Results for 'Richard T. Fink'

934 found
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  1.  28
    Response latency as a function of hypothesis-testing strategies in concept identification.Richard T. Fink - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 95 (2):337.
  2.  58
    The functional anatomy of a hysterical paralysis.John C. Marshall, Peter W. Halligan, Gereon R. Fink, Derick T. Wade & Richard S. J. Frackowiak - 1997 - Cognition 64 (1):B1-B8.
  3.  39
    The Reality of Time Flow: Local Becoming in Modern Physics.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    It is commonly held that there is no place for the 'now’ in physics, and also that the passing of time is something subjective, having to do with the way reality is experienced but not with the way reality is. Indeed, the majority of modern theoretical physicists and philosophers of physics contend that the passing of time is incompatible with modern physical theory, and excluded in a fundamental description of physical reality. This book provides a forceful rebuttal of such claims. (...)
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  4.  26
    Memory for random shapes: A dual-task analysis.Richard T. Kelly & David W. Martin - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (2):224.
  5.  26
    My Interest in Polanyi, His Links with Other Thinkers and His Problems:An Interview with Richard T. Allen.C. P. Goodman & Richard T. Allen - 2023 - Tradition and Discovery 49 (1):39-45.
    In this interview, C. P. Goodman invites British Polanyi scholar Richard T. Allen to reflect on his interest in Polanyi’s philosophical ideas and share what he believes is valuable in his thought.
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  6.  37
    Leibniz’s Syncategorematic Actual Infinite.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2018 - In Igor Agostini, Richard T. W. Arthur, Geoffrey Gorham, Paul Guyer, Mogens Lærke, Yitzhak Y. Melamed, Ohad Nachtomy, Sanja Särman, Anat Schechtman, Noa Shein & Reed Winegar (eds.), Infinity in Early Modern Philosophy. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 155-179.
    It is well known that Leibniz advocated the actual infinite, but that he did not admit infinite collections or infinite numbers. But his assimilation of this account to the scholastic notion of the syncategorematic infinite has given rise to controversy. A common interpretation is that in mathematics Leibniz’s syncategorematic infinite is identical with the Aristotelian potential infinite, so that it applies only to ideal entities, and is therefore distinct from the actual infinite that applies to the actual world. Against this, (...)
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  7.  8
    Century of genius: European thought, 1600-1700.Richard T. Vann - 1967 - Englewood Cliffs, N.J.,: Prentice-Hall.
    In Century of Genius: European Thought 1600-1700, Richard T. Vann links selections from the writings of such thinkers as Galileo, Bacon, Hobbes, Pascal, and Newton with interpretative commentary to show how seventeenth-century discoveries in science and mathematics not only changed the way in which men viewed the sun and the fall of apples from a tree, but also influenced forever afterward men's view of themselves. In Vann's interpretation, the spirit of the age was one of confidence and quest, given (...)
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  8.  49
    Review of Richard T. DeGeorge: Competing with Integrity in International Business.[REVIEW]Richard T. De George - 1995 - Ethics 106 (1):215-217.
  9.  32
    Collective and Corporate Responsibility.Richard T. De George - 1987 - Noûs 21 (3):448-450.
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  10. Human Nature and Moral Sprouts: Mencius on the Pollyanna Problem.Richard T. Kim - 2016 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 99 (1):140-162.
    This article responds to a common criticism of Aristotelian naturalism known as the Pollyanna Problem, the objection that Aristotelian naturalism, when combined with recent empirical research, generates morally unacceptable conclusions. In developing a reply to this objection, I draw upon the conception of human nature developed by the ancient Chinese philosopher Mencius, and build up an account of ethical naturalism that provides a satisfying response to the Pollyanna Problem while also preserving what is most attractive about Aristotelian naturalism.
