Results for 'Thing'

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  1. Some years past I perceived how many Falsities I admitted off as Truths in my Younger years, and how Dubious those things were which I raised from thence; and therefore I thought it requisite (if I had a designe to establish any thing that should prove firme and permanent in sciences) that once in my life I should clearly cast aside all my former opinions, and begin a new from some First principles. But this seemed a great Task, and I still expected that maturity of years, then which none could be more apt to receive Learning; upon which account I waited so long, that at last I should deservedly be blamed had I spent that time in Deliberation which remain'd only for Action.Of Things Doubtful - 2006 - In Stephen Gaukroger (ed.), The Blackwell Guide to Descartes' Meditations. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 204.
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  2.  35
    Risk bodies: rehabilitation of sports patients in the physiotherapy clinic.Lone Friis Thing - 2005 - Nursing Inquiry 12 (3):184-191.
    This paper describes how body regimes are effectuated in the prevailing treatment strategy of physiotherapy. The process of self‐mastering in the context of sports‐related injuries is highlighted. Through a Foucauldian perspective on body regimes the aim is to shed light on the process of individualization and self‐mastery in rehabilitation. The treatment of illness in the physiotherapy clinic does not characterize the patient as sick, and exempt the patient from daily duties and expectations. The empirical data include 17 qualitative illness narratives (...)
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  3. Crossing the Utopian.Apocalyptic Border: The Anxiety of Forgetting in Paul Auster'S. In the Country of Last Things - 2017 - In Jessica Elbert Decker & Dylan Winchock (eds.), Borderlands and Liminal Subjects: Transgressing the Limits in Philosophy and Literature. Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
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  4. Erfaring og dagligsproglig begrebsdannelse.Arne Thing Mortensen - 1982 - In Knut Hanneborg (ed.), 6 Essays Om Erfaring. [Roskilde]: Institut for uddannelsesforskning, medieforskning og videnskabsteori (Institut vii).
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  5.  9
    Perception og sprog.Arne Thing Mortensen - 1972 - København,: Akademisk Forlag, D. B. K..
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  6. Not a sure thing: Fitness, probability, and causation.Denis M. Walsh - 2010 - Philosophy of Science 77 (2):147-171.
    In evolutionary biology changes in population structure are explained by citing trait fitness distribution. I distinguish three interpretations of fitness explanations—the Two‐Factor Model, the Single‐Factor Model, and the Statistical Interpretation—and argue for the last of these. These interpretations differ in their degrees of causal commitment. The first two hold that trait fitness distribution causes population change. Trait fitness explanations, according to these interpretations, are causal explanations. The last maintains that trait fitness distribution correlates with population change but does not cause (...)
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  7. Every Thing Must Go: Metaphysics Naturalized.James Ladyman & Don Ross - 2007 - In James Ladyman & Don Ross (eds.), Every thing must go: metaphysics naturalized. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book argues that the only kind of metaphysics that can contribute to objective knowledge is one based specifically on contemporary science as it really is, and not on philosophers' a priori intuitions, common sense, or simplifications of science. In addition to showing how recent metaphysics has drifted away from connection with all other serious scholarly inquiry as a result of not heeding this restriction, this book demonstrates how to build a metaphysics compatible with current fundamental physics, which, when combined (...)
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  8.  34
    The doing of the thing itself: Gadamer's hermeneutic ontology of language.Günter Figal - 2002 - In Robert J. Dostal (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Gadamer. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 102--125.
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  9.  16
    The Vision Thing.H. Floris Cohen - 2015 - Isis 106 (2):229-234.
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  10.  89
    The Underlying Thing, the Underlying Nature and Matter: Aristotle's Analogy in Physics I 7.Kathleen C. Cook - 1989 - Apeiron 22 (4):105 - 119.
  11. What Is a Thing?Martin Heidegger, W. B. Barton, Vera Deutsch & Eugene T. Gendlin - 1972 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 5 (3):191-192.
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  12.  16
    Kant’s Thing Itself as a theoretic Basis of Materialism in Marx.Jae Yoo Lee - 2022 - EPOCH AND PHILOSOPHY 33 (2):177-212.
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  13. Fact-Introspection, Thing-Introspection, and Inner Awareness.Anna Giustina & Uriah Kriegel - 2017 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 8 (1):143-164.
    Phenomenal beliefs are beliefs about the phenomenal properties of one's concurrent conscious states. It is an article of common sense that such beliefs tend to be justified. Philosophers have been less convinced. It is sometimes claimed that phenomenal beliefs are not on the whole justified, on the grounds that they are typically based on introspection and introspection is often unreliable. Here we argue that such reasoning must guard against a potential conflation between two distinct introspective phenomena, which we call fact-introspection (...)
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  14. Is there “no such thing as business ethics”?Eric H. Beversluis - 1987 - Journal of Business Ethics 6 (2):81 - 88.
    What are we to make of the claim that we often hear, that there is no such thing as business ethics? This essay first examines two arguments that might be in people's minds in making such a claim — that business is a game, and hence the ordinary constraints of morality do not apply, and that one cannot survive in business if one is too ethical. The critique of these arguments begins the process of making clear what business ethics (...)
