Results for 'Satgé Daniel'

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  1.  27
    (1 other version)On somatic mutations and tissue fields in cancer.Satgé Daniel - 2011 - Bioessays 33 (12):922-923.
    Editor's suggested further reading in BioEssays: Fields and field cancerization: The preneoplastic origins of cancer Abstract.
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  2. Preface by.Daniel Wegner - 2002 - In The Illusion of Conscious Will. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
     
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  3.  48
    Integration of stimulus dimensions in perception and memory: Composition rules and psychophysical relations.Daniel Algom, Yuval Wolf & Bina Bergman - 1985 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 114 (4):451-471.
  4.  33
    A neuropsychological theory of motor skill learning.Daniel B. Willingham - 1998 - Psychological Review 105 (3):558-584.
  5.  44
    Spoken word recognition and lexical representation in very young children.Daniel Swingley & Richard N. Aslin - 2000 - Cognition 76 (2):147-166.
  6. From Thick to Thin: Two Moral Reduction Plans.Daniel Y. Elstein & Thomas Hurka - 2009 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 39 (4):pp. 515-535.
    Many philosophers of the last century thought all moral judgments can be expressed using a few basic concepts — what are today called ‘thin’ moral concepts such as ‘good,’ ‘bad,’ ‘right,’ and ‘wrong.’ This was the view, fi rst, of the non-naturalists whose work dominated the early part of the century, including Henry Sidgwick, G.E. Moore, W.D. Ross, and C.D. Broad. Some of them recognized only one basic concept, usually either ‘ought’ or ‘good’; others thought there were two. But they (...)
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  7.  45
    Rethinking moral distress: conceptual demands for a troubling phenomenon affecting health care professionals.Daniel W. Tigard - 2018 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 21 (4):479-488.
    Recent medical and bioethics literature shows a growing concern for practitioners’ emotional experience and the ethical environment in the workplace. Moral distress, in particular, is often said to result from the difficult decisions made and the troubling situations regularly encountered in health care contexts. It has been identified as a leading cause of professional dissatisfaction and burnout, which, in turn, contribute to inadequate attention and increased pain for patients. Given the natural desire to avoid these negative effects, it seems to (...)
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  8.  38
    What we can learn from how trivalent conditionals avoid triviality.Daniel Lassiter - 2020 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 63 (9-10):1087-1114.
    ABSTRACT A trivalent theory of indicative conditionals automatically enforces Stalnaker's thesis – the equation between probabilities of conditionals and conditional probabilities. This result holds because the trivalent semantics requires, for principled reasons, a modification of the ratio definition of conditional probability in order to accommodate the possibility of undefinedness. I explain how this modification is motivated and how it allows the trivalent semantics to avoid a number of well-known triviality results, in the process clarifying why these results hold for many (...)
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  9. Mutual exclusivity in crosssituational statistical learning.Daniel Yurovsky & Chen Yu - 2008 - In B. C. Love, K. McRae & V. M. Sloutsky (eds.), Proceedings of the 30th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. Cognitive Science Society. pp. 715--720.
  10.  46
    Causation and Experimentation.Daniel M. Hausman - 1986 - American Philosophical Quarterly 23 (2):143 - 154.
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  11. How to Think, Say, or Do Precisely the Worst Thing for Any Occasion.Daniel M. Wegner - unknown
    In slapstick comedy, the worst thing that could happen usually does: The person with a sore toe manages to stub it, sometimes twice. Such errors also arise in daily life, and research traces the tendency to do precisely the worst thing to ironic processes of mental control. These monitoring processes keep us watchful for errors of thought, speech, and action and enable us to avoid the worst thing in most situations, but they also increase the likelihood of such errors when (...)
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  12.  35
    Phronêsis and Kalokagathia in Eudemian Ethics VIII.3.Daniel Wolt - 2022 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 60 (1):1-23.
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  13. Right Practical Reason: Aristotle, Action, and Prudence in Aquinas.Daniel Westberg - 1997 - Philosophical Quarterly 47 (187):263-265.
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  14.  35
    Using facial emotional stimuli in visual search experiments: The arousal factor explains contradictory results.Daniel Lundqvist, Pernilla Juth & Arne Öhman - 2014 - Cognition and Emotion 28 (6):1012-1029.