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  11.  71
    Informed consent: Patient's right or patient's duty?Richard T. Hull - 1985 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 10 (2):183-198.
    The rule that a patient should give a free, fully-informed consent to any therapeutic intervention is traditionally thought to express merely a right of the patient against the physician, and a duty of the physician towards the patient. On this view, the patient may waive that right with impugnity, a fact sometimes expressed in the notion of a right not to know. This paper argues that the rule also expresses a duty of the patient towards the physician and a right (...)
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  12.  74
    Feyerabend's attack on observation sentences.Richard T. Hull - 1972 - Synthese 23 (4):374 - 399.
  13. Actual Infinitesimals in Leibniz's Early Thought.Richard T. W. Arthur - unknown
    Before establishing his mature interpretation of infinitesimals as fictions, Gottfried Leibniz had advocated their existence as actually existing entities in the continuum. In this paper I trace the development of these early attempts, distinguishing three distinct phases in his interpretation of infinitesimals prior to his adopting a fictionalist interpretation: (i) (1669) the continuum consists of assignable points separated by unassignable gaps; (ii) (1670-71) the continuum is composed of an infinity of indivisible points, or parts smaller than any assignable, with no (...)
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  14.  25
    Business as a Humanity.Richard T. DeGeorge - 1994 - The Ruffin Series in Business Ethics:11-26.
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  15.  15
    Corliss Lamont on Personal Immortality.Richard T. Deters - 1934 - Modern Schoolman 11 (3):65-69.
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  16.  20
    Business Ethics Pioneers: Richard T. De George.Richard T. De George - 2021 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 40 (3):309-319.
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  17.  19
    History and Demography.Richard T. Vann - 1969 - History and Theory 9:64-78.
    The success of historical demography in establishing through statistical means the existence of family limitation in the past demonstrates that the methods of the quantitative social sciences can explain some problems better than traditional historiographical tools. In this case no literary evidence was available, and even if evidence existed it would have been too distorted to be reliable. Such findings may help historians understand broader issues such as the origins of the Industrial Revolution. Historical demography also may provide clues about (...)
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  18.  16
    Working Memory Performance for Differentially Conditioned Stimuli.Richard T. Ward, Salahadin Lotfi, Daniel M. Stout, Sofia Mattson, Han-Joo Lee & Christine L. Larson - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Previous work suggests that threat-related stimuli are stored to a greater degree in working memory compared to neutral stimuli. However, most of this research has focused on stimuli with physically salient threat attributes, failing to account for how a “neutral” stimulus that has acquired threat-related associations through differential aversive conditioning influences working memory. The current study examined how differentially conditioned safe and threat stimuli are stored in working memory relative to a novel, non-associated stimuli. Participants completed a differential fear conditioning (...)
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  19.  12
    Preexposure to the UCS affects avoidance conditioning.Richard T. Browning & Walter Isaac - 1989 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (1):55-56.
  20. Intuitions.Richard T. Webster - 1982 - Analecta Husserliana 12:429.
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  21. Toward resolving the abortion and embryonic stem cell debates.Richard T. Hull & Elaine M. Hull - 2007 - In Paul Kurtz & David Richard Koepsell (eds.), Science and ethics: can science help us make wise moral judgments? Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books. pp. 95.
     
