Results for 'Rapcsak Steven'

961 found
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  1.  15
    Conscious experience and autonomic response to emotional stimuli following frontal lobe damage.Alfred W. Kaszniak, Sheryl L. Reminger, Steven Z. Rapcsak & Elizabeth L. Glisky - 1999 - In Stuart R. Hameroff, Alfred W. Kaszniak & David John Chalmers (eds.), Toward a Science of Consciousness III: The Third Tucson Discussions and Debates. MIT Press.
  2.  33
    Exploring the Neural Substrates of Phonological Recovery for Symposium: Neural Correlates of Recovery and Rehabilitation.Beeson Pelagie, Rising Kindle, DeMarco Andrew & Rapcsak Steven - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  3.  9
    Molecules and minds: essays on biology and the social order.Steven Peter Russell Rose - 1987 - Philadelphia: Open University Press.
  4.  13
    Perfectionism and Neutrality: Essays in Liberal Theory.Steven Wall (ed.) - 2003 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Editors provide a substantive introduction to the history and theories of perfectionism and neutrality, expertly contextualizing the essays and making the collection accessible.
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  5. On the withering away of physical objects.Steven French - 1998 - In Elena Castellani (ed.), Interpreting Bodies: Classical and Quantum Objects in Modern Physics. Princeton University Press. pp. 93--113.
     
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  6. Testimony, knowledge, and epistemic goals.Steven L. Reynolds - 2002 - Philosophical Studies 110 (2):139 - 161.
    Various considerations are adduced toshow that we require that a testifier know hertestimony. Such a requirement apparentlyimproves testimony. It is argued that the aimof improving testimony explains why we have anduse our concept of knowledge. If we were tointroduce a term of praise for testimony, usingit at first to praise testimony that apparentlyhelped us in our practical projects, it wouldcome to be used as we now use the word``know''.
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  7. The evolution of human mating: Trade-offs and strategic pluralism.Steven W. Gangestad & Jeffry A. Simpson - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (4):573-587.
    During human evolutionary history, there were “trade-offs” between expending time and energy on child-rearing and mating, so both men and women evolved conditional mating strategies guided by cues signaling the circumstances. Many short-term matings might be successful for some men; others might try to find and keep a single mate, investing their effort in rearing her offspring. Recent evidence suggests that men with features signaling genetic benefits to offspring should be preferred by women as short-term mates, but there are trade-offs (...)
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  8.  50
    The Pathology of Man: A Study of Human Evil.Steven James Bartlett - 2005 - Springfield, IL, USA: Charles C. Thomas.
    The Pathology of Man is the first comprehensive study of the psychology and epistemology of human evil, long urged by leading psychiatrists and psychologists, including Freud, Jung, Menninger, Fromm, and Peck. The book breaks new ground by offering a clear, empirically based, and theoretically sound understanding of human evil as a widespread, real, non-metaphorical pathology. With deliberate and thorough scholarship the author proposes a new framework-relative theory of disease and justifies the provocative thesis that human evil should be classified as (...)
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  9. Developing effective ethics for effective behavior.Steven E. Wallis - 2010 - Social Responsibility Journal 6 (4):536-550.
    Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate the internal structure of Gandhi's ethics as a way to determine opportunities for improving that system's ability to influence behavior. In this paper, the author aims to work under the idea that a system of ethics is a guide for social responsibility. -/- Design/methodology/approach – The data source is Gandhi's set of ethics as described by Naess. These simple (primarily quantitative) studies compare the concepts within the code of ethics, and (...)
     
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  10. The mystery of consciousness.Steven Pinker - manuscript
    The young women had survived the car crash, after a fashion. In the five months since parts of her brain had been crushed, she could open her eyes but didn't respond to sights, sounds or jabs. In the jargon of neurology, she was judged to be in a persistent vegetative state. In crueler everyday language, she was a vegetable.
     
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  11.  20
    Thomas Aquinas: Basic Philosophical Writing: From the Summa Theologiae and the Principles of Nature.Steven Baldner (ed.) - 2018 - Peterborough, Ontario: Broadview Press.
    This volume contains new translations of the essential philosophical writings of Thomas Aquinas, from the _Summa Theologiae_ and _The Principles of Nature_. The included texts represent the breadth of Aquinas’s thought, addressing causality, the fundamental principles of nature, the existence of God, how God can be known, how language can be used to describe God, human nature, happiness, ethics, and natural law. The goal of these translations is twofold: to allow Aquinas to speak for himself, but also to make his (...)
