Results for 'Steven Kerr'

962 found
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  1.  17
    Spatial reasoning in a fuzzy region connection calculus.Steven Schockaert, Martine De Cock & Etienne E. Kerre - 2009 - Artificial Intelligence 173 (2):258-298.
  2. Integrity in effective leadership.Steven Kerr - 1988 - In Suresh Srivastva (ed.), Executive integrity: the search for high human values in organizational life. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
     
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  3.  40
    Thinking Through Sound: Martin Heidegger and Wallace Stevens.Joshua Kerr - 2019 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 33 (4):553-570.
    In his 1950 lecture entitled “Language,” Martin Heidegger announces a turn in the philosophy of language: for the opening theme, “man speaks,” he substitutes a countervailing theme: “language speaks”. Heidegger saw himself living in an era in which the historical determination of the inquiry into language that began with the Greek conception of human being as the animal with language had developed into a relentlessly technical way of thinking that viewed language instrumentally. By abandoning this conception, displacing the occurrence of (...)
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  4.  71
    Policy recommendations for addressing privacy challenges associated with cell-based research and interventions.Ubaka Ogbogu, Sarah Burningham, Adam Ollenberger, Kathryn Calder, Li Du, Khaled El Emam, Robyn Hyde-Lay, Rosario Isasi, Yann Joly, Ian Kerr, Bradley Malin, Michael McDonald, Steven Penney, Gayle Piat, Denis-Claude Roy, Jeremy Sugarman, Suzanne Vercauteren, Griet Verhenneman, Lori West & Timothy Caulfield - 2014 - BMC Medical Ethics 15 (1):7.
    The increased use of human biological material for cell-based research and clinical interventions poses risks to the privacy of patients and donors, including the possibility of re-identification of individuals from anonymized cell lines and associated genetic data. These risks will increase as technologies and databases used for re-identification become affordable and more sophisticated. Policies that require ongoing linkage of cell lines to donors’ clinical information for research and regulatory purposes, and existing practices that limit research participants’ ability to control what (...)
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  5. Making a Difference with a Discrete Course on Accounting Ethics.Steven Dellaportas - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 65 (4):391-404.
    Calls for the expansion of ethics education in the business and accounting curricula have resulted in a variety of interventions including additional material on ethical cases, the code of conduct, and the development of new courses devoted to ethical development [Lampe, J.: 1996]. The issue of whether ethics should be taught has been addressed by many authors [see for example: Hanson, K. O.: 1987; Huss, H. F. and D. M. Patterson: 1993; Jones, T. M.: 1988–1989; Kerr, D. S. and (...)
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  6. 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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  7.  24
    Pragmatism, Objectivity, and Experience.Steven Levine - 2018 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    In this book Steven Levine explores the relation between objectivity and experience from a pragmatic point of view. Like many new pragmatists he aims to rehabilitate objectivity in the wake of Richard Rorty's rejection of the concept. But he challenges the idea, put forward by pragmatists like Robert Brandom, that objectivity is best rehabilitated in communicative-theoretic terms - namely, in terms that can be cashed out by capacities that agents gain through linguistic communication. Levine proposes instead that objectivity is (...)
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  8. 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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  9.  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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  10.  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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  11.  8
    Science, technology, and social change.Steven Yearley - 1988 - Boston: Unwin Hyman.
  12.  32
    Julian Wuerth, Kant on Mind, Action, and Ethics. Reviewed by.Steven Tester - 2016 - Philosophy in Review 36 (1):39-41.
  13. Kant: Some Objections and Replies.Steven Tester - 2011 - Philosophical Forum 42 (3):314-315.
  14.  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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  15. 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.
  16.  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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  17.  24
    Virtue Epistemology and the Value of Knowledge.Steven Hales - 2018 - Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 75:109-113.
    Virtue epistemologists like Ernest Sosa and John Greco have attempted to explain why knowledge is more valuable than mere true belief. In this talk I demonstrate that both of their accounts fail so profoundly that it is difficult to see how virtue epistemology alone contains the resources to explain the value of knowledge. According to the virtue theoretic approach, knowledge is a kind of success from ability. Knowledge constitutes a competent epistemic performance, and some performances are better than others; not (...)
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  18.  22
    Hao Wang. Undecidable sentences generated by semantic paradoxes. The journal of symbolic logic, vol. 20 , pp. 31–34. Reprinted Hao Wang. as Undecidable sentences suggested by semantic paradoxes, pp. 546–558.Steven Orey - 1965 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 30 (1):100.
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  19. The Prayer Texts of Luke-Acts.Steven F. Plymale - 1991
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  20.  58
    The problem of social choice: Arrow to Rawls.Steven Strasnick - 1976 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 5 (3):241-273.
  21. Thomas Aquinas on celestial matter.Steven Baldner - 2004 - The Thomist 68 (3):431-467.
     
