emerging Church has come out of US Evangelicalism, which has found itself in crisis, with a diminishing number of young people remaining in the church and a general popular impression of being intolerant, judgmental, and right-wing. Many in the Emerging Church are attempting to construct a vision of Christianity that addresses these problems. However, the Emerging Church is not a (...)
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  47.  30
    Is there a hole in your parentheses, or are you wholly parenthetical?Randall D. Whitaker - unknown
    The title of this paper represents a "trick question" of the sort an interlocutor might employ to solicit an answer which, if framed with specific regard to the question's implicatures, cannot fail to confirm that interlocutor's position or further his aims. The best-known query of this form is the cliched "Do you still beat your spouse?" To escape being trapped, the respondent must either (a) avoid answering or (b) point out and refute the implication(s) embedded in the question itself. In (...)
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  48. Entrepreneurial Beliefs and Agency under Knightian Uncertainty.Randall Westgren & Travis Holmes - 2021 - Philosophy of Management 21 (2):199-217.
    At the centenary of Frank H. Knight’s Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit, we explore the continuing relevance of Knightian uncertainty to the theory and practice of entrepreneurship. There are three challenges facing such assessment. First, RUP is complex and difficult to interpret. The key but neglected element of RUP is that Knight’s account is not solely about risk and uncertainty as states of nature, but about how an agent’s beliefs about uncertain outcomes and confidence in those beliefs guide their choices. Second, (...)
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  49.  35
    Commentary on Anne Marie Schultz’s and Paul Carron’s “The Virtuous Ensemble”.Randall Auxier - 2014 - Southwest Philosophy Review 30 (2):25-28.
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  50.  61
    On Mark McEvoy’s “Should Analytic Epistemology Be Replaced by Ameliorative Psychology?”.Randall E. Auxier - 2007 - Southwest Philosophy Review 23 (2):47-49.
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