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  12. A Primer on Bartlett's CRITIQUE OF IMPURE REASON.Steven James Bartlett - 2021 - Willamette Univesity Faculty Research Website.
    This is a primer on Steven James Bartlett's book CRITIQUE OF IMPURE REASON: HORIZONS OF POSSIBILITY AND MEANING. ●●●●● -/- Some books are long and complex. The Critique of Impure Reason is such a book. It is long enough and complex enough so that it may be a service to some readers to offer a primer to introduce and partially summarize the book’s objectives and method. Here, the author of Critique of Impure Reason: Horizons of Possibility and Meaning provides (...)
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  13. Individuality, supervenience and bell's theorem.Steven French - 1989 - Philosophical Studies 55 (1):1-22.
    Some recent work in the philosophy of quantum mechanics has suggested that quantum systems can be thought of as non-separable and therefore non-individual, in some sense, in Bell and E.P.R. type situations. This suggestion is set in the context of previous work regarding the individuality of quantal particles and it is argued that such entities can be considered as individuals if their non-classical statistical correlations are understood in terms of non-supervenient relations holding between them. We conclude that such relations are (...)
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  14.  9
    The Law of the Temple in Ezekiel 40–48.Steven Shawn Tuell (ed.) - 1992 - Brill.
    "In the closing chapters of Ezekiel, a great Temple is described, one reminiscent of Solomon's but in fact like none ever built. From that Temple, a river flows through the land, with healing in its wake; within the Temple dwells the divine Glory, depicted here alone in Ezekiel as coming to rest, never again to be removed. All of these features of Ezekiel's grand vision are embedded in the core of Jewish and Christian devotional and mystical practice. Yet no less (...)
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  15. Mortal harm.Steven Luper - 2007 - Philosophical Quarterly 57 (227):239–251.
    The harm thesis says that death may harm the individual who dies. The posthumous harm thesis says that posthumous events may harm those who die. Epicurus rejects both theses, claiming that there is no subject who is harmed, no clear harm which is received, and no clear time when any harm is received. Feldman rescues the harm thesis with solutions to Epicurus' three puzzles based on his own version of the deprivation account of harm. But many critics, among them Lamont, (...)
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  16.  19
    The Postmodern Adventure: Science, Technology, and Cultural Studies at the Third Millennium.Steven Best & Douglas Kellner - 2001 - Guilford Press.
    Massive geopolitical shifts and dramatic developments in computerization and biotechnology are heralding the transformation from the modern to the postmodern age. We are confronted with altered modes of work, communication, and entertainment; new postindustrial and political networks; novel approaches to warfare; genetic engineering; and even cloning. This compelling book explores the challenges to theory, politics, and human identity that we face on the threshold of the third millennium. It follows on the success of Best and Kellner s two previous books: (...)
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  17. Can empirical theories of semantic competence really help limn the structure of reality?Steven Gross - 2006 - Noûs 40 (1):43–81.
    There is a long tradition of drawing metaphysical conclusions from investigations into language. This paper concerns one contemporary variation on this theme: the alleged ontological significance of cognitivist truth-theoretic accounts of semantic competence. According to such accounts, human speakers’ linguistic behavior is in part empirically explained by their cognizing a truth-theory. Such a theory consists of a finite number of axioms assigning semantic values to lexical items, a finite number of axioms assigning semantic values to complex expressions on the basis (...)
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  18.  41
    (1 other version)Causation in Early Modern Philosophy: Cartesianism, Occasionalism, and Preestablished Harmony.Steven Nadler (ed.) - 1989 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Three general accounts of causation stand out in early modern philosophy: Cartesian interactionism, occasionalism, and Leibniz's preestablished harmony. The contributors to this volume examine these theories in their philosophical and historical context. They address them both as a means for answering specific questions regarding causal relations and in their relation to one another, in particular, comparing occasionalism and the preestablished harmony as responses to Descartes's metaphysics and physics and the Cartesian account of causation. Philosophers discussed include Descartes, Gassendi, Malebranche, Arnauld, (...)
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  19.  27
    Axiom of choice and excluded middle in categorical logic.Steven Awodey - 1995 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 1:344.
  20.  79
    Infinity in Descartes.Steven Barbone - 1995 - Philosophical Inquiry 17 (3-4):23-38.
    The role of "infinite" (opposed to "indefinite") in Descartes philosophy. The character of being infinite is reserved for God alone, while extension and mathematics are strictly indefinitely large. The paper presents possible reasons behind this distinction.