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  22. The City of Arts, the City of Law, and the Problem of the End of Man: Maidmonides's Treatment of Final Causality in the Commentary on the "Mishnah".Steven Berg - 2012 - Interpretation 39 (3):253-282.
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  23.  82
    National security games.Steven J. Brams & D. Marc Kilgour - 1988 - Synthese 76 (2):185 - 200.
    Issues that arise in using game theory to model national security problems are discussed, including positing nation-states as players, assuming that their decision makers act rationally and possess complete information, and modeling certain conflicts as two-person games. A generic two-person game called the Conflict Game, which captures strategic features of such variable-sum games as Chicken and Prisoners'' Dilemma, is then analyzed. Unlike these classical games, however, the Conflict Game is a two-stage game in which each player can threaten to retaliate (...)
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  24.  14
    Searching for a universal ethic: multidisciplinary, ecumenical, and interfaith responses to the Catholic natural law tradition.William C. Mattison & John Berkman (eds.) - 2014 - Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
    In this volume twenty-three major scholars comment on and critically evaluate In Search of a Universal Ethic, the 2009 document written by the International Theological Commission (ITC) of the Catholic Church. That historic document represents an official Church contribution both to a more adequate understanding of a universal ethic and to Catholicism s own tradition of reflection on natural law. The essays in this book reflect the ITC document s complementary emphases of dialogue across traditions (universal ethic) and reflection on (...)
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  25.  32
    The Devil And Dawkins.Steven French - 2007 - Metascience 16 (3):485-488.
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  26. Atheism and the Freedom of Religion.Steven G. Gey - 2006 - In Michael Martin (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Atheism. Cambridge University Press.
  27.  8
    The dagoba and the gopuram: A semiotic contrastive study of the Sinhalese Buddhist and Tamil Hindu cultures.Steven Bonta - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (236-237):167-197.
    Having shown previously how a culture type can be given a unitary description in terms of a semiotic “lens” constrained by one of the Peircean Categories (“Shamanic” culture, by Firstness), we apply this methodology to a more “fine-grained” level of analysis, by comparing the Tamil and Sinhalese cultures under the assumption that one of them (Sinhalese) is in fact a “hybrid” culture-sign. Having shown in previous work that the greater South Asian microculture may be characterized as a Firstness of Thirdness (...)
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  28.  22
    Phoenix Rising from the Ashes.Steven J. Jensen - 2020 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 20 (3):525-544.
    New natural law advocates are somewhat notorious for their loose action theory, having a track record of counterintuitive claims. In response to criticisms, advocates have entrenched, further defending their questionable action theory. This paper first rehearses the basic criticism against the new natural law action theory. It then examines four recent attempts to revive this action theory and finds these attempts wanting. Within these attempts, certain patterns arise. Given a certain means A to a goal C, a search is made (...)
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  29.  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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  30. Private Prayer and Public Audiences.Steven K. Green - 2000 - Nexus 5:27.
     
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  31. 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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  32.  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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  33.  32
    Individualism.Steven Lukes - 2006 - Colchester: ECPR Press.
    Individualism embraces a wide diversity of meanings and is widely used by those who criticise and by those who praise Western societies and their culture, by historians and literary scholars in search of the emergence of 'the individual', by anthropologists claiming that there are different, culturally shaped conceptions of the individual or 'person', by philosophers debating what form social science explanations should take and by political theorists defending liberal principles. In this classic text, Steven Lukes discusses what 'individualism' has (...)
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  34.  18
    Centering and extending: an essay on metaphysical sense.Steven G. Smith - 2017 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    An original metaphysical proposal building on classical and contemporary sources. In Centering and Extending, Steven G. Smith retrieves and refashions some of the best ideas of classical and early modern metaphysics to support insight into the natures of mental and material beings and their relations. Avoiding what he critiques as distortive paths of idealism, materialism, repressive monism, and overly permissive pluralism, Smith builds his framework on centering and extending as universal principles of formation. Identifying the basic consistency of being (...)
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  35. (1 other version)Consciousness it/self.Steven Laycock - 1998 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 5 (2):141-152.
    For better or for worse, I find myself in the company of the `misers' of Galen Strawson's portrayal who, in response to the question, `Is there such a thing as the self?' rejoin: `Well, there is something of which the sense of the self is an accurate representation, but it does not follow that there is any such thing as the self'. Far from representing a form of `metaphysical excess', the rejoinder seems faithfully and reliably phenomenological. We need not assume (...)
     
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  36. Etienne Gilson, Linguistics and Philosophy: An Essay on the Philosophical Constants of Language Reviewed by.Steven Baldner - 1990 - Philosophy in Review 10 (12):495-498.
     