  15.  23
    Nietzsche as Cultural Physician.Daniel R. Ahern - 1995 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    From Nietzsche's early writings to those marking the end of his intellectual life, the dynamics of what he called "physiology" permeate virtually every facet of his philosophical enterprise. In the following investigation, these dynamics are explored as an interpretive key to not only the dominant themes but also the philosophical motive underlying Nietzsche's philosophy. This motive is described in terms of his diagnosis and attempted cure for the disease of nihilism. In this we maintain that Nietzsche's foremost philosophical task is (...)
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  16. Evil, Meaning and Meaning-Makers.Daniel Ambord - 2010 - Ars Disputandi 10:38-49.
    In her work Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God, Marilyn McCord Adams offers an account of the problem of evil that deals with the interaction between certain types of evil and the human capacity for meaning production. This paper attempts to consider certain implications of her presuppositions and, in so doing, to uncover several challenges to her broader project entailed by said implications. More specifically, this paper considers, within the context of Adams’ broader project, the status of perpetrators of (...)
     
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  17.  30
    The Knowledge of Contradictions.Daniel Molto & Spencer Johnston - 2022 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 11 (3):157-164.
    If there are true contradictions, where are they? In language or in the world? According to one important view, best represented by Jc Beall (2009), only the former. In this paper, we raise a problem for this view. In order to defend a “merely semantic” version of dialetheism (aka ‘glut theory’), Beall adopts transparent accounts of truth and falsity, which gives rise to “dialethic ascent” on which true contradictions are also, contradictorily, untrue contradictions. This is a consequence of trying to (...)
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  18.  69
    Choking RECtified: embodied expertise beyond Dreyfus.Daniel D. Hutto & Raúl Sánchez-García - 2015 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 14 (2):309-331.
    On a Dreyfusian account performers choke when they reflect upon and interfere with established routines of purely embodied expertise. This basic explanation of choking remains popular even today and apparently enjoys empirical support. Its driving insight can be understood through the lens of diverse philosophical visions of the embodied basis of expertise. These range from accounts of embodied cognition that are ultra conservative with respect to representational theories of cognition to those that are more radically embodied. This paper provides an (...)
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  19.  94
    What's trust got to do with it? Revisiting opioid contracts.Daniel Z. Buchman & Anita Ho - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (10):673-677.
    Prescription opioid abuse (POA) is an escalating clinical and public health problem. Physician worries about iatrogenic addiction and whether patients are ‘drug seeking’, ‘abusing’ and ‘diverting’ prescription opioids exist against a backdrop of professional and legal consequences of prescribing that have created a climate of distrust in chronic pain management. One attempt to circumvent these worries is the use of opioid contracts that outline conditions patients must agree to in order to receive opioids. Opioid contracts have received some scholarly attention, (...)
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  20.  16
    Entrevista al profesor Eligio Resta.Daniel J. García López - 2022 - Anales de la Cátedra Francisco Suárez 56:377-392.
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  21. John Stuart mill's philosophy of economics.Daniel M. Hausman - 1981 - Philosophy of Science 48 (3):363-385.
    John Stuart Mill regards economics as an inexact and separate science which employs a deductive method. This paper analyzes and restates Mill's views and considers whether they help one to understand philosophical peculiarities of contemporary microeconomic theory. The author concludes that it is philosophically enlightening to interpret microeconomics as an inexact and separate science, but that Mill's notion of a deductive method has only a little to contribute.
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  22.  70
    Explicit pre-training instruction does not improve implicit perceptual-motor sequence learning.Daniel J. Sanchez & Paul J. Reber - 2013 - Cognition 126 (3):341-351.
  23. The active role of partial knowledge in cross-situational word learning.Daniel Yurovsky, Damian Fricker, Chen Yu & Linda B. Smith - 2010 - In S. Ohlsson & R. Catrambone (eds.), Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. Cognitive Science Society.
     
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  24.  14
    Una ontología de la actualidad de la reforma constitucional.Daniel J. García López - 2020 - Anales de la Cátedra Francisco Suárez 54:409-411.
    Sauquillo González, Julián. La reforma constitucional. Sujetos y límites del poder constituyente. Tecnos, Madrid, 2018, 406 páginas.
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  25.  78
    Fun and games in fantasyland.Daniel Dennett - 2008 - Mind and Language 23 (1):25–31.
    commentary on Fodor, “Against Darwinism.”.