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  22. A Naturalistic View of Human Dignity.Richard T. McClelland - 2011 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 32 (1):5.
    References to human dignity abound in contemporary political, legal, and ethical documents and practices, including a widening representation in bioethical contexts. Appeals to dignity characteristically involve some notion of equality and the idea that there is some range of actions which ought never to be directed at persons . However, much of this contemporary use of dignity leaves the concept itself under-developed or poorly grounded. This sometimes conduces to a broadly skeptical view that dignity has any determinate content, or that (...)
     
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  23.  50
    The reception of Hayden white.Richard T. Vann - 1998 - History and Theory 37 (2):143–161.
    Evaluation of the influence of Hayden White on the theory of history is made difficult by his preference for the essay form, valued for its experimental character, and by the need to find comparable data. A quantitative study of citations of his work in English and foreign-language journals, 1973–1993, reveals that although historians were prominent among early readers of Metahistory, few historical journals reviewed White's two subsequent collections of essays and few historians-except in Germany-cited them. Those historians who did tended (...)
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  24.  30
    Russell's Leibniz Notebook.Richard T. W. Arthur & Nicholas Griffin - 2017 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 37 (1).
    In preparation for his lectures on Leibniz delivered in Cambridge in Lent Term 1899, Russell started in the summer of 1898 to keep notes on writings by and about Leibniz in a large notebook of the type he commonly used for notetaking at this time. This article prints, with annotation, all the material on Leibniz in that notebook.
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  25.  29
    David Hartley’s Enlightenment psychology: From association to sympathy, theopathy, and moral sensibility.Richard T. G. Walsh - 2017 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 37 (1):48-63.
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  26.  56
    Leibniz’s Causal Theory of Time Revisited.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2016 - The Leibniz Review 26:151-178.
    Following the lead of Hans Reichenbach in the early twentieth century, many authors have attributed a causal theory of time to Leibniz. My exposition of Leibniz’s theory of time in a paper of 1985 has been interpreted as a version of such a causal theory, even though I was critical of the idea that Leibniz would have tried to reduce relations among monadic states to causal relations holding only among phenomena. Since that time previously unpublished texts by Leibniz have become (...)
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  27.  40
    Husserl's relation to Hume.Richard T. Murphy - 1979 - Research in Phenomenology 9 (1):198-223.
  28.  45
    The Role of the Sensible Species in St. Thomas’ Epistemology.Richard T. Zegers - 1974 - International Philosophical Quarterly 14 (4):455-474.
  29. Presupposition, Aggregation, and Leibniz’s Argument for a Plurality of Substances.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2011 - The Leibniz Review 21:91-115.
    This paper consists in a study of Leibniz’s argument for the infinite plurality of substances, versions of which recur throughout his mature corpus. It goes roughly as follows: since every body is actually divided into further bodies, it is therefore not a unity but an infinite aggregate; the reality of an aggregate, however, reduces to the reality of the unities it presupposes; the reality of body, therefore, entails an actual infinity of constituent unities everywhere in it. I argue that this (...)
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  30.  46
    (1 other version)Louis Mink's Linguistic Turn.Richard T. Vann - 1987 - History and Theory 26 (1):1-14.
    The development of Louis Mink's philosophy of history is traced beginning with his classic essay "The Autonomy of Historical Understanding" and culminating in "Narrative Form as a Cognitive Instrument". Mink's thoughts on history during this period were marked by an everdeepening interest in the textuality and intertextuality of historical accounts, in the modes of representation which historians adopt and use to produce their "reality effects," and in the effort to mediate between what he was to call the New Rhetorical Relativism (...)
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  31.  66
    Massimo Mugnai and the Study of Leibniz.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2013 - The Leibniz Review 23:1-5.
    This essay is an appreciation of Massimo Mugnai’s many contributions to Leibniz scholarship, as well as to the history of logic and history of philosophy more generally.
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  32. Autonomy, Personhood, and the Right to Psychiatric Treatment.Richard T. Hull - unknown
    In the May, 1960, issue of the American Bar Association Journal (vol. 499), Morton Birnbaum, a lawyer and physician, argued for a legal right to psychiatric treatment of the involuntarily committed mentally ill person. In the 18 years since his article appeared,, there have been several key court cases in which this concept of a right to psychiatric treatment has figured prominently and decisively. It is important to note that the language of the decisions have had at least an indirect (...)
     
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  33.  9
    Early Urban Planning: 1870-1940.Richard T. LeGates & Frederic Stout (eds.) - 1998 - Routledge.
    This set is a carefully balanced selection of writings representing some of the most important currents in the thought of city and regional planning during the period 1870-1940 when urban planning emerged as a serious disciplinary field. The set consists of eight key books from this period, handsomely illustrated and reproduced in their entirety, and a separate volume of fifteen seminal short selections - all by major figures of the time, such as Abercrombie, Geddes, and the Olmsteds. Soria y Mata's (...)
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  34.  29
    Response to Vincenzo De Risi.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2022 - The Leibniz Review 32:141-145.
  35. Time, inertia and the relativity principle.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2007
    In this paper I try to sort out a tangle of issues regarding time, inertia, proper time and the so-called “clock hypothesis” raised by Harvey Brown's discussion of them in his recent book, Physical Relativity. I attempt to clarify the connection between time and inertia, as well as the deficiencies in Newton's “derivation” of Corollary 5, by giving a group theoretic treatment original with J.-P. Provost. This shows how both the Galilei and Lorentz transformations may be derived from the relativity (...)
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  36. The Baby Fae Case: Treatment, Experiment, or Animal Abuse?Richard T. Hull - unknown
    On October 26, 1984, Dr. Leonard Bailey and the transplant team of Loma Linda University Medical Center in California operated on a five-pound baby girl born a few weeks earlier with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. In babies born with this defect the left side of the heart is much smaller than the right and is unable to pump sufficient blood to sustain life for more than a few weeks. This rare defect occurs about once in every 12,000 live births; it (...)
     