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  21.  18
    The light of Thy countenance: science and knowledge of God in the thirteenth century.Steven P. Marrone - 2001 - Boston: Brill.
    v. 1. A doctrine of divine illumination -- v. 2. God at the core of cognition.
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  22.  8
    Science, technology, and social change.Steven Yearley - 1988 - Boston: Unwin Hyman.
  23.  9
    Medical Thinking: The Psychology of Medical Judgment and Decision Making.Steven Schwartz & Timothy Griffin - 2012 - Springer Verlag.
    Decision making is the physician's major activity. Every day, in doctors' offices throughout the world, patients describe their symptoms and com plaints while doctors perform examinations, order tests, and, on the basis of these data, decide what is wrong and what should be done. Although the process may appear routine-even to the physicians in volved-each step in the sequence requires skilled clinical judgment. Physicians must decide: which symptoms are important, whether any laboratory tests should be done, how the various items (...)
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  24.  36
    Mortal Objects: Identity and Persistence Through Life and Death.Steven Luper - 2022 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    How might we change ourselves without ending our existence? What could we become, if we had access to an advanced form of bioengineering that allowed us dramatically to alter our genome? Could we remain in existence after ceasing to be alive? What is it to be human? Might we still exist after changing ourselves into something that is not human? What is the significance of human extinction? Steven Luper addresses these questions and more in this thought-provoking study. He defends (...)
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  25. Philosophy as ideology.Steven James Bartlett - 1986 - Metaphilosophy 17 (1):1–13.
    The psychological-ideological roots of philosophy. -/- ●●●●● 2022 UPDATE: The approach of this paper has been updated and developed further in Chapters 1 and 2 of the author’s 2021 book _Critique of Impure Reason: Horizons of Possibility and Meaning_. The book is available both in a printed edition (under ISBN 978-0-578-88646-6 from Barnes & Noble, Amazon, and other booksellers) and an Open Access eBook edition (available through Philpapers under the book’s title and other philosophy online archives).
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  26.  58
    The problem of social choice: Arrow to Rawls.Steven Strasnick - 1976 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 5 (3):241-273.
  27.  42
    Mind, brain and material culture: An archaeological perspective.Steven Mithen - 2000 - In Peter Carruthers & Andrew Chamberlain (eds.), Evolution and the Human Mind: Modularity, Language and Meta-Cognition. Cambridge University Press. pp. 207--217.
  28. On the role of selective attention in visual perception.Steven J. Luck & Michelle Ford - 1998 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 95 (3):825-830.
  29.  16
    Misogyny on and off the “pitch”: The gendered world of male rugby players.Steven P. Schacht - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (5):550-565.
    From a feminist perspective and using an ethnographic methodology, this article explores the gendered world of male rugby players in terms of how they socially and relationally propagate gender roles. Rugby players' social reproduction of gender, ultimately grounded in misogyny, allows these men at the individual level to psychologically and sometimes physically dominate women. At the societal level, rugby, like many sporting practices, both reflects and supports a hierarchical ideology of masculinity and the subordination of women.
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  30.  88
    Symmetry, structure, and the constitution of objects.Steven French - 2001 - PhilSci Archive.
    In this paper I focus on the impact on structuralism of the quantum treatment of objects in terms of symmetry groups and, in particular, on the question as to how we might eliminate, or better, reconceptualise such objects in structural terms. With regard to the former, both Cassirer and Eddington not only explicitly and famously tied their structuralism to the development of group theory but also drew on the quantum treatment in order to further their structuralist aims and here I (...)
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  31. Tip-of-the-Tongue Phenomena: An Introductory Phenomenological Analysis.Steven Ravett Brown - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (4):516-537.
    The issue of meaningful yet unexpressed background - to language, to our experiences of the body - is one whose exploration is still in its infancy. There are various aspects of "invisible," implicit, or background experiences which have been investigated from the viewpoints of phenomenology, cognitive psychology, and linguistics. I will claim that James, as explicated by Gurwitsch and others, has analyzed the phenomenon of fringes in such a way as to provide a structural framework from which to investigate and (...)
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  32.  14
    Meaning and negation.Steven Bradley Smith - 1975 - The Hague: Mouton.
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  33.  4
    Statues of Jeff Bezos.Steven D. Brown - 2024 - Angelaki 29 (4):88-97.
    The passage of human civilization into the new geological era of the Anthropocene raises the question of species extinction. How can we confront the possibility of collective death in a way that does not descend into uncontained anxiety or melancholy? Michel Serres’s works in the Foundations and Humanism series offer critical insights into the way in which human violence and death operate as mechanisms for binding together human collectives. Serres draws attention to the role of “social technologies” based around sacrificial (...)