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  37. The Past Just Ain’t What it Used to be: A Response to Kevin Staley and Ronald Tacelli, S.J.Steven Baldner - 1992 - Lyceum 4 (2):1-4.
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  38.  16
    El número en Agustín.Steven Barbone - 1999 - Augustinus 44 (172-175):35-49.
    This article, translated by Jose ARNOZ, examines the role of number in Augustine's philosophy. While the analysis focuses on the sixth book of De musica and the second book of De libero arbitrio, it does include some of Augustine's other works. I argue that number plays many roles for Augustine including forming notions of ordinary arithmetic, describing meter and rhythm, but most importantly, forming every created object. As a result, every created thing has within it a residual number which could (...)
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  39. Designed for Death: Controlling Killer Robots.Steven Umbrello - 2022 - Budapest: Trivent Publishing.
    Autonomous weapons systems, often referred to as ‘killer robots’, have been a hallmark of popular imagination for decades. However, with the inexorable advance of artificial intelligence systems (AI) and robotics, killer robots are quickly becoming a reality. These lethal technologies can learn, adapt, and potentially make life and death decisions on the battlefield with little-to-no human involvement. This naturally leads to not only legal but ethical concerns as to whether we can meaningful control such machines, and if so, then how. (...)
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  40.  36
    De summa rerum: Metaphysical Papers, 1675-1676. G. W. Leibniz, G. H. R. Parkinson.Steven Nadler - 1993 - Isis 84 (3):577-578.
  41.  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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  42.  23
    Spinoza and Scripture: A Colloquium Introduction.Steven Nadler - 2013 - Journal of the History of Ideas 74 (4):621-622.
  43. Too bad for Kant : lessons of experience with the three questions foundational to teaching business ethics.Steven Olson - 2011 - In Ronald R. Sims & William I. Sauser (eds.), Experiences in teaching business ethics. Charlotte, N.C.: Information Age.
  44.  36
    Dee, Mercator, and Louvain Instrument Making: An Undescribed Astrological Disc by Gerard Mercator.Steven Vanden Broecke - 2001 - Annals of Science 58 (3):219-240.
    The present paper complements the publications of Gerard L'E. Turner on Mercator's astrolabes by presenting an account of an astrological disc which Mercator published at Louvain in May 1551. This instrument, of which only one copy is known, is described, and a transcription of its instruction sheet, with commentary and English translation, is provided. My preliminary study of the astrological content and context of the instrument indicates that it is connected with John Dee's astrological studies at Louvain from 1548 to (...)
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  45.  96
    The Irrelevance to Religion of Philosophic Proofs for the Existence of God.Steven M. Cahn - 1969 - American Philosophical Quarterly 6 (2):170 - 172.
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  46.  13
    Xenophilia.Steven Shankman - 2020 - Arion 28 (2):73-94.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Xenophilia STEVEN SHANKMAN We often hear about xenophobia in today’s troubled Western world, about fear of the stranger, fear of the demonized other. But we rarely, if ever, encounter the term, or the inspiring idea of, xenophilia, love of the stranger, hospitality. Rarely, that is, unless we regularly consult the Bible and the two great Homeric epics. What do these foundational works of Western culture teach us about (...)
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  47. St. Albert the great and st. Thomas Aquinas on the presence of elements in compounds.Steven Baldner - 1999 - Sapientia 54 (205):41-57.
     
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  48. The nature of Regularity and Irregularity: Evidence from Hebrew Nominal Inflection.Steven Pinker & Joseph Shimron - unknown
    Most evidence for the role of regular inflection as a default operation comes from languages that confound the morphological properties of regular and irregular forms with their phonological characteristics. For instance, regular plurals tend to faithfully preserve the base’s phonology, whereas irregular nouns tend to alter it. The distinction between regular and irregular inflection may thus be an epiphenomenon of phonological faithfulness. In Hebrew noun inflection, however, morphological regularity and phonological faithfulness can be distinguished: Nouns whose stems change in the (...)
     
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  49.  8
    Images of Technology in Popular Films: Discussion and Filmography.Steven L. Goldman - 1989 - Science, Technology and Human Values 14 (3):275-301.
    From at least 1925 to the present, science and technology have been depicted largely negatively in popular films of all genres. The images of science and technology in films reflect consistent public anxiety over the linkage between science, technology, and corporate power; the complacency of government agen cies and scientists toward new knowledge and artifacts; the insensitivity of scientists toward the moral implications of their research and its applications; and the co-option of technical knowledge by vested corporate and government interests. (...)
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  50.  7
    Cancer Treatment and Research in Humanistic Perspective.Steven C. Gross & Solomon Garb - 1985
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