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  37.  73
    Leibniz: Body, Substance, Monad.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2010 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 18 (4):721-724.
  38.  48
    The deconstruction of the mirror and other heresies: Ch'an and taoism as abnormal discourse.Richard T. Garner - 1985 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 12 (2):155-168.
  39. G.W. Leibniz, Interrelations Between Mathematics and Philosophy.Richard T. W. Arthur (ed.) - 2015 - Springer Verlag.
  40. Dying in America.Richard T. Hull - unknown
    Good Morning! When I was asked to talk on the subject of Dying in America at a breakfast meeting, It occurred to me that I might get to make some wisecracks about how we eat, at a breakfast where we would be served croissants, butter, sausage and eggs, and berries served with Devonshire cream: certainly the most tasteful form of dying in America! Nor have we been disappointed: quiche and ham should do quite nicely. Then, after last Tuesday’s election, someone (...)
     
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  41.  16
    The Labyrinth of the Continuum - Writings on the Continuum Problem 1672-1686.Richard T. W. Arthur (ed.) - 2013 - Yale University Press.
    This book gathers together for the first time an important body of texts written between 1672 and 1686 by the great German philosopher and polymath Gottfried Leibniz. These writings, most of them previously untranslated, represent Leibniz's sustained attempt on a problem whose solution was crucial to the development of his thought, that of the composition of the continuum. The volume begins with excerpts from Leibniz's Paris writings, in which he tackles such problems as whether the infinite division of matter entails (...)
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  42.  23
    (1 other version)Moore's Notes on Leibniz Lectures.Richard T. W. Arthur & Nicholas Griffin - 2017 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 37 (1).
    G. E. Moore attended Russell’s lectures on Leibniz in 1899 and kept detailed notes which have been preserved among his papers. The present article prints his notes in their entirety with annotations.
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  43.  48
    On the significance of A. A. Robb’s philosophy of time, especially in relation to Bertrand Russell’s.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 31 (2):251-273.
    The aim of this paper is to explain the significance of Alfred A. Robb’s philosophy of time stemming from his interpretation of relativity theory; and at the same time, to investigate the reasons for the failure of his philosophical contemporaries to appreciate its significance, with special attention to its reception on Russell’s part. The study of Russell’s reaction to Robb exposes shortcomings in Russell’s own philosophy of time, which has been extremely influential through the years. It also highlights the philosophical (...)
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  44. Psycho-Physical Correlations and Ontology: A Reply to Shaffer.Richard T. Hull - 1974 - Behaviorism 2 (2):194-199.
     
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  45.  2
    John Dewey and Esthetic Experience.Richard T. Garner - 1960
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  46. Russell's Conundrum: on the Relation of Leibniz's Monads to the Continuum in An Intimate Relation. Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science.Richard T. W. Arthur - 1989 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 116:171-201.
  47. Leibniz’s Actual Infinite in Relation to His Analysis of Matter.Richard T. W. Arthur - 2015 - In G.W. Leibniz, Interrelations Between Mathematics and Philosophy. Springer Verlag.
  48.  10
    Ethical Issues in the New Reproductive Technologies.Richard T. Hull - 1990
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  49. Term-labeled categorial type systems.Richard T. Oehrle - 1994 - Linguistics and Philosophy 17 (6):633 - 678.
  50.  17
    Structural Communication in Binding.Richard T. Oehrle - 2003 - In R. Oehrle & J. Kruijff (eds.), resource sensitivity, binding, and anaphora. kluwer. pp. 179--214.
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