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  15.  8
    (1 other version)And another thing... Asian writing in English: Why it fails to reach a world market.Leon Comber - 1991 - Logos 2 (3):170-172.
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  16.  31
    The Question of a Thing-Centred View of Education: Notes on Vlieghe and Zamojski’s Towards an Ontology of Teaching.Stefano Oliverio - 2019 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (1):103-107.
  17. The Sure Thing Principle Leads to Instability.J. Dmitri Gallow - forthcoming - Philosophical Quarterly.
    Orthodox causal decision theory is unstable. Its advice changes as you make up your mind about what you will do. Several have objected to this kind of instability and explored stable alternatives. Here, I'll show that explorers in search of stability must part with a vestige of their homeland. There is no plausible stable decision theory which satisfies Savage's Sure Thing Principle. So those in search of stability must learn to live without it.
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  18. (1 other version)What is This Thing Called Ethics?Christopher Bennett - 2010 - London: Routledge.
    What is morality? How do we define what is right and wrong? How does moral theory help us deal with ethical issues in the world around us? This second edition provides an engaging and stimulating introduction to philosophical thinking about morality. Christopher Bennett provides the reader with accessible examples of contemporary and relevant ethical problems, before looking at the main theoretical approaches and key philosophers associated with them. Topics covered include: life and death issues such as abortion and global poverty; (...)
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  19.  11
    Just One More Thing .Tim Madigan - 2007 - Philosophy Now 64:4-4.
  20. Is there such a thing as self-consciousness?G. P. Ramachandra - 1997 - Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 15 (1):83-85.
     
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  21. Is there such a thing as chinese philosophy? Arguments of an implicit debate.Carine Defoort - 2001 - Philosophy East and West 51 (3):393-413.
    The question of whether or not there is such a thing as "Chinese philosophy" is seldom explicitly raised, but the implicit answers to this question--although different in China and the West--dominate institutional and academic decisions. This article not only constructs a typology to recognize, differentiate, and evaluate various answers to this question, but it also takes the sensitivity of this matter seriously by comparing it with one's attachment to something as sensitive, arbitrary, and meaningless as a family name.
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  22.  27
    The Thing: Why I'm an Editor. Part II.Svitlana Ivashchenko, Illia Davidenko, Vlada Anuchina & Daria Popil - 2023 - Sententiae 42 (1):171-185.
    Interview of Illia Davidenko, Vlada Anuchina and Daria Popil with Svitlana Ivashchenko.
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  23.  79
    There's No Such Thing as Free Speech: And It's a Good Thing, Too.Stanley Eugene Fish - 1994 - Oxford University Press USA.
    In an era when much of what passes for debate is merely moral posturing--traditional family values versus the cultural elite, free speech versus censorship--or reflexive name-calling--the terms "liberal" and "politically correct," are used with as much dismissive scorn by the right as "reactionary" and "fascist" are by the left--Stanley Fish would seem an unlikely lightning rod for controversy. A renowned scholar of Milton, head of the English Department of Duke University, Fish has emerged as a brilliantly original critic of the (...)
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  24.  17
    There is No Such Thing As Addition.Peter van Inwagen - 1992 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 17:138-159.
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  25.  10
    (1 other version)And another thing... No future for libraries? Well, maybe there is, provided..Liz Chapman - 1995 - Logos 6 (3):169-172.
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  26.  10
    (1 other version)And Another Thing... India's greatest bookman.Pierre Evald - 2001 - Logos 12 (1):49-51.
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  27.  11
    And another thing... I'm so glad to see you reading a book.Martyn Goff - 1992 - Logos 3 (3):163-164.
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  28.  4
    And another thing... What in the world are booksellers worrying about?Gordon Graham - 1994 - Logos 5 (4):210-212.
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  29.  11
    And another thing... The Charleston phenomenon.Katina Strauch & Judy Webster - 1997 - Logos 8 (3):165-169.
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  30. 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 (...)
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  31. Getting a Thing into a Thought.Kent Bach - 2010 - In Robin Jeshion (ed.), New Essays on Singular Thought. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press. pp. 39.
     
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  32.  6
    And another thing... Plagiarism on US campuses.William M. Hannay - 1998 - Logos 9 (2):113-114.
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  33. Ethics or the right thing?: corruption, care, and family in an age of good governance.Sylvia Tidey - 2022 - Chicago: HAU Books.
    A sympathetic examination of the failure of anti-corruption efforts in contemporary Indonesia. Combining ethnographic fieldwork in the city of Kupang with an acute historical sensibility, Sylvia Tidey shows how good governance initiatives paradoxically perpetuate civil service corruption while also facilitating the emergence of new forms of it. Importing critical insights from the anthropology of ethics to the burgeoning anthropology of corruption, Tidey exposes enduring developmentalist fallacies that treat corruption as endemic to non-Western subjects. In practice, it is often indistinguishable from (...)
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  34.  16
    Women, Fire and Dangerous Thing: What Catergories Reveal About the Mind.George Lakoff (ed.) - 1987 - University of Chicago Press.