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  34.  11
    Comment.Steven M. Cahn - 2013 - Journal of Social Philosophy 44 (2):127-128.
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  35.  30
    Ethics and Disclosure in the Savings and Loan Industry.Steven F. Cahan - 1992 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 11 (3):57-72.
  36.  12
    Transnational Tolstoy: Between the West and the World.Steven Cassedy - 2018 - The European Legacy 24 (1):95-97.
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  37.  40
    Comment On Manuel Davenport’s “Poetry, Truth, and Phenomenology”.Steven G. Crowell - 1985 - Southwest Philosophy Review 2:174-179.
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  38.  6
    (4 other versions)No title available: Religious studies.Steven T. Katz - 1974 - Religious Studies 10 (1):108-110.
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  39.  32
    Julian Wuerth, Kant on Mind, Action, and Ethics. Reviewed by.Steven Tester - 2016 - Philosophy in Review 36 (1):39-41.
  40. Kant: Some Objections and Replies.Steven Tester - 2011 - Philosophical Forum 42 (3):314-315.
  41. Take two : Barthes and film in the age of mythologies.Steven Ungar - 2023 - In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Žižek, understanding modernism. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  42. Crispin Wright, Frege's Conception of Numbers as Objects Reviewed by.Steven J. Wagner - 1986 - Philosophy in Review 6 (2):89-91.
     
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  43. Kant, nonaccidentalness and the availability of moral worth.Steven Sverdlik - 2001 - The Journal of Ethics 5 (4):293-313.
    Contemporary Kantians who defend Kant''s view of the superiority of the sense of duty as a form of motivation appeal to various ideas. Some say, if only implicitly, that the sense of duty is always ``available'''' to an agent, when she has a moral obligation. Some, like Barbara Herman, say that the sense of duty provides a ``nonaccidental'''' connection between an agent''s motivation and the act''s rightness. In this paper I show that the ``availability'''' and ``nonaccidentalness'''' arguments are in tension (...)
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  44. The strange case of John shmarb: An aesthetic puzzle.Steven M. Cahn & L. Michael Griffel - 1975 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 34 (1):21-22.
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  45. Section II. The Japanese Zen Nexus: 4. The Transmission of the Blue Cliff Record to Medieval Japan: Textuality and Historicity in Relation to Mythology and Demythology.Steven Heine - 2022 - In Heine Welter (ed.), Approaches to Chan, Sŏn, and Zen studies: Chinese Chan Buddhism and its spread throughout East Asia. Albany: State University of New York Press.
     
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  46.  24
    How law can help solve the collective action problem of antimicrobial resistance.Steven J. Hoffman, Reema Bakshi & Susan Rogers Van Katwyk - 2019 - Bioethics 33 (7):798-804.
    Antimicrobial resistance is a global collective action problem with dire consequences for human health. This article considers how domestic and international legal mechanisms can be used to address antimicrobial resistance and overcome the governance and political economy challenges that accelerate it.
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  47.  66
    Relativism and truth: A reply to davson-Galle.Steven Rappaport - 1998 - Philosophia 26 (3-4):519-524.
    In a previous article in _Philosophia, I claim that one can be a metaphysical relativist without being a truth relativist. One premise my argument for this claim relies on is (R2) truth relativism is inconsistent with the deflationary theory of truth. Peter Davson-Galle criticizes my argument for (R2), and also argues directly for the falsity of (R2). I try to show that Davson-Galle's effort to undermine (R2) founders due to his blurring the distinction between a taxonomy or classification system on (...)
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  48.  36
    De summa rerum: Metaphysical Papers, 1675-1676. G. W. Leibniz, G. H. R. Parkinson.Steven Nadler - 1993 - Isis 84 (3):577-578.
  49.  30
    Lectures de Descartes ed. by Frédéric de Buzon, Élodie Cassan, and Denis Kambouchner.Steven Nadler - 2016 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 54 (1):168-169.
    A fair number of recent monographs and essay collections on Descartes cover the same old ground, rehashing well-worn problems and taking us for another tour in Cartesian circles. Much to be preferred are those studies that go beyond the familiar and truly advance our understanding of Cartesian metaphysics, epistemology, science, ethics, and philosophical theology, especially with new insights into their complex relationships. The best anthologies will also contain original essays by both well-established scholars and new colleagues, thus providing a nice (...)
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  50.  23
    Spinoza and Scripture: A Colloquium Introduction.Steven Nadler - 2013 - Journal of the History of Ideas 74 (4):621-622.
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