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  26.  14
    Whitehead's Ethics: Fill in the Blanks.Daniel Bella & Milan Stürmer - 2023 - Process Studies 52 (2):179-200.
    The recent publication of the stenographer's transcript of Whitehead's guest lecture on “social ethics” has shed new light on the relation between his metaphysics and ethics. Instead of including ethics in his philosophy, Whitehead treats it as a distinct, specialized science that does not share in the universality of metaphysics. The present article argues that an analysis of his lecture shows that a nonindividualist Whiteheadian ethics is possible without rupturing the coherence of Whitehead's system or contradicting the ontological or subjectivist (...)
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  27.  43
    Integrating Intermediate Goods to Theories of Distributive Justice: The Importance of Platforms.Daniel Weinstock - 2015 - Res Publica 21 (2):171-183.
    There is an underappreciated disconnect between the ultimate values that lie at the heart of contemporary theories of distributive justice, and the practice of state institutions. State institutions deliver “intermediate goods” – goods such as health-care, education, housing, transportation, and the like – that are instrumental to a society being distributively just, but that do not in an of themselves constitute criteria of justice. Researchers who have emphasized the “social determinants of health” provide an insight that, when generalized, point us (...)
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  28.  29
    John Dewey's Liberalism: Individual, Community, and Self-Development.Daniel M. Savage - 2001 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    John Dewey's classical pragmatism, Daniel M. Savage asserts, can be used to provide a self-development-based justification of liberal democracy that shows the current debate between liberal individualism and republican communitarianism to ...
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  29. What Leibniz really said?Daniel Garber - 2008 - In Daniel Garber & Béatrice Longuenesse (eds.), Kant and the Early Moderns. Princeton University Press.
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  30.  35
    Nested conditionals and genericity in the de Finetti semantics.Daniel Lassiter & Jean Baratgin - 2021 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 10 (1):42-52.
    Thought: A Journal of Philosophy, Volume 10, Issue 1, Page 42-52, March 2021.
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  31. Is time-discounting hyperbolic or subadditive?Daniel Read - 2001 - Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 23 (1):5–32.
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  32.  34
    Deleuze and the naming of God: post-secularism and the future of immanence.Daniel Colucciello Barber - 2014 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Deleuze’s philosophy of immanence, because it vigorously rejects every appeal to the beyond, is often presumed to be indifferent to the concerns of religion. This book argues against such a presumption. It does so, first of all, by emphasising how both Deleuze’s thought and the notion of religion are motivated by a demand to create new modes of existence, or to imagine and enact a future that would substantively break with the present configuration of being. If Deleuze’s thought and the (...)
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  33.  48
    An evolutionary life-history framework for understanding sex differences in human mortality rates.Daniel J. Kruger & Randolph M. Nesse - 2006 - Human Nature 17 (1):74-97.
    Sex differences in mortality rates stem from genetic, physiological, behavioral, and social causes that are best understood when integrated in an evolutionary life history framework. This paper investigates the Male-to-Female Mortality Ratio (M:F MR) from external and internal causes and across contexts to illustrate how sex differences shaped by sexual selection interact with the environment to yield a pattern with some consistency, but also with expected variations due to socioeconomic and other factors.
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  34.  72
    Case Study: Dialysis for a Prisoner of War.Daniel Zupan, Gary Solis, Richard Schoonhoven & George Annas - 2004 - Hastings Center Report 34 (6):11.
  35. Commentary: Double Effect—Intention is the Solution, Not the Problem.Daniel P. Sulmasy - 2000 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 28 (1):26-29.
  36.  73
    Adam Smith on vanity, domination, and history.Daniel Luban - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (2):275-302.
    Adam Smith's lectures present a bleak theory of history in which the innate human results in the perpetuation of increasingly repressive slave societies. This theory challenges common conceptions about the philosophical and historical foundations of Smith's thought, and accounting for it requires moving beyond traditional dichotomies between an sphere grounded on asocial wants and a sphere grounded on sociability. For Smith, under the influence of earlier thinkers like La Rochefoucauld, Mandeville, and Rousseau, all human behavior is rooted in our esteem-seeking (...)
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  37. Stathis Psillos, Philosophy of Science AZ Reviewed by.Daniel McArthur - 2009 - Philosophy in Review 29 (2):130-131.