    "Its publication should be a major event for cognitive linguistics and should pose a major challenge for cognitive science. In addition, it should have repercussions in a variety of disciplines, ranging from anthropology and psychology to epistemology and the philosophy of science.... Lakoff asks: What do categories of language and thought reveal about the human mind? Offering both general theory and minute details, Lakoff shows that categories reveal a great deal."—David E. Leary, American Scientist.
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  35.  12
    (1 other version)And another thing... Utopia or Dystopia?Jerome S. Rubin - 1996 - Logos 7 (3):242-244.
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  36.  50
    The sure thing principle, dilations, and objective probabilities.Haim Gaifman - 2013 - Journal of Applied Logic 11 (4):373-385.
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  37. No Such Thing as Killer Robots.Michael Robillard - 2017 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 35 (4):705-717.
    There have been two recent strands of argument arguing for the pro tanto impermissibility of fully autonomous weapon systems. On Sparrow's view, AWS are impermissible because they generate a morally problematic ‘responsibility gap’. According to Purves et al., AWS are impermissible because moral reasoning is not codifiable and because AWS are incapable of acting for the ‘right’ reasons. I contend that these arguments are flawed and that AWS are not morally problematic in principle. Specifically, I contend that these arguments presuppose (...)
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  38.  18
    Moral Moments: A Funny Thing About Consciousness.Joel Marks - 2004 - Philosophy Now 44:35-35.
  39.  23
    Nature and the Living Thing in Aristotle's Biology.George Kimball Plochmann - 1953 - Journal of the History of Ideas 14 (2):167.
  40.  26
    Dying is the Most Grown-Up Thing We Ever Do: But Do Health Care Professionals Prevent Us from Taking It Seriously?Valerie Iles - 2016 - Health Care Analysis 24 (2):105-118.
    This paper takes a somewhat slant perspective on flourishing and care in the context of suffering, death and dying, arguing that care in this context consists principally of ‘acts of work and courage that enable flourishing’. Starting with the perception that individuals, society and health care professionals have become dulled to death and the process of dying in Western advanced health systems, it suggests that for flourishing to occur, both of these aspects of life need to be faced more directly. (...)
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  41. What Is a Thing?M. Oreste Fiocco - 2019 - Metaphilosophy 50 (5):649-669.
    Thing’ in the titular question should be construed as having the utmost generality. In the relevant sense, a thing just is an entity, an existent, a being. The present task is to say what a thing of any category is. This task is, I believe, the primary one of any comprehensive and systematic metaphysics. Indeed, an answer provides the means for resolving perennial disputes concerning the integrity of the structure in reality—whether some of the relations among things (...)
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  42.  27
    The play’s the thing: science and satire in the English enlightenment: Al Coppola: The theater of experiment. Staging natural philosophy in eighteenth-century Britain. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2016, x+264pp, £56.00 HB.Larry Stewart - 2017 - Metascience 27 (1):63-65.
  43.  38
    Scrutinizing thing knowledge.Sebastian Kletzl - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 47:118-123.
  44.  28
    Subjective Probability: The Real Thing.Richard C. Jeffrey - 2002 - Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book offers a concise survey of basic probability theory from a thoroughly subjective point of view whereby probability is a mode of judgment. Written by one of the greatest figures in the field of probability theory, the book is both a summation and synthesis of a lifetime of wrestling with these problems and issues. After an introduction to basic probability theory, there are chapters on scientific hypothesis-testing, on changing your mind in response to generally uncertain observations, on expectations of (...)
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  45.  21
    On Two Concepts of Thing-in-itself.Alicja Pietras - 2007 - Idea. Studia Nad Strukturą I Rozwojem Pojęć Filozoficznych 19:57-76.
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  46.  23
    To Will One Thing: Reflections on Kierkegaard’s "Purity of Heart.".Jeremy Walker - 1973 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 34 (4):607-609.
  47. (1 other version)What is this Thing Called Science?: An Assessment of the Nature and Status of Science and Its Methods.Alan Francis Chalmers - 1976 - St. Lucia, Q.: Univ. Of Queensland Press.
    Co-published with the University of Queensland Press. HPC holds rights in North America and U. S. Dependencies. Since its first publication in 1976, Alan Chalmers's highly regarded and widely read work--translated into eighteen languages--has become a classic introduction to the scientific method, known for its accessibility to beginners and its value as a resource for advanced students and scholars. In addition to overall improvements and updates inspired by Chalmers's experience as a teacher, comments from his readers, and recent developments in (...)
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  48.  19
    How a Thing Is Said and Heard: Wittgenstein and Kierkegaard.Russell B. Goodman - 1986 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 3 (3):335 - 353.
  49. Critical Notice of Every Thing Must Go.Katherine Hawley - 2010 - Metascience 19 (2):174-179.
    This is a critical notice of Ladyman and Ross et al's Every Thing Must Go. I argue that they mischaracterise much of so-called 'analytic metaphysics', and that they could have usefully drawn upon the resources of current metaphysics in order to articulate their own views more clearly. The piece appears in a symposium which also includes contributions by Kyle Stanford and Paul Humphreys, with responses from Ladyman and Ross.
     
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  50. What is This Thing Called Structure?Steven French - unknown
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