  38.  27
    Tenure, the Canadian tar sands and ‘Ethical Oil’.Daniel Pauly - 2016 - Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 15 (1):55-57.
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  39.  46
    The heterogeneous social : new thinking about the foundations of the social sciences.Daniel Little - 2009 - In Chrysostomos Mantzavinos (ed.), Philosophy of the social sciences: philosophical theory and scientific practice. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 154--78.
  40.  39
    Measuring the complexity of the law: the United States Code.Daniel Martin Katz & M. J. Bommarito - 2014 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 22 (4):337-374.
    Einstein’s razor, a corollary of Ockham’s razor, is often paraphrased as follows: make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler. This rule of thumb describes the challenge that designers of a legal system face—to craft simple laws that produce desired ends, but not to pursue simplicity so far as to undermine those ends. Complexity, simplicity’s inverse, taxes cognition and increases the likelihood of suboptimal decisions. In addition, unnecessary legal complexity can drive a misallocation of human capital toward comprehending and (...)
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  41. Syntactic translations and provably recursive functions.Daniel Leivant - 1985 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 50 (3):682-688.
  42.  69
    Critical Pedagogy and Attentive Love.Daniel P. Liston - 2007 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 27 (5):387-392.
  43. (1 other version)Is it possible to formulate a precise and objective standard of proof? Some questions based on an argumentative approach to evidence.Daniel González Lagier - 2020 - In Jordi Ferrer Beltrán & Carmen Vázquez (eds.), Evidential Legal Reasoning: Crossing Civil Law and Common Law Traditions. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  44. La Filosofía como experiencia humana de la Realidad en el Fedón.Daniel Mariano Leiro - 2008 - A Parte Rei 58:1.
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  45.  16
    Der Streit um die Birne. Autorschafts-Attributionstest mit Burrows’ Delta und dessen Optimierung für Kurztexte am Beispiel der ‚Halben Birne‘ des Konrad von Würzburg.Daniel Schlager, Katharina Zeppezauer-Wachauer & Friedrich Michael Dimpel - 2019 - Das Mittelalter 24 (1):71-90.
    Short epics in Middle High German are a challenge for author attribution procedures as they involve dealing with short texts, incomplete normalisation, and generic tests. Firstly, the paper discusses optimisation methods using basic form and grammar tags extracted from the ‘Mittelhochdeutsche Begriffsdatenbank’ (Middle High German Conceptual Database). As part of this, an evaluation test with normalised Middle High German texts is carried out where 20 texts with known authorship are used as ‘guessing texts’ and a further 19 works of the (...)
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  46.  21
    The problem of quantification in psychological science.Daniel Brower - 1949 - Psychological Review 56 (6):325-333.
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  47.  62
    The Impossibility of Supererogation in Kant’s Moral Theory.Daniel Guevara - 1999 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (3):593-624.
    It is common to think that certain acts are supererogatory, especially certain heroic or saintly self-sacrifices for the good. The idea seems to have an ordinary and clear application. Nothing shows this better than the well-known cases which J. O. Urmson adduced. Urmson argued that no major moral theory could give a proper account of the supererogatory character of such acts, and that therefore none could account for “all the facts of morality,” as he put it. But his arguments were (...)
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  48.  35
    The politics of fear : idolatry and superstition in Maimonides and Spinoza.Daniel H. Frank - 2011 - In Jonathan Jacobs (ed.), Judaic Sources and Western Thought: Jerusalem's Enduring Presence. Oxford University Press. pp. 177.
  49. Dialéctica de la liberación: la utopía social de Herbert Marcuse.Daniel Innerarity Grau - 1985 - Anuario Filosófico 18 (2):109-128.
     
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  50.  22
    (1 other version)Πραπίς en Homero: una propuesta de clarificación semántica.Daniel Gutiérrez - 2015 - Argos (Universidad Simón Bolívar) 38 (2):167-176.
    El sustantivo πραπίς / πραπίδες presenta diversos usos en los poemas homéricos, de acuerdo con diferentes campos semánticos que van desde lo anatómico a lo cognoscitivo. Desde la Antigüedad se intentó clarificar el sentido básico del término, equiparándolo con los distintos campos semánticos que comprende el sustantivo φρήν / φρένες. El término no aparece nunca en singular en los poemas homéricos sino siempre en plural.. Este trabajo pretende clarificar, en general, la significación del término y, en particular, el sentido que